Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings Other Evenings by Appointment Office over the Post Office Woodbridge Phone 77 Msple, Ont DENTIST YONGE AND ARNOLD STREET PHONE 70 RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO Office: Trench Block, two doors north of Bank of Commerce Hours: 9 am. to 5.30 p.111. Telephone 32 sLL KINDS OF SHE-ET META WORK Macao, Eave Troughs, Metal Office Hours: 9 to 11 a.m. 8 to 8 p.m., and by appointment OffiCe: Centre and Church Streets Richmond Hill Phone 24 Dr. Charles C. Collins DENTIST ‘DR. LILLIAN C. LANGSTAFF (Women and Children) Office Hours 1 - 3 p.m. Appointments made Phox *Qgice Hour“er 7 3122 Yonge St. Richmond Hill DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFF Dr. C. A. MacDonald DENTIST Successor to DR. M. C. MacLACHLAN Ganges, Rooting Jobbing Promptly Attended to OffiCE‘ Hours 9â€"10 a.m., 12-2 & 6-8 p.m. and by appointment MAPLE â€" th DR. JAMES R. LANGSTAFF Licensed Auctioneer Counties of York and Simcoe Sales of all descriptions c0nducbed upon shortest notice and at reasonable rates No sale too large and none too small King, Ont. Phone King 42-r-3 J. H. Prentice. 415 Balliol St. K. C. Prentice, Markham Toronto. HYland 0834 We are prepared to conduct sales of every description. Farms and- farm chock sales a Specialty. Farms bought and sold on commission. All sales at. tended to on shortest, notice and con- ducted by the m05vt approved methods I.FOX J. Carl Saigeon AUCTIONEER MAPLE Licensed Auctioneer for the County of York Giles attended to on shortest notice and at reasonable rates Bank of commerce Building THORNHILL Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST FIRE â€" AUTO'Méï¬iLE â€" LIFE Thirty Years Experience Formerly with Heintzman Company Leave Orders at Austin‘s Drug Store Richmond Hill THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE From the Toronto Conservatory of Music, will accept a number of pupils in Piano, Org-an and Theory. Richmond Hillâ€"Tuesday and Friday MRS. MYLKS FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Richmond Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at Dr. W. J. Mason Prentice & Prentice Dr. R. A. Bigford Office Hours 10 â€" 12 am. At Dr. B-igford’s Office Tuesdays 9-12 a.m. Thursdays 12â€"430 pm: 7 Dr. J. P. Wilson VOL. LVII. C. E. Walkington Drso Langstaff =~ Dr. L. R. Bell DENTIST Wright & Taylor Telephone 80 J. T. SAIGEON & ’soN George W. Cross Piano Tuner “YORK COUNTY’S NEWSIEST NEWSPAPER Adelmo Melecci MEDICAL AUCTIONEERS BUSINESS MUSICAL Insurance Phohe Maple 8 Phone 100 Phone 3 Contractor; Benson Ave. 1 BRICKWORK â€" PLASTERING ACCIDENT, SICKNESS, ‘ PLA’I E GLASS, AUTOMOBILE BURGLARY, GUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES TO FARMERS INSURANCE Bowden Lumber & Coal 00., LTD LUMBER OF ALL KINDS Insulex, Donnacona Board, etc. LANSING WILLOWDALE ‘2 HUDSON 0284 CEMENT BLOCKS Chimneys built and repaired Estimates Cheerftu Given Alexander MacGregor K. C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC Office 229 ON ALL CARS TARIFF & NONTARIFF CO'S BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every . THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic Hall Phone 87 â€"â€" Richmond Hill Toronto Office â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone WAverley 2321 ‘A. Cameron MacNaus'hifm. iii 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 &'De1any BARRISTER - SOLICITOR NOTARY Barristers and Solicitors . Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Boles, BA. Percy Biggs AD. 0177 Toronto AD. 0178 1315 Bank of Hamilton Building Yong-e Street â€"â€" Toronto 614 Confederation Life Bldg. Toronto Phone: Office EL. 6029 Res. M0. 2866 BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc. 84 Yonge Street Richmond Hill OFFICE HOURS 9.30 to 12 â€"â€" 2 to 5 At Maple Tuesday Afternoon Bank of Commerce Building 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 ‘. Bloomfield Jordan Offices ' 85 ;Richmond St. W., Toronto 3 " Waverley 5701 ‘ Naughton Block, Aurora. PhOne 147J Res. Elgin Mills. RiChmond Hill 127 Solicitor for: Au‘ora, Richmond Hill, King, Whitcburch, Markhan'i, North Gwillixmbuty and The Board of Examiners. 1008 Federal Building 85 Richmond St. West. Toronto Telephone AD. 1948 McGuire, Boles & C0. Barrister. Solicitor, Notary Public 201 Church Street, Toronto Phone Waverley 4365 Residenceâ€"18 Poyntz Ave" Lansing, Ont. Willowdale 308 J. H. Naughton, K.C. BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, NOTARY BARRISTER 1711 Star Building 80 King Street West, Toronto Phone: ELgin 4879 '. O. & SON A. G. SAVAGE Mulock, Milliken, 'C'lark & Redman Walter S. Jenkins Thomas Delany Old Post Office Richmond Hi] T. C. Newman Barriigers,_Sqlici_tor-§, Established 1880 Cook & Gibson Telephones Phone 153 Residence 148 etc‘ Marriages STIVER-DUNCANâ€"At 38 Charles Street, Toronto, on Wednesday, June 19th, 1907, by the Rev. Dr. McTav- ish, Reuben L. Stiver of Unionville to Laberettia Jane Duncan of But- tonville. TODD-MARSHâ€"On Tuesday, June 25, at Presbyterian Church, Richmond Hill, by Rev. James A. Grant, as- sisted by Rev. J. Anderson, Ella Ade- line, daughter of William G. Marsh of Elms Lea, Richmond Hill, to Frank H. Todd, eldest son of Herbert Todd of Leeds, Yorkshire, England. ‘ Between eighty and ninety pupils and ex-pupils attended the High School annual picnic to Lake Wilcox last Friday) and spent a very pleas- ant afternoon, though a slight show- er threatened for a time to mar the pleasure of the day. In addition to the usual attractions of Lake Wilcox the pupils engaged in a number of field sports. VSupper was served at 6 o’clock and the remainder of the evening spent in boating, swinging and promenading. Quite a number of our lusty} citi- zens attended the raising of Mr. Geo. Dean’s new bank barn near Headford Saturday afternoon. The frame work was in charge of Mr. Riddell of Thornhill. The captains Saturday were Mr. Ed. Lynett and Mr. Albert Williams. The former, with his men, was the first to surround the re- freshment table. It will be remem- bered that the former barn on this farm was burned by lightning in March of this year. From our Issue of June 27th, 1907 The farm of the late A. F. Stout- ensburgh. at Victoria Square, contain-- ing 99 acres, was sold by auctione‘er I Saigeon, to Mr. L. B. Heise, on- Tues- day of this week. The price is $7,- ] 500. Seventy-eight candidates are writ- ing at the Entrance Examinations here. Mr. Shaw, principal of the High School, and! Mr. Thompson, principal of the Aurora Public School are the presiding examiners. Mr. T. A. Lamon is presiding in Schomberg. A gang of men commenced work yesterday on the switch leading from Yonge Street to the C.N.O. station here. By all accounts Richmond Hill will be a pretty quiet place on Domonion Day this year. There will be no public celebration here, consequently many of our citizens are contemplat- ing visiting neighbouring villages on that day. Some will go to the Meth- odist festival at Maple, others will spend the afternoon at the Presby~ terian anniversary at ThornhiII, oth- ers will go to the Markham celebra- ti01., and others to the Bond Lake picnic. Mr. D. Gregory of Oak Ridges has purchased the centre hundred acres of the Larchmere farm. The' receipts of the Temperance- viIl~e corner stone layling amounted to $280.00. North York Schools According to Inspector Davidson’s report to the Council, the school pop- ulation is 7368 of whom 6131 are on the registers. The boys exceed the girls in number by 550. The teach- ers number 108, the average salaries being, for males $374, and for fe- male teachers $307. The report says truancy has disappeared in rural schools and in town and village schools it has decreased, where the { truancy act has been strictly enforc- ed. In the entrance examinations 45 passed out of 76 in Newmarket High School, 38 out of 57 in Aurora, 35‘ out of 52 in Richmond Hill, and ’7 out~of 24 in Sutton Public School. In the leaving examinations all three candidates passed at Newmarket, 6 out of 17 in Aurora, the only candi- date in Richmond Hill passed, and 2 out of 12 at Sutton. 17 out of 19 passed! the prescribed examination at Newmarket Model School. The whole _report shows the schools in the norâ€" thern inspectorate to be in first-‘7 class standing. ‘ Work has commenced for the new High School. A number of old trees have been cut down and cleared away, a large pile of sand has been hauled: and some of the old build- ings will be. removed at once. The tenders for the erection of the build- ing will be opened on the 10th of July. WAY BACK IN LIBERAL FILES ‘FORTY YEARS AGO From our Issue of Juiy lst, 1897 RICHMOND HIfL, ONTAlgg, THURSDAY, JULY Ts'E, 1937. THIRTY YEARS AGO The train was coming- fast; The train jumped off the railroad track To let the boy go past.†The train was cbming fast; The boy stepped off the railroad track To ‘let the train go past.†The teacher said, “It Iacks the dra- matic,†so the boy submitted the fol- lowing: “A boy was walking down the track, “LACKS THE DRAMATIC’W.» A class in English was given- the task of writing four lines of dra- ‘matic poetry. One bay. wrote: “A boy was walking down the track, well Who never such a tale can tell, But they, we fear, will go to Well, the place where there’s no' Winter.†“Breathes there-a man with soul so dead, ‘ Who never to himself hath said, I’ll pay before I go to bed The debt I ’owe the printer; Yes, there are some We know full This will greatly facilitate the ap- prehension of persons who have been conducting wholesale thefts of farm machinery throughout the county du- ring the past few months, it was pointed out by members of the Coun- cil. ~ A recommendation to the Provin- cial Government that it license all junk dealers and buyers in the provâ€" ince, will be forwarded to Toronto by the Hastings County Council, it was decided at their meeting last Week. The herd is said to be a picture and will add to the large number of fine animals now on the Ring- wood estate. It is reported that Mr. Rodanz paid $8,000 to a prominent U.S. breeder for the Hereford ship- ment. Last week a shipment of twentyâ€" one Hereford Cows arrived from the USA. consigned to Mr. George Rod'anz, Ringwood. Wingham made a profit out of re- lief. They purchased a cement tile machine from a bankrupt company and operated it in the basement of the town hall with transients and local unemployed providing the labor. Not only have they been able to sup- ply their own needs but are also selling tile to neighboring munici- palities. ing‘ r‘ inces. The old question:Is a critic a hu- man being? is revived by the anâ€" nouncement that in a vote of 500 American literary critics only one declared that “Gone With the Wind†was the best book of 1936. There are few applicants for more than 600 jobs offered young men in the British Columbia governmentv yet the relief rolls continue extens- All Fascists in Italy are ordered to subscribe to Mussolini’s personal newspaper, Popolo d’Italia. The cir- culation manager of this paper Will be envied by similar press officials throughout the world. Labor troubles are taking many; queer turns these days. In Poland 400 women armed with clubs and um- brellas chasedl back to work their striking men folk who refused arbi- tration proposals. We suppose a pessimist would be a man who from now on will call attention to the doleful fact that the days are growing shorter. News item says a isturgeon booked by an angler in Lake Nipissing was so big that it pulled him into the water. They’re off! The Literary Digest has been ab- sorbed: by another magazine and, ap- parently, the vote it~took before the recent‘presidential‘ election was the last straw. What is happening in Russia con- firms the wisdom of Trotsky: in choosing Mexico as his health re- sort. This is the holiday seasonâ€"remem- ber safety rules and avoid accidents. Crops throughout the district give promise of a bountiful yield. General News & Views This puzzling situation regard- relief exists also in other prov- To-day is Canada’s birthday FISH OUT OF WATER (Warkworth Journal) It is a very easy matter to raise a laugh at the expense of the country newspaper;'but just transplant a city journalist to some small town, and set him to work as editorâ€"in-chief, proprietor, business‘manager, book- keeper, reporter, proof-reader, com- positor, and devil, on the SlabtoWn Slasher, and see how soon the laugh will be on the other side of the fence. HARRY R. ROSE R. u‘r. McNeillie, widely known and popular Canadian Pacific Railway official, who on June 30 snceeds C. B. Foster as passen- ger traffic manager of the Com- pany with headquarters in Mont- real. Mr. Foster retires under the pension regulations after 4-6 years of service. Announcement of Mr. Foster’s retirement and Mr. McNeillie’s promotion was made by George Stephen, traffic vice-president of the Company. Earns High Post 40 Yonge St., Richmond Hill VVâ€"zl‘elephon Office Hoursâ€"Every Monday and Thursday Afte and by appointment Toronto Offices: 100 Adelaide Street West ROSE & HERMAN Barristers-A t-Law iDependable g M11ka i §Your Table i Septic Tanks Installed Pumps Barn & Stable Equipment 74 Yonge Street Phone 92F R. H. KANE ' TINSMITHING FURNACES - PLUMBING HEATING Telephone 133 Thursday Afternoon SINGLE COPIES 6:. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE LOUIS HERMAN N0.