____â€"â€"â€"â€"~ WANT ADS COVER AND DISCOVER A MULTITUDE OF NEEDS 'VOL. LXII. MUSICAL Adelmo Melecci Fijom the Toronto Conservatory of lime, will accept a number of pupils _ Piano, Organ and Theory. mond Hillâ€"Tpesday and Friday MRS. MYLKS George W. Cross Piano Tuner Thirty Years EXDEIIEI‘ICE Formerly with! Heintzman Company hive Orders at Austin’s Drug Store Richmond Hill VOICE Richard Edmunds 21 CENTRE ST. WESTâ€" Phone 264 BUSINESS Wright & Taylorâ€"f FUNERAL DIRECTORS AMBULANCE SERVICE Richmond Hill Phonesâ€"15 and 142 Night Phone 15 Branch Offices at THORNHILL AND UNIONVILLE Campbell Line BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC. 42 Yonge Street ’ RICHMOND HILL Telephone 186 Thomas Delany formerly of Wm. Cook, Cook 8: Delany BARRISTER - SOLICITOR NOTARY 1008 Federal Building 85 Richmond St. West, Toronto Telephone AD. 1948 Cook & Gibson Barristers, Solicitors, etc. Wm. Cook, K. C. â€"â€"â€" FORTY YEARS AGO From our Issue of Aug. 9th, 1900 The vital statistics for Vaughan Township for July, as registered at the clerk's office, are 5 births, 6 deaths and no marriages. Wednesday was New/market‘s Civic Holiday. The Firemen ran an (xcursion to Niagara via Motiopol- itan Railway and steamers Chippewa and Chicora. Six crowded cars passed through this village before 7 o’clock. Two lacrosse matches were played in the park Monday afternoon. Both visiting teams were from Newmar- ket, and they were opposed by Rich- mond Hill teams. The Newmarket juniors were easily vanquished, the home team winning by 10 to 1. Fol- lowing the junior match the seniors took the field. The match was clean and at times fast. The Newmarket men were in fine condition. and won the match on their own merits from the home team, the score standing 8 to 4. Mr. Ed. Doyle of Newmar- ket refereed the game. The timeâ€" keepers were Messrs. J. McConaghy and W. Howard, and Messrs. W. Cane and Wyc. Trench captained the teams for Newmarket and Richmond Hill respectively. Marriages EYEIR-McLEANâ€"By the Rev. A. Williams, Toronto, on Tuesday, Au- gust 8th, Mr. Walter Eyer of Rich- MEDICAL ' Dr. R. A. Bigford Office Hours 9â€"10 a.m.. 12â€"2 & 6â€"8 p.m. and by appointment Ralph B, Gibson, K. 0. Toronto Office: 912 Federal Bldg. 85 Richmond St. West. Richmond Hill, Thursday foronoon Maple, Thursday afternoon Money to loan at Current Rate 8. Bloomfield Jorda BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, Etc. 84 Yonge Street Richmond Hill OFFICE HOURS 9.30 to 12 z to 5 Evenings by appointment Telephones Ofï¬ce 229 Morgan L. Piper Barrister, Solicitor, Etc. UINIONVILLE Wednes y 3-6 pm. TH NHILL Wednesday 7-9 pan. Toronto Office â€"â€" 45 Richmond St. W. WA. 5923 ‘ McGuire. Boles & Co. Barristers and Solicitors Hon. W. H. McGuire James A. Boles. B.A. Percy Biggs AID. 0177 Toronto AD. 0178 1315 Bank of Hamilton Building Yonge Street Toronto Mulock, Milliken, 'Clark & Redman Bari-ism, Solicitors, etc. Miceâ€"711 Dominion Bank Builing, mthweot corner of King and Yonge Streets, Toronto. , w. a. Milliken, KC. 11. A. Clark, Kc. K. E. Rednnarr, K.C. W. P. Mulook,K.C. A. Cameron MacNaughton, K.C. BA RRISTER McKinnon Building 19 Melinda Street Toronto, Ont. , Alexander MacGregor K. C. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC 614 Confederation Life Bl . TorOn‘m Phone: Office EL. 029 Rec. M0. 