BROTHERTON’S Steamship35’33312G Lowest Rates. Photos and Passports Secured All enquiries confidentill We look after your wants right £10m Johnston & Granston IANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS OF CANADIAN .& FOREIGN Gramte Monuments 1840 Yonge St. (east aide) Between Mertan 8: Bulliol Sts. Phone HYland 2081 Open Evenings In. Phone 9788 Special Sailings to the Homeland by Canadian Pacific, Cunard and Anchor-Domde lines at Dealers in Lumber, Lath, Shingles Ashp‘halt Roofing, Gyproc SHEPPARD & GILL LUMBER CO. Glasses that suit you is what you want. You may have on: choice of our guaranteed DE- LUKE’S†gold-filled rimless mounting or frame, latest shapes, plus best quality single vision Toric lenses. F. E. LUKE & SON 163 YONGE ST.- “"Jones CoalCn. Full Line of FUEL SAND â€"- GRAVEL WM. MCDONALD Telephone 62 Thornhill From Mapie Gravel Pit Lime, Cement, Tile onposite Simpson's â€" Take Elevator . . . . . . $1.50, $3.50 & $5.00 Manicure . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. Hair Cut . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 25c. Child's hair cut . . . . . . . . . 15c. Beauty Parlor RUTH RUMB'LE, Prop. PRICE LIST We Invite Your Patronage 35 Yonge Street, (Liberal Office Building) Telephone 9 For Appoint- merits Finger Wave . . . . . . . . . . . 40c. Shampoo & Finger Wave 50c. Marcel . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40c. Shimpoo & Marcel 50c. Oil Cmquinole Permanent $2.00 Other Permanents at GENERAL CARTAGE Phone 1883' Phone Yards at Burr’s Mill For Day or Appohllzment Phone RICHMOND HILL RICHMOND HILL PAGE SIX SPECIAL Hillcrest Telephone 27 EL. 4820 also Includi.‘ .tion The boar is a first consideration. He is often impaired by under or over-feeding, and by confinement in small quarters. He should be able to exercise out of doors all the year round, in addition to a dry clean bed If the sows are not bred along bacon lines, or have already produc- ed poor progeny, it is now a suitable time to procure one or two gilts to strengthen 'the sow herd and intro- duce a good bacon strain. An early start allows two litters to be raised next year. Two litters instead of one will reduce the carrying charges per pig, and this in turn, with aver age or better conditions, will mean more profit to the breeder. For example a club member who has competed at the Royal Winter Fair in any previous contest conduct- ed by the Canadian Council on Boys’ and Girls’ Club Work will not be eligible to compete, and the number 'of contestants is to be limited to one speaker from one province. The contestant must not be less than eighteen years of age and must not have reached his twenty-first birth- day on November 1, 1936. The sub- ject matter of each address will deal with the position and opportunity of youth in agriculture, and each ad- dress is limited to ten minutes. Healthy Spring Pigs The production of large numbers of healthy spring pigs is dependent upon good feeding, care, and man- agement of the boar and sows dur- ing the winter. First of all, the problem of correct mating is one which alwayS confronts the livestock breeder. Presuming that the sows are of good baucon type, it is the re- sponsibility of the breeder to mate them to a. suitable boar, so that the offspring will grow into bacon hogs of the right type. Entries will be received from the officers in charge of club work and must be mailed to the General See- retary, Canadian Council 011' Boys’ and Girls’ Club Work, 463 Confeder- ation Building, O‘tawa, béfore Oc- tober 31. Youthful Oratory For Royal Winter Fair “Youth in Agriculture†is not only to be the slogan of the 1936 Royal Winter Fair in Toronto from Novem- ber 18 to 26 but also will be the motif or theme animating the whole spirit of the Fair. In keeping with this “Youth in Agriculture†idea, a 'special event has been arranged in the form of a public speaking con- test open to boys who are members of boys’ and girls’ farm clubs under the Canadian Council on Boys’ and Girls’ Club work. This contest is a feature apart from the usual pro- jects of the boys" and girls, farm clubs and has regulations of its own. C. Beck, B.S.A., M.A., succeeds to the bacteriology professorship left vacant with the superannuation of Prof. Dan Jones; Gerald N. .Ruhnke, B.S.A., is to head the chemistry de- partment which Dr. Harcourt pre- sided over; and Murray McNabb, B. A., M.A., Ph.D., is given the new post of assistant professor in chemâ€" istry. New appointments to the staff were recently announced by Hon. Duncan Marshall, Minister of Agri- culture, as follows: Gordon P. McRostie, B.S.A., Ph.D., succeeds the late Professor Squirrel as professor of field husbandry; E. O. A. C. Staff Changes Two senior members of the faculty of the Ontario Agricultural College, :Guelph, retired from active service on October lst, namely, Dr. Robert Harcourt, head of the Department of Chemistry, and Prof. Dan Jones, head of the bacteriologicall depart- ment. Dr. Harcourt had a record of 43 years service on the staff. That both will be missed is indicated by the words of Dr. G. I. Christie, Col- lege principal, commenting on their retirement: “It means a great loss to College work. They have rend- ered not only distinct service in their fields of endeavour, but have been strong, helpful associates with the students, staff and people of the province." Loading Horses When horses are loaded crosswise into an open motor-truck, they are safer if their heads are towards the outside of the road. Reports tell of horses seriously injured by passing trafficâ€"often another truck â€" when the horses had their heads towards the centre of the road. The danger is greatest at night. Lime For the Soil Limestone is required on many soil types not only to counteract present acidity but also to replace lime used by plants and lost annually by leach- ing. Every four years, it has been estimated, more than a ton of lime- stone per acts; is taken out of the average soil by‘ crop removals and leaching. NEWS AND INFORMATION FOR THE E Qua a - BUSY FARMER f Bymuridsgfétlo'nght Another way to prevent class feel- ing is to quit talking- about it so 'darned much. ISaturday: Well, my vacashen day are at hand onct more .& I prepOSe to sellebrate by rakem the leeves, cleenen out the bassment, blacken a stove & not playen no ft. ball and etc. Friday: I recken I am in good with Jane agen. Emery how when Jake ast her did I ever kiss her agenst her Will she replide No he onley thinks he has. Thursday: Blisters sed to Elsy that be are 2. passed master of the art of kising & she replide & sed‘ as‘ far as she are konseq-ned them are the good old days. Blisters lookt puzzeled but I was wise & new his cake is! doe with Elsry. Wednesday: Mebbe Blisters ainn as dumb as I thot. In compesishen he had to kompose a line for the fu- neral reath of a brave firemun which is ded‘ & writ “Hese Went to His Last Fire.†The teecher sad it was not so hot & I didee'nt prezackly get what she merit. Tuesday: The teecher has been testen us kids on gen’l infermasher. & ast Jake how are colecshexxs'bin at his chirch. Jake replide he dunno xcept he have notised they dont ixaft to stop in the senter of same & emptey the plate. Monday : Back to skool and miz- zery and etc and so forth agen. Life with me is the xact antienim, vs. and rivverse of a round of pleshurc & 1 grand sweet song. I am temted q to drown myself -' in the crick & wood if the watter wassent so cold & wet. Sunday: Well, I haft to report that Saturday is pracktekelly the 1 & onley day I have ' )I‘eft. Us kid): is V_ now infeckted w"th ‘ a S. S. ‘teecher that insists on us haven some idee about the lessen The best advice for feeding the sows is a repetition of the old maxim â€"â€"feed according to the condition of the sows. The feeding practice should be to bring the sow through the winter in medium flesh. The feeds used must of necessity be made up largely, if not entirely, of the feeds available on the farm. Suscessful feeding depends upon combining these feeds in suitable proportion and the employment of only a mini- mum of expensive purchased feeds. free from draughts during the win- ter. SLATS’ DIARY (By Oliver N. Warren) THE LIBERAL. RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO The Women’s Employment Com- mittee is to grapple with the prob- lem of finding work for unemployed women. A good deal of preliminary surveying has been accomplished al- ready by Mrs. Mary McCallum Suth- erland, the lady member of the com- mission. She had been from coast to coast since her appointment study- ing ways and means of assisting girls and women out of work. Many suggestions 'have come forward for the absorption of men into employ- ment, state or private, but very very few for the women. The most pro- mising project at the moment is the opening of a number of schools for the training of domestic servants. There is a much larger demand for first-class domestics in many “parts of Canada than the current supply. There is, however, a glut of teachers, nurses, stenographers and other professional or semi-pro- fessional groups. It is difficult to know just how serious is the prob- lem of the unemployed woman, be cause few of them are being counted in the national registration. They live mostly at home and are not of- ficially on relief. ‘ Dr. G. H. Barton, deputy minister of agriculture, and Dr. J. H. Gris- dale, former minister, are both in ;Britain. While there they will check ‘up some aspects of the information obtained by Hon. J. G. Gardiner, Minister of Agriculture, regarding the British market for Canadian pro- ducts. You remember that $300,000 was voted to assist in the marketâ€" ing of Canadian agricultural prod- ucts abroad, and on the basis of the reports brought back by Messrs. Barton and Grisdale, a new market- ing organization will be set up. It" will have two principal objects, one, to study more closely the needs of Britain and other customers and two, to maintain a closer check on the quality of Canadian farm products going abroad. (Plans to Employ Youth) Meantime the National Employ- ment Commission is busy. The chair- man of the Youth Employment Com.- mittee has submitted detailed plans to the head of the Commission for the employment of several thousand young Canadians at once in forestry, mining, agriculture and aviation. These will go, if approved, to the Minister of Labour and hence to the cabinet for sanction of the necess- ary expenditure. Then the depart- ment of labour will create an ad- ministrative body to get the prOgram under way. They will have to make good time if they are going to get anywhere before the dead of win- ter. Another problem lies in the un- certainty of the currency situation. The franc and the lira have been devaluated: the German mark has not. It is worth 25 cents in Ger- many. but it costs nearly 40 cents outside to buy. In other words, if you want to buy a German doll worth a mark, you have to pay 40 cents for it. Also you have to pay cur- rent duties on 40 cents. That makes it hard to buy from Germany. Can- ada has no legislation to make it easier to buy from countries with" appreciated currencies; though we have plenty making it difficult to buy from those with depreciated currencies. The Germans would like us to make special provision. But the situation is so uncertain that by the time that was done, the mark might have followed the franc and‘ the lira, and com-e down too. No doubt Euler will be able to make some compromise which will assist German commerce with Canada. (German Trade Up) Canadian trade with Germany for the first six months of 1936 is up' 18 per cent. in imports and over 50 per cent. in exports as compared with the first half of 1935. Most‘ of the gain in Canadian sales to Germany consists of metals and ores (principally nickel), raw wool, saus- age casings ‘and lumber. A slight increase has been reported in wheat, though Germany has so nearly be- come self-sufficient in wheat of re- cent years that our market there is not what it was once. Ottawa, October 13.â€"Numerous minor matters are being worked out behind the scenes at Ottawa, while Premier Mackenzie King and his colleagues are overseas. Canadian and German representa- tives are trying to get together on a trade treaty. Germany wants nic- kel, asbestos, wheat and other raw materials: She wants to sell finish- ed manufactured goods, of iron and steel largely, to Canada. There are several obstacles. Canada feels that she can sell all her nickel, asbestos, wheat, at the moment, without much effort. The market in Canada for external manufactured articles is not unlimited, and there is the renewal of the British agreement to think about. Also the United States treaty, and the position of the Canadian manufacturer. TERMS:â€"â€"Barns, Hay. Grain, Roots, Fowl, Pigs, Car, Household goods, Tractor, Lumber, ï¬ana ‘rall larticles under $25.00 cash. over that amount 10 months credit on approved joint notes. 4% off for cash. 4% added on credit. "1’E‘wfl'71‘ï¬wnwrmq‘rï¬lmm 415 Balliol St, Toronto 1 I\Sfmiiing‘ tooth cultivator, 13 tooth, 1 Stiff tooth cultivator, 9 tooth, In- ternational 1 NO-ROW scuffler, M.H. 1 Land roller 1 Horse scuffler 2 Waaons 2 Hay racks 1 Fanning Mill, Chatham 1 Set scales. 600 lb. 1 Plow, Wilkinson No. 3 1 Plow. Wilkinson N0. 1' 1 Light wag-on 1 Cutter 1 One horse sleigh 1 Potato digger 2 Sets bob sleighs 1 Fordson Tractor 1 Tractor plow, narrow bottom. M.H., 2 furrow 1 Heavy hand sleigh 1 Grind stone 1 Hand emery FURNITURE 1 Carpet, 18 ft. 6 in. by 15 ft. 6 in. 1 Carpet, 18 ft. 6 in. by 15 ft. 6 in. 1 Carpet, 15 ft. 6 in. by 11 ft. 6 in. Number of other carpets 2 Buffets 1 Centre table 1'Table, small 1 Settee 1 Separator 1 Churn Quantity of Dishes 1 Extension Table 1 Cupboard Number Kitchen Chairs Quantity Storm Windows and screens 1 Heater 1 Kitchen linoleum 1 Linen horse 2 Feather ticks 1 Washing Machine and wringer and tubs 2 Bedsteads 1 Bureau Numerous other articles GRADE CO\VS. FULLY 65 Well bred Rock bullets ACCREDITED 65 Roosters 1 Holstein Cow, bred March 10th,1 Brooder house milking 1 Brooder stove, Buckeye 1 Holstein Cow, full flow, not bred HAY AND GRAIN 1 Holstein Cow, bred July lst, milk-About 15 ton good mixed hay mg 500 Bus. Barley, O.A.C. No. 21 1 Holstein Cow,_full flow, not bred200 Bus. Cats 1 Holstein Cow, bred April 23rd,300 Bus. Mixed Grain milking Quantity of Red Clover seed 1 Holstein Cow, bred June 10th,Quantity of Timothy seed milking Quantity of Alfalfa seed 1 Holstein Cow, bred March 22nd LUMBER milking A quantity of pine lumber 1 a] 1 Holstein Cow. bred Jan. 25th inch I 2 Holstein Heifers, 1 yr. old A quantity of Hickory plank, S 1 Holstein Heifer. 6 months old 9 Oak tongues These Cattle are all extra good milk- ROOTS ers and big cows with a dairy testA quantity of mangels as high as 4.6. About 2 acres of turnips IMPLEMENTS Quantity of Cobbler Potatoes 1 Binder, McCormick, 7 ft. cut Quantityioif‘mllopley Potatoes calved Nov: lst, 1935 '19 Shoats Maple Lassie Keyes N0. 317859,14 Young pigs 8 weeks old . HARNESS calved April 18th. 1935 Bessie Artis Ika No. 333432, calvedl Set long tug team harness Jan. 12th, 1936 1 Set hames and traces Bull Edgehill Banostine Rat: AppleNumber of Collars No. 114286. calved Dec. 2nd, 1935 FOWL 1 Bay Mare, 9 yrs. old, H.D. Beatty A 1 Grey Mare, aged, GP. 1 Set clippers, Stewart REGISTERED CATTLE, FULLY Number odd wagon wheels and gears ACCREDITED 1 Milk buggy Rosy Abbekerk Alcartra No. 3075611 Sulky plow, 1 furrow calved Oct. 6th, 1934, bred Jan.1 Set disc harrows 14th, 1936. 1 Hay fork Abbekerk Wayne Dora No. 314642Number of forks. shovels, neck-yokes, calved Sept 4, 1934. Calf by side, double-trees, wrenches and tools full flow BARNS AND HEN HOUSE Avorill Pontiac Keyes No. 2287161 Frame Barn, 117x40 ft. calved Aug. 17th, 1929, bred May1 Cow Barn. 45x30 ft. 14th, 1936, milking 1 Horse Barn 30x25 ft. Alma Artis Ika No. 190949, calvedl Horse Barn 30x25 ft. Sent. 2nd, 1928, bred July 19, 1936,1 Small Hen House milking USED CAR Irish ‘Model Cornucopia No. 308169,1 Packard car in good running order cvalved April 14th. 1934, milking PIGS full flow. not bred 1 Yorkshire brood sow Abbekerk Wayne Jane No. 3274001 Yorkshire brood sow, bred Sept. 25 calved April 28th, 1935 1 Yorkshire brood sow, bred Sept. 30 AbbekerkWayne Greta No. 327399,1 Yorkshire brood sow 1 Bay Gelding, 8 yr. old, H.D 1 Bay Mare, 9 yrs. old, H.D. 1.G_rsx_wre_,_ag¢d_§.P- Binder, McCormick, 7 ft. cut Mower, M.-H. Drill. Seed, M.â€"H., 13 disc Set heavy barrows Set seed harrows Set spring tooth harrows Sulky rake, new, M.-H., 10 ft. Gang plows Spring tooth cultivator, 13 tooth, Protestant i Farm Stock, Implements, Hay, Furniture, Etc. THE PROPERTY OF WILBERT BONE J. H. and KEN PRENTICE, Auctioneers Registered Cattle â€" Fully Accredited EXTENSIVE AUCTION SALE OF TUESDAXLOCTOBER 27TH, 1936 HIGH - CLASS DAIRY HERD Lot 16, Rear Con. 2, Vaughan (At Carrville) COMMENCING AT NO RESERVE AS FARM IS SOLD HORSES E. n GREAT 934, milking PIGS 1 Yorkshire brood sow No. 3274001 Yorkshire brood sow, bred Sept. 25 35 1 Yorkshire brood sow, bred Sept. 30 No. 327399,1 Yorkshire brood sow 19 Shoats N0. 317859,14 Young pigs 8 weeks old HARNESS CARSON SMITH and R. MITCHELL, Clerks. THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15th, I936 and 2 Milk pails 1 Strainer 1 I 1 8-2211. can '1 Long- Lumber rule 1 Battery. Hot Shot Quantity ofi‘qgvgggg LUMBER A quantity of pine lumber 1 and 2 inch ' A quantity of Hickory plank, 2 in. 9 Oak tongues ROOTS 1 Root pulper 1 Drill plow 1 Carurope and pulleys and slings, 12 O’CLOCK NOON MISCELLANEOUS 1 Plunger Markham, Ont.