Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 29 Jun 1939, p. 7

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Y. J ‘NE 29th, 193$). THE LI . . ‘ .l -' ’ THURSDA L BER AL RICH IO\D HILL. ONTARIO PAGE SEVEN w*â€" w“ - W W WWW ..-, v e u: ‘ . . col : MOO“ . ll. pt »\l.llll;_1 to me pm to do anyl ' 12;.» -~;1 - . . \ I v 1 7 I Charles Graham ;§ THE LIBERAL SHORT STORY 3 (2.0 b51130: :1],an RIVhRFOlRT imiuomALs ' 'v v ‘ . ‘ "n‘ 1 " ' ' 'un away . . . , 7 MASSEY-HARRIS ,‘ 6 R“ ERSIDE BUS. l939 : lump“. than mm,“ mu... ‘ . 300 VOCONNOR DRHE AGENT : B). 12018 Forresm : ~ I 1 A v - , Humizizm DUN mus ROAD g : c C I \\'(l.\ tie queemst sort of luck, ‘ l.l‘I'l:’l‘l’.]TI?\'(E (‘.\' ppslaNs AND PRICES Farm Imflfimiizti'i,m°h‘“m l 0°00cocoooooooooooomomooooomooooooomm“. fine The lights down the ammo l‘lm‘xll‘lm STONES GIVEN ox REQUEST ' n Pa 5 i 4 I. ; ‘ ‘ v ‘ V v . Telephone RiL’hand Hm 39 That was all it Find on the post- Slwcial search for Mm: At 1mm lstlcmcnW to dance before he,- “was; Agent â€" h. BENTLEY, Richvalc, Ont. Beatty Farm Equipment “am from Mal" Boll) fished it out {Wife 22 week. thev took the loranM {fit him am} Jealous “WY mil . '1': (if hi.< inner coat packet and showed my. up on ,, V0 4‘,“ ,1, The “"1: (or May. but she was HmumH _1_ L, 7 77 7 7 7_ W 7 " ' ' . '.,- . . ‘A ‘ ' ' “A . “ 1n ihllk 1h; ‘13 ' ' - v o _ ’~_ 7 v7 7 7:1: to, Stephanie tllt fllrL night l’ll. m, Pom Try,“ and {he mommy.“ ‘ 17H} tlibml‘it ‘21 uh; ht. had 10.1 ono====o=xom=0=m_“ =o=°==°=¢ dirt}. to tell her why he was in The}. 9mm“ got off and Sufi-Jed i v « L0 -\ 6 “0nd iathm run, meooouoo: i New York. [around the gardens in Ih‘: warm "Zl\\l\i.‘\,1_‘lm; mam. hlm' . SAND â€"â€" GRAVEL or n was around you. “'llell the small .spring nights. It was so bcautliui 4,, h:::.,,;,; 2:]: Honchfid Ogfihvsuwvt : MCDONALD 3 v white lunch room on Seventh avâ€" ,tlml unreal, as if they \\‘Qy‘o all alone 21‘: ‘ {1},” a (M1)” Im‘ “lll' ll“ ( . ‘ ~ - ‘ . . r ll -~ \ v; \» .- : Telephone (32 Thor-“hill :lcnuo was empty 01 customers. Bob inn monasth garden of 1}“. ,,1(; EV)!" h” “y l; 1“ llmm‘ “fill “10. . F NT 1 G ~ ' 0 lsat, as usual. on the last stool, catâ€"‘lworld, with the river far hpjny ‘ l, ' ‘ F o a" “" .1 “‘ln‘ ill“ (’V“".\' rem ape ra‘ez Flt . ' ‘ ' ~ l - - ‘ lli-flhi and nwcr (lltl mind it -\ l i 3 GENERAL CARTAGE o l mg doughnuts and drinking coflee, J :tliom. quicksilvm. bright {ls it caught hi n m‘h N I‘ . . I ' :‘ . m... 3 by Trugk ‘ g as he had for the past. two woeksulthe tide. 1T1” It‘dtl‘f‘kl‘ll‘ (Wint- ' (ll 1' . M ’ Stephanie had taken him on as her It was all so porgoml‘, and To",an H n 11:: f“: (ll lottmg’ 3011 0 . Moo” mm“. Spec“, custom”. Mm. you’nm that Sipphame Often wished Bob < m. < msisnui, but me TilliOlC‘d to your nuasulc from choicest new fabrics STOCK REGISTER Imported Suffolk Stallion DEE~ SIDE HOPEFULL (292) 6700 sired by Blackmore Hopefull 5206. Dam Maggiette (330) 17050, the property of Wm. Glass, Lot 11, Concession 5, Vaughan, phone 79r3 Maple. This horse is a beautiful chestnut, weight 1850 lbs. Will stand in own stable for service for the season. Terms to insure foal, $1.00 service, $11.00 payable on or before March 1, 1940. All accidents at owner‘s risk. I PUREBRED PERCHERON STALLION ' ROBE DALE CARBERT (15692) The property- af William Glass, Lot 11, Con. 5, Vaughan, phone 7913 Maple. This horse is black and weighs