2866 T. C. Newman BARRISTER SOLICITOR, NOTARY PUBLIC Richmond Hill Every THURSDAY AFTERNOON 93 Yonge Street Immediately North of Masonic Hall Phone 87 Richmond Hill Toronto Office â€" 18 Toronto Street Phone WAverley 2321 Walter S. Jenkins \Barrister. Solicitor, Notary Public ' Room 66. 18 Toronto St. Toronto .Phone WAverley 2321 ' Residenceâ€"21 Hollywood Ave. Lansing. Ont. Willowdale 3.8 SAND â€"- GRAVEL WM. McDONALD Telephone 62 Thomhill Residence 148 centre st. E. VIAPLE â€"â€" Phone 3 Drs. Langstaff .22 Yonge St. Richmond Hill DR. ROLPH L. LANGSTAFI‘ Office Hours 10 â€"â€" 12 a.m. DR. JAMES R. LANGSTAFF Office Hours 9 - 11 a.m.: 6 - 8 p.111 ‘R. LILIJAN C. LANGSTAFF (Womin and Children) Office Hours 1 - 3 p.m. Appointments made Phone 100 Drs. Wilson & Wilson Richmond Hill DR. J. P. WILSON OFFICE HOURS â€"â€" 1 -4 pm. daily Mon., Wed. & Fri. Evenings 6 â€" 8 DR. W. J. WILSON . OFFICE HOURS â€"â€" 9 - 12 am. daily Tues., Thurs. & Sat. Evenings 6 - 8 Telephone 24 Night: 147 Dr. W. J. Mason DENTIST YONGE AND ARNOLD STREET PHONE '70 RICHMOND. HILL, ONTARIO Dr. C. A. MacDonald DENTIST Successor to DR. M. C. MacLACHLAN Open Monday, Wednesday and Friday Evenings Other Evenings by Appointment Office over the Post Office Woodbridge Phone 77 Bank of Commerce Building THORNHILL Dr. M. J. Quigley DENTIST Telephone 80 R. H. KANE AUCTIONEER Licensed Auctioneer County of York Auction Sales conducted on short notice and at reasonable rates Richmond Hill Phone 921’. Prentice & Prentice AUCTIONEERS Jt H. Prentice, 415 Balliol St. K. C. Prentice, Markham Toronto. HYland 0834 We are prepared to conduct sales of every description. Farms and farm Itock sales a specialty. Farms bought and sold on commission. All sales at- tended to on shortest notice and con- lucted by the most approved methods J. Carl Saigeon 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 From Maple Gravel Pit GENERAL CARTAGE by Truck A. S. Farmer LICENSED AUCTIONEER 1" YEARS EXPERIENCE , Gomley R.R. No. 1 mond Hill to Miss Euphemia (Effie) McLean of Hagerman. THIRTY YEARS AGO From our Issue of Aug. 4th, 1910 The Fire Brigade went to Welland on Wednesday and competed in some of the races. There were 2'2 com- panies present. Richmond Hill did not win any of the prizes, though they made very good time in the hose reel and hook and ladder races. the time in the former being 51 4/5 seconds. and in the latter 50 3/5 seconds. Dr. A. S. Thompson has purchased the goodwill and practice of Dr. John Wilkinson, and will take up his resi- dence in the house formerly occu- pied by Dr. Wilson. Dr. Thompson comes highly recommended as a sucâ€" cessful physician. The strike on the G.T.R. has caus- ed considerable inconvenience to Markham Village merchants and others, who are having the goods shipped by Metropolitan R.R. to Langstaff and teaming it across from Yonge Street. The Metropolitan is using a big C.N.O. car to bring freight up Yonge Street. The regular meeting of the coun- cil was held in the council chamber on August 2nd, 1910. All members present. Minutes of last meeting read and confirmed. Accounts were presented amounting to $174.07 and were ordered paid. I A letter was read from the T. & Y. R.R. in reference to their poles through the village. Also a report on the water supply of the village by Mr. Glauleitz, consulting engin-, eer. The report was not extremely". encouraging as regards water supply from springs. but advised the drill- ing of artesian wells as a test. The clerk reported receipt of a requisition from the Board of Edu- cation for $1700.00 for Public School purposes to be collected from Rich- mond Hill. No. 3 Markham and No. 4 Vaughan. and 8800.00 fer School purposes, 8300.00 of which is to be used for equipment. Simsâ€" Sandersonâ€"On motion it was decid- ed to drill a test well with as little delay as possible. The clerk was instructed to write to Mr. Kitchen of Almonte with re- ference to a knitting mill proposiâ€" tion referred to in a letter from him. Council adjourned. ': g Australia will only be permitfed sufâ€"§ ficient gasoline to run a maximum! of 39 miles per week, starting on Sept. lst. Picture Hitler as Cupid!...A lady Heels for Victoryâ€. in Bristol, England, agreed to billet two soldiers. When they arrived, she was embarrassed to find that one of them was her divorced hus- band whom she hadn’t seen for 3' years...They have already married again. Freewill wartime gifts of the Do- minion Government total nearly half a million dollars, and are still pour- ing in. The gifts are largely from people of small means. An employee of the Canadian Na- tional Railways in Winnipeg is go- ing to reduce his monthly wages to those of a private soldier and turn over the balance to the Government for the duration of the war. He is a naturalized Canadian of Italian descent. Chalk up another victory for Brit- ain's blockade...An announcement from Germamcontrolled Amsterdam says that 152.000.0001 laying hens. two-thirds of Holland's p0ultry, will be slaughtered before Sept. 15 beâ€" cause of a shortage of chicken feed, formerly imported. A legless pilot of the R.A.F. who is leading a squadron of Canadians at present, has shot down a German bomber. This pilot was injured in a pre-war plane crash. lost both legs, but refused to die. He got fitted with artificial metal limbs. played games such as tennis and squash, and when war broke out, he argued his way back into the Air Force. Another reason why we can- not lose. ‘Jand to furnish an additional insur- High, Elie lecral. RICHMONDâ€"HILL, ONTARIO TI'I'RSDAY, AUGUST 8th, 1940. WAY BACK IN LIBERAL FILES {Wars on Timely Topics DON'T ROCK THE BOAT! The hour calls for steadiness and quiet courage. We can do the taskl a>signcd to us, with everyone ‘pull- ‘n: his Weight'. Panicmongers should be severely dealt with, for fear is a contagious disease, As for those who seek to exploit racial or part- isan prejudice at a time like this. we would cite the suggestion of a patriotic French-Canadian. His rem- edy was to have four or five of the worst offenders publicly executed on St. Jean Baptiste Day as a proof that French-Canada wants no trait- ors in its ranksâ€"Three Rivers Chronicle, Que. l RECORDING THE FAMILY TREE A fine idea is now being under- taken by some families who have a book in which is recorded the fam- ily tree or lineage back to the ar- rival in Canada of the pioneer an- cestors. Such a record book will be invaluable to future generations. Its compiling should be undertaken ear- Iy, otherwise many valuable items of interest will be lost for evenâ€"Cree- more Star, Ont. NEW INCOME FOR THE \VEST? With markets for some of Westâ€" ern Canada’s agricultural products [of the war, it is very vital that oth- er sources of revenue be expanded to enable the West to make a maxi- mum contribution to the war effort, .ance policy in postwar days. Petro- leum may be destined to be one of these sourcesâ€"Alameda Dispatch Sask. V NO MORE “SUITCASE†LEADERS Dