I Set of Scales, capacitv 2000 lbs. 1 Farming Mill 1 Hay Rack 1 Brooder Stove 1 Iron Kettle for Furnace 2'Iron Kettles. 1 Crowbar 1 Scoon Shovel 1 Fleurv Plow . 1 Gang Plow 1 Scuffler A Quantitv of Machine Oil 1 Set of Team Harness 1 Set of Single Harness 4‘ Collars 4 Halters Several Pieces. of Harness A Quantilm of_ R099 Lot 25, Con. 4 Markham 1% Miles East of Victoria Square 1 Quantity of Hay 75 bus. of Barley 1 Low Wagon 1 Spring- Wagon 1 Set Heavy] Bab Sleigh-g 1 Set Light Bab Sleighs 1 Ton Buggy 1 ( 1 Cultivator 1 H: 1 Set of Iron Harrows I Turnin iDrjIl‘ Saturday,Oct.9 1 Black Mare, GP. 1 Bay Mare, H.D. CATTLE ‘1 Rex! Cow with Calf by side 11J~ersey Heifer with Calf by side 1 Jersey Cow due time of sale 1 Red and White Cow bred June 15 10 Yearling Steers 2 Yearling Heifers ‘ 6 Calves 8 months _old '1‘ sfei‘gami‘.’ De Lava! 1 on Drum‘ Washstand 4 Washs’cands 1 Book Case in Sections 12 Kitchen Chairs 1 Ironing- Board 1 Bake Board 1 Churn with Butter Mixer 1 Chum - 1 Bureau 1 Mirror in Frame Several Yds. of Linoleum Several Yds. of Congoleum Several Picture Frames Several Jars 1‘ Findlay Cook Stove 0th?i articles too numerous to men- on NO RESERVE AS OWNER IS RETIRING A. S. FARMER, Auctioneer. L. L. NICHOLS, Cierk. At the same time the house and lot consisting of 4 acres with buildings and fruit trees will be offered for sale. Terms made known on day of sale. BROTHERTON’S Steamshipng‘ï¬G Special Sailings to the Homeland by Canadian Pacific, Cunard and Anchor-Donaldson lines at Lowest Rates. Photos and Passports Secur‘ All enquiries conï¬dential We look after your wants right from your home. Phone Willowdale 63J Office Step 6 Yonge S+., Lansiqu PIGS Yorkshire Sow bned July 15th IMPLEMENTS Oak Dining-mom Suite Birch Mahogany Parlour Suite Iron EnameL Beds, complete Set of Springs Kitchen Cabinet Glass Cupboard: Centre Table Wooden Bed with Springs and Auction Sale of FARM STOCK, IMPLEMENTS, FURNITURE, ETC. HOUSE AND LOT Commencing zit 1.30 p.m. HORSES The . F. BOYNTON Full Line of FUEL also Lime, Cement, Tile Phone 188 TERMS â€" CASH Telephone 62 Thornhill From Maple Gravel Pit PAGE 81 V GENERAL CARTAGE by Truck Yards at Burr’s Mill HAY AND GRAIN SAND â€"â€" GRAVEL WM. MCDONALD The Property. of JonesCoalCfl. FURNITURE '1 Cutter 1 Hay Rake Has Saved Newsprint Industry For the Province of Ontario Premier Hepburn gave a clear and sane defence of his Northern Ontario timber policy when speaking recentâ€" ly at Lindsaiy. “Pulpwood,†he said, “like cattle or wheat reaches matur- ity and should be harvested then. Otherwise it goes to Waste. That is why_we are cutting timber at the proper stage and at the same time providing work for people in the north and revenue for the province. By doing this, besides providing rev- enue for the province and) employ- ment for people in the north we are creating a demand in the north for supplies from the south. Coupled with this should be a farâ€"sighted policy of reforestation to assure a perpe- tual supply for mills. This is the plan the government is carrying out.» When this government took office whole commuities in the north were on relief and that section. of the pro- vince presented a sorry picture of stagnation and privatlon. Newsprint mills of the Norther;- United States were rapidly moving south to south- ern pine. Had this movement con- tinued the main market for northern timber would have been lost and the newsprint industry of Ontario might have disappeared. Under these cir- cnmstances we authorized for the time being eyqport of pulpwood for these mills. We also reclaimed for the people timber empires which had been given to friends of Tory gov- ernments and which were being held by them for speculation. BM this‘ pol- icy we put 25,000 more men to work in woods operations and‘ turned a de- HEPBURN AND TIMBER POLICY ficit in the lands and forests» depart- ment into revenue of $4,000,000. Next year we anticipate there will be 50,000 men at work in the bush and that the provincial timiber reveâ€" nue will reach $7,000,000." The skeleton of what is believed to be a Neolithic human being who roamed Saskatchewan 10,000 years ago was found in a gravel pit in Vaughan Council Saskatoon 1.00 P.M. for the transaction of General Business DATED at Maple this 80th day of September, 1937. 7A__A-,. A. 7L Baker’s Repairshpp Monday, Oct. 4th. CALL AND SEE US FOR HARNESS, COLLARS, ETC. ALL REPAIRING PROMPFI'LY ATTENDED T0 Shop Closed 6 pm. MON., WED, FRI. CALL AND SEE US ISAAC BAKER mph, 0m. The regular the Vaughan will be held 0m. ' ER. No. 2 Minute Maple 1063 ,J.WM. McDONALD, Clerk. llar October meeting of :han Township Council held in the Township Hall, Vellore THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO [WAY BACK IN I LIBERAL FILES FORTY YEARS AGO From our Issue of Sept. 30th, 1897 Commissioners Arthur Quantz and Andrew Miller met on Saturday at 4 o’clock to receive tenders for the building of a. new bridge in the Pomona Road, directly opposite the Queen’s hotel, Thornhill. The con- tract was given to Mr. Robert Clark for $29.00. The tenders ran as high as $92.00. A petition is in circulation in Markham Village asking the Council to take over the Public Library and make it a free library. The Sun thinks that a Village grant of $75 a year will be sufficient for running expenses; and that nothing more will be required as the Ontario Govern- ment practically bwys» all the books for the library. If Markham shows as much economy as Richmond Hill does, the Sun is quite within the mark. Our village grant is $75, the library and reading room are open three nights a week, and we pur- chase every year $100 worth of new books for the library, and magazines, periodicals and newspapers to the aâ€" mount of $50.00. citement, as many of our citizens scarcely knew how a 700 ll). hell would be raised to such a height. The trick was easily accomplished, how- ever, and the metallic vessel went up without a hitch. The new bell which will be used for village pur- poses as well as for the ,Public School, was manufactured by the Mc- Shane Company of Baltimore, Md. Its tone is B. flat, and when it ’was rung- for the first time on Friday evening at six o‘clock the verdict was that its tone was loud, clear and musical. The erection of the new bell which was placed in position in the belfny' on the Public School building on Fri- day afternoon, created quite an ex- citement, as many of our citizens North Toronto has assessed the Metropolitan Street Railway. Com- (Advertisement) Fellow citizens of Gwillimbury Township, who know Earl Rowe best, are enthusiastic admirers of his sterling character and gift for leadership If you had a large scale map of Ontario, you Would ï¬nd Gwil- limbury Township marked in the County of Simcoe. But you would have to possess a very large scale map indeed, to locate the town of Newton Robinson. This little dot of a town is beginning to ï¬nd itself in print frequently these days. The citi- zens feel that this is only to be expected because one of their own boys, Earl Rowe, is going to be, they are conï¬dent, Pre- mier-Elect of Ontario the night of October 6th. Some of the old-time proverbs are wearing a little thin these modern days and that well- kriown oneâ€"“A prophet is not without honor save in his own country†means nothing, simply nothing, to these sturdy citizens of Gwillimbury. They honor Earl Rowe because they know and admire him; the oldsters have been watching him for twenty-two years, ever since- he was elected a Township Coun- cillor on his let birthday. Reaches Cabinet Rank They start them young in pub- lic service in these Ontario towns but only one in ten thousand forges ahead to the Provincial Legislatureâ€"â€"only one in a hun- dred thousand keeps going until he reaches Cabinet rank at Ot- tawa. Such a man is Earl Rowe â€" and Gwillimbury Township has followed, with pride, every step of his progress. The most important events in this young man’s twenty-two years of public service can be briefly summarized: WISâ€"Elected to Council of Cwillimbury Townâ€" 1916â€"Islected Reeveâ€"re- elected each year for ï¬ve years. l923â€"Elected to Ontario Legislature. 1925â€"Elected to Federal Parliament. 1930â€"Reâ€"elected. l935â€"Promoted to the Cab- inet by Honourable R. B. Bennett, then Prime Minister. Reâ€"elected to Furlpml Parliament. MAN HONORED IN HIS OWN COUNTRY A Public Servant For 22 Years! 450 pany per THIRTY YEARS AGO From our Issue of Sept. 26th, Newmarket’s tax rate this will be 37 mills on the dollar, mills over that of last year. The “G_oo;l Estate" 011‘ Mill Street has been sold .by Mr. H. A. Nicholls, Real Estate agent, to Miss Nancy Brillinger Sf Sutepï¬enslvilLe, Welland County. The price was $2,500. an“ vvu†v.7 . _ The English Church was well fill- ed last evening, the occasion being the annual Thanksgiving service. The church was neatly decorated with fruit and grain and vines. An ap- propriate’ senmon .was‘ preached by Re; Canon Dixon, and excellent mu- sic was furnished by the choir of Trinity Church, Toronto. __-.. ‘ The surveyors of the C.N.O. and officials of the Radial line were here this week staking out the proposed line to connect with the C.N.O. HEN IS ARISTOCRATIC Munichâ€"A hen that will lay eggs onLy in the'drawing‘ room is owned by a farmer at Kitzlegg. The hen marches up to the house and cackles. The farmer’s wife opens thedoor and the hen goes to the drawing room, where she lays the eggs. The fowl {hen cackles for readmittance to the yard Evening 82W Richmond Hill JUST UNLOADED CAR 0F 0 A T s FULL LINES 0F FEEDS DR. HESS TONICS TONE UP YOUR FLOCKS AND HERDS Tuesdays â€" â€"- â€"- North Wednesdays â€" â€" Village Thursdays â€"- â€"- â€" South THE» MILL (Advertisement) 193oâ€"Unanimously selected as leader- of the On- tario Liberal-Conser- vative Party. A Happy Family Earl Rowe, whenever his pub- lic duties will permit, hurries back to Newton Robinson. For there he ï¬nds awaiting him his sturdy red brick houseâ€"his wife and three ï¬ne childrenâ€"his 225 acres of farm landâ€"â€"his pureâ€" bred Yorkshire swine, Durham cattle, registered Clydesdalesâ€" his old Township friends. One cannot hope to under- stand a public man solely by ob- serving him in the midst of pub- lic affairs in Toronto or Ottawa. Follow Earl Rowe back to New- ton Robinsonâ€"~have a meal with him in his big kitchenâ€"walk with him over his fertile acresâ€" see him feeding his swine and his cattle â€" talk with his aged par- ents, who live across) the road. Then you would realize even more fully than ever before how completely this man possesses that something without which all else is so much chaffâ€"and that something is CHARACTER. Heredity must get some of the credit. The Conservative leader comes from old British stock which settled in Simcoe County many, many years ago. His father, still active at 88 and his mother, eight years younger, were farm folk, and Earl Rowe, when little more than a youngâ€" ster, bought his farm from his father on credit and paid every cent of his debt from his proï¬ts as a dirt farmer. Virtues of the Soil On his typical Ontario farmâ€" in his typical rural Ontario resi- denceâ€"Earl Rowe leads the regular routine of a farmer when his Parliamentary work dces not call him to the cities. His is a friendly homeâ€"made happy by the presence of his wife, and his children, Jean aged 17, Bill aged 13 and Lennox aged 8. Here are enshrined the homely virtues of the soil â€"â€" those virtues which since earliest days have given strength of character to so many of Canada’s greatest public serâ€" V 8‘1’ Deliveries Phones: a, total of $107" Day 139 Ontario 1907 year or 3 1 Bay Gelding, H.D. 1 Bay Mare, H.D. The above team are well matched 1 Jersey CowISiyears, due Dec. 6 1 Jersey Heifer, 2 years, due Oct. 311 1 Jersey Calf, 10 months old 1 The above cattle are T. B. tested. HENS 1 About 55 year-old White Leghornl hens â€" laying 6 IMPLEMENTS 1' 1 6-ft. Masseyâ€"Harris Binder 3 1 5-ft. Deerimg‘ Mower 1 1 10-ft. Horse Rake 3 2 Waggons 1 Hay Rack 2 1 Set Sleighs 1 Garden Seeder 1 Set Harrows, 4 sections Fleury 10 in. Cutï¬q Box 1 Fleury No. 12 Wheel Plow 1 Wilkinson Gang Plow 1 Massey~Harris Di5c Two-horse Spring: Tooth Cultivator Cockshurtt Scuffler '3 De Laval Cream Separator, 600 1b. capacity ' ‘1 prhers Incubator. 150 egg cap. 1 H Iâ€"Hâ€"Hâ€"‘Pâ€"Hâ€"‘bâ€"Hâ€"‘Dâ€"i One Man Sag: 1 BUCk 33W 2 Storm'bgdi‘s [WinflowiBoï¬s 2 SCOOP Shovels 2 Ladders A Numb-er of Pictures 2 Pitch Forks 1 Manure Fork 1 12_gauge Doub1e Banded, shotgun 1 Stable Shovel 1 3mm? 1 Fire-nlace, coal grate and. screen 1 Garden Rake 1 40-281. 011 Druml Set of Fire Irons 2 Galvanized Water Troughs Number of Window Shades 1 Grind Stone 1 Lawn Mower 3 pair Window Curtains 1 Hand Com Pl‘affltel‘ _ 1 Dresden Clock and Candle Stick, 50 lbs. U.F.O. Binder Twme over 150 years old 1 Long Handig _Sh0vg1.;‘ 1 Solid Oak Leatbelf_InIay top L1!)- 11 2 Hoe; 1 Iron Wheelbarrow irraryr Table, Antique ' HARNESS 1 Chest of Drawers 1 Set Work Harness and Collars 2 Dressers 2 Washatandl 1 Broodor House 12’ x 12’. may bel “White†Sewing Machine taken down in sections 1 Hall Rack 1 Small Cabinet 1 Hen House, 6’ x 10’ 1 Electric Heater GRAIN, HAY AND VEGETABLESI Floor Lamp 2 Table Lam-pg About 25 ton mixed hay in stacksA Quantity of Linoleum 1/8 Acre Mangels 1 Bed Lamp 1 Single Iron Bed 1/2 Acre Standing- Ensilage Corn Cooking- Utensils, Dishes and other A Quantity of Cabbage m Gar-dell articles too numerous to mention Terms: Cash. ARTHUR LAWRIE, Clerk. MISS RUTH PATTON On Highway N0. 7, 1/2 mile west ofThornhill MONDAY, OCTOBER 4th, 1937 This has been written of Earl Rowe by a iong-time associate: “The warmth of his person- ality is contagious. One cannot come into his pres- ence without feeling his force and sincerity, tem- pered by a natural kindli- ness and interest in his fel- low-men and their prob- lems. With his splendid ideals, backed by long and honourable Parliamentary experience, he is uniquely equipped to make a great contribution to the public life of Ontario.†Newton Robinson isn’t seeing much of Earl Rowe these days. (Adyver’cisement) AUCTION SALE of FARM STOCK, IMPLEMENTS ANTIQUE FURNITURE, Etc. A Warm Personality You _C_afl Trust. BOWE VOTE CONSERVATIVE ARTICLES HORSES CATTLE Issued by the Liberal-Conservative Party of Ontario CaSh. Sale Starts 1 o’clock sharp RIE. Clark. J. CARI: SAIGEON, Aucï¬om. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 30th, 1937. HON. EARL ROWE THE PROPERTY OF 2 Rows of Raspberry Bushes A Quantity of Beets A Quantity of Carrots_ A Quantiqv‘ of Potatoes m Rows and other dardemVegetables HOUSEHOLD GOODS Wringer Wash-stand, 2 Tubs, 1 Wringer Acme Electric Stove Kitchen Chairs Extension Dining-room Table Kitchen Tables Flat Top Kitchen Cupboard Arm Chairs 1 Morris Chair Rocking Chairs Solid Oak Dining-room Suite, Antique 3â€"piece Chesterfield Suite Philco Cabinet Radio Solid Walnut Bedroom Suite, Bax Spring and Mattress for Bed, Antique 3 Wooden Bed steeds with Spring: and Mattresses 1 3/4 Iron Bed 'with Spring and Mat- tress 1 Onvx Clock inlayed with Bronze 1 Barrel Churn 2 Screen Doors 2 Storm Doors- 4 Window Boxes A Number of Pictures 1 Iii-gauze Double Barreled. Shotgun 1 Fire-nlace, coal grate and. screen Hrâ€"IH HMWHWIâ€"Hmrâ€"râ€" Quebec Heater Happy Home Electric Washer and, It is a blessing that he is still in the prime of life and health, for he has mapped out a speak- ing program which will keep him moving back and forth throughâ€" out Ontario until the eve of October 6th. His friends are glad of this because they know that every man or woman who sees and hears Earl Rowe, who shakes his hand, who comes under the influence of his warm personality, will say, “This is the type of leaderOntario needs.†'For that’s the kind of man Earl Rowe isâ€"likeable, sincere, earn- estâ€"a statesman whose good character and good judgment are written indelibly in the record of his twenty-two years of public service. (AdVVerSOWW “n