about 1950 lbs. This horse will stand in his own stable for ser- vice for the season. Terms to in- sure foal $1.00, service $11.00 pay- able on or before lst March 1940. Persons disposing of their mares be- fore fouling time or not returning them regularly to horse will be charged insurance whether in foal or not. All accidents at owner’s risk. PUREBRED PERCHERON STALLION, MAJOR CHIEF (15032) 3172 The property of Lorne Johnson, lot 24, Con. 5, North York, phone 4614 Maple. This is a beautiful dupple grey Percheron stallion. He has good feet. and ankles and nice flat bone and has a wonderful top. He stands 163/4. hands high and weighs around 1900 lbs. This horse will be home every night but through the fly will go to any one stable, that will phone before 8 o’clock in the morning. Termsâ€"To insure a foal $10.00 payable on or before lst of February next. Persons disposing of their mares before foaling time or not returning them regularly 1:! horse will be charged insurance whe- ther in foal or not. All accidents at owner’s risk. To truck this horse to anyone’s stable will charge $1.00 within 10 miles. Over that will be 10¢. per mile. REGISTERED PERCHERON have worked on Times Square for two years at the same place. you grow to know the same people who (show up night after night, and Stephanie had her own philosophy of life. She believed she could pick dull: ‘the right ones, and she liked ‘iB‘Olb. Tonight their two heads bent over the postcard, with its inked in ar- row pointing to the crowd milling about and the one word, “Me.” mother last week.” Bob drew out Earjother one, of a bus trundling along Riverside Drive. Again there I was the arrow pointing to a figure on top, and the word “Me”. “That's all the word we’ve had from 'her since she left home and I decided to come on up here and hunt for her myself. Here’s a snap- shot of her. She’s only about siev- enteen, eighteen in June.” Stephanie studied the snapshot carefully. Just the head of a smilâ€" ing, pretty girl with a puppy in her arms in a garden a long way from l STA LLION MAR LAET ‘ A son of Laet, grand champion Times Square, back in TenneSSee. “I suppose you’ve tried the hesâ€" pitals, and Missing Persons Bureau? You know, she may have come up here and had an accident or some- thing.” She didn’t want to suggest looking down in the Morgue, but she wondered." \“Srure. I’ve been. all around," Bob replied. “And the hotels and employment offices, every place I ficouldi think of. She’s never been away from home before.” “Did she have any trouble at home?” Stephanie leaned her el- bows on the counter, very serious and interested, as one might well [lie in anything concerning- such a {person as Bob Carter. While he talked about May, she could notice things about him without him catch- ln‘g her at it, his brown eyes and dark lashes, blonde hair, cut very closely, inclined to curl, heavy coat of tan, full, resolute mouth. “I don’t know that she did,” he seemed to hesitate here. “She al- ways, wanted her own way. I found out she took a train around six that night, and she bought a ticket for New York.” “Maybe 'she wanted to go on the stage, lots of them do. This place around here is just swarming with stage struck kids, you know. Try stallion 1921 International, Chicago, the theatrical agencies.” sire of grand champion stallion at’ International in 1023, 1924, 1925,. 1928, 1929, 1931, 1932 and 1936. Laet l sired both grand champion mare and stallion at Chicago International in 1928-31â€"33, a record never equalled: Five of the Dawes Brewery famous black stallions are sired by Lact.: Mar Laet's fashionable pedigree- should appeal strongly to owners of: registered perchcron mares. Ir. ser-1 vice at J. W. Palmer's farm. 1 mile east of Richmond Hill. Terms $12.00,. payable Feb. 1. 1940. to insure a foal. Owner of mare must assume all risk of accidents. Trucking serâ€" vice to your farm. minimum charge $1.00 within 10 miles. additional rate 10c. a mile. ' , But Bob was scrutinizing the pest. card of Riverside Drive. “Somehow I’ve got a hunch this is it,” he said. “She must like to ride on buses, or maybe she lives up that way. I’ve been standing for two hours on the miner of Fifth Avenue. watching them go bv. What time do you get off tonight? I’d like to ride all the way up on one of them." \It sounded like one of the old- livre wavs of getting acnuaintedr and Stephanie felt she knew them all. But this tiwe shc sl’lllle’l and mid him she might be able to go if she could get another giv" to take her place. It was just that she didn’t think he was like all the rest. That was the beginning of a very o Goodyear made and Goodyear guaranteed . . . the Speedway is built to meet the bud- get of the motorist who wants a quality tire at a real low price. Speedway is all of that. See it today ! SPEEDWAY , T l RES your HERE. NOW: ‘AND SAVE-MONEY YOUNG’S Service Station YONGE STREET RICHMOND HILL .v; “Here’s another I got from her‘ could toll he was not. thinking of would stop talkin forever about. i - M 7 . _ g ‘ Aer. not even wlth her hand tucked . a} and Just concomrato on pre- H. in, h;\. “m ,1 th 11‘ I ‘ I n ' l. ‘ ‘ g A (x v ~ ~(\ . . ._ ‘r‘ont Company for a change. She ( ‘ “ “a 1 m0» town to the old brownstone house whch she lived on the second floor with her father. His eyes had the same restless, far-away look in thcml as when slic had first noticed him, perched on a stool at the cml 1' never quite know why she had jump- ed at the conclusion that May wasl his sister. Once she spoke of her that way and Bob let it pass. For Iher part. in the thrill and wonderâ€" .ment Of her 1.99m”: 0V9" lllm~ She the long white counter. When thev Often folly“ 3“ 3130m- Ma.“ lreached the steps of her house she One night. when she wore her new r gathered up courage" ‘ outfit, bought especially to please up ' I i . - m still .orvr - . him, blue With a peasant blouse. all can-t You QQZ~1§W€$ yogi, Egg-inky“ embrmdered and a very demure sort of anfihin'gfin' the wonrld b it“ hmg lif hat that no man comm possibly and I. don’t want to go on: wietli 3V9 ObJeCted to- She “'35 W’amng you any more. I like you still but for Bob to say how pTEt‘ly she look- I don‘t want to 0 0, ,4 , l . ed, but he just hung over the stone 1 ml, find Ma‘._th::1 W:;:;Epposmg Parapet: gaZlng Off at the “V” and i It was precisely whatwhe asked ' . l l iaztr3§dboatl 1:11.111: of Ma.“ .139 himself daily. and suddenly he reâ€" ..h'ome‘ a 9 91" e Saldv f1 0m doubled his efforts, going back over U - _ . his tracks, checking up, as if he I thmk her mother 5 ybl‘eakmg were trying to satisfy his conscience 11:?) under the strain. Its pretty Over the old love that haunted him. a. '11 130 105‘: Your ("713‘ daugme" Stephanie was friendly enough still, like that, as if the earth bad Just [but she womdnit wait on him and, ,7 ’ swglloxzed her up. when he tried to talk with her she rm- et‘WW hgillne :9 W3: 3:1'59‘1‘1' was evasive with him. Dav by d‘ay “1 v 00’ U“ S e Sal a at yv he came to realiy ‘ l ‘ y . W . , . l .e a l ‘I dont think its fair at all for a about life that Son,g.u,::see:n¢t:”f uglrl :to treat her mother like that, and now he got it straight and it 710:30: tMaycS] Sill]; alive.’ wasn‘t May he was thinking of. mg to 00k at her, WW Just the daily sight of a slim fig- earnestly. You Wmfldnl’t do that ‘50 ,ure in a white unifonm became the Y‘O‘I‘lr mo‘t'heri W011” YOU?" most necessary thing in his exist- Well, in the first place, I could. ence’ even though he only caught :‘btéut "MOI/her dled When I was a smile from over Stephanie’s shoul- -' der as she passed him (I ‘ ‘ f} s . . h’islile dld' Wenv “hat do yo: One night he was very late. The t in of me never asking before. theatre crowd had melted awa a- His arm lay along the back of the round. Times Square and in. yjte seat pressmg her shoulders warmly. of herself She found, hersélf W556}, “I dOn’t know a thing about you, do ing him ’ Then, just as the pl“; ‘7 ‘ V ’ v _ . , c I- And here 3011“? got an “‘3 h‘VS' was closing up, he was there, happy tory. Tell me about yourself, W111 and sure of himself as he found her you?” - l I » i ' Just one more 11d ~ Stephanie leaned her head back, he begged 1He ha: Egmilgfgdff' flaturauy» her hat on ‘herlap' “Neth' the greatest importance to tell her mg to tell: man)“ I'm 31‘“ a New â€"before she knew it he had Whisk- York girl. I was born here, am. ed, he]. across Fift}; Avenue and my people came from Switzerland ‘ - there they were on top, in the front My father was a ‘l'amhmaker and seat, as before, his arm around her. hada little shop down on Lexington “Look at this, will yen?” he said avenue around 42nd years ago. We chuckling, giving her a postcard “IV *stnl live in an apartment near there. , . . ' '1" _ _ . got that today fiom her mother â€"â€"â€" ‘ if”: I fmlShed SChOOI I Went to she’s up in San Francisco married Work. Homing exciting 31301”: a“ to some. salesman she fell in lova I)” the}? is Filere' . with back home. She didn’t really I I .flhmkl anything about you .15 disappear. she just eloped, see? And lmllg'h‘ty lntereStlngy’ BOlb returned I don’t care a rap about her. I just deliberately. “YOU know I you fee] Grateful to her for the minute I ever set eyes on you, bl-jngjrg me u; to New York to a remember'that night?" Riverside bus, with V0117 Di, you ‘S'tephame laughed “I kn‘0W~ I suppose this is Fate or just coinciâ€" fll‘ked’ YOU: t00' bill; I thought 331 denCe, honev girl?" Stephanie nev- ,’W81'€ jUSt kidding me aDlUt 105mg er even answered, and the bus your sister. You’d be surprised the rumbled on up along Riverside 'TJu'nnij stories fellows will tell to ' get acquainted.” ! Bob was silent, staring ahead of them, as the bus headed down Fifth revenue. “I suppose you'd have cut me off, just like that. if you’d found out I was fooling, wouldn't you?" “Maybe I would, but no ore could .jolke about anything so serious as that. I was awfully glad to Le able to help you.” Bob sighed deeply. “You helped me, all right, and I didn't lie to you â€"â€"May was really lost, still is. But life is mighty queer. Here I drop everything, throw up any job to ;f0hl‘€ up to New York to hunt for her, and thenvl meet you." He took his arm from the back of the seat, and faced her. his face resolute and worried looking. ‘Lis- ten here. Stephanie." he said, “I' can't go {long this way, and I've been afraid to set you straight on something, for fear I‘ll lose you. KLEINBURG & NASHVILLE W-I. The theme of the regular June meeting was “Our King and Our Queen", the roll call being “Where I saw the King and Queen”. Mrs. Ed. Miller gave an interesting pap- l-er. “Our King and Queen as Good Samaritans”. Miss Margaret Watâ€" son instrumental, “A Welcome to our King and Queen” and Mrs. Benstead as a contest conducted a questionnaire about “The Royal Family”. During- the afternoon plans were made for a picnic to be held in July at the home of Mrs. George Irwin, Nashville. 21!} STRAWBERRY FESTIVAL AT KING CITY h A Strawberry Festival will be u ‘ V v_ H, ‘ eld on the United Church gz‘ounds,‘ COP”: I >h‘mld ha‘e mm 3"“ light King City on Friday, June 23 under away. .ilie auspices of King United Church “Told me what-" as he hesitated. “ A‘ Supper served from 5.30 ST. ‘Eiitertaimnent at. 8 o'clock by the “B , . , - q . ut you can take it. he ironed ' . “I mean would you minI aiiv‘diné . Chapman (omen Party Of Tmlontc' . _ A h . A a {A hearty welcome to all. about inc that dzdn't Seem to bet quite on the level? What I'm try- RICHMOND HILL ing to say isâ€"do you care for me that much?" She laid one hand over his, “Sure I care. Bt‘ll, plenty. I know yOu‘ve been worrying over something he- sidcs your sister." “That's it." he broke in. eagerly. “She isn't my sister. You ju>t nat~ T‘VO‘IN_ONE' ACBIE AND urally supposed she was. She was SL‘DDEN DEATH BUG my cirl back home. And when she disappeared up north here. I was alâ€" most crazy. I made my mind Id find her if it was the as? thing, the“ prevent blight. KILLER l l i l ' They kill bugs and posi- t‘. p i 9 a) I ever did. It was all I could “pink- . ‘ ' “ ‘ s ' ' 1" < ‘ ‘ ‘7 I, of until I met You. I walked the [Dal 1 9 Phone Evtrb' 8““ streets hunting for iter. Her nuviner‘ l l l l l i "nwdwzunwunu. ooooooooooooooooouowoomowo Dressy Flannels for Sports Wear Call in and see us and be convinced of the moderate cost of made-to-measurc clothing Cleaning 7 and Pressing We offer to the district an unexcelled cleaning and pressing service. Phone and our driver will call, or take advantage of our attractive Cash and Carry Prices- RICHMOND TAILORS J. A. GREENE Highest Quality Tailoring For Men and Ladies Phone 49J Richmond Hill go=o==o=o====ao=o==o=o===or=o===o=o l l l l CEO OFFICIAL ‘ ROAD SERVICE STATION -‘ (24 Hour Service) GENERAL REPAIRS Cities Service Garage 29 Yonge Street Phone 12 Richmond Hill Resourceful Men Consult LIBERAL CLASSIFIED ADS T HE up-and-coming citizens who get things done know where to turn when they want something. . . . They consult the Classified Col- umns of The Liberal. . . . If they do not find it listed there they then turn to their phone, tell The Liberal to insert an ad . . . and get results. . . . If you want a job, a house, an automobile, a garage, a room, some work done, furniture re- paired or sell a house, automobile, horse, cow, radio, etc.. etc. . . . Use The Liberal Classified Ads. . . . Try The Liberal Classified Ads. . . . . They are wonder workers. . . . THE LIBERAL mv'bnm Mn. ‘1... . Phone 9 Richmond Hill l E i l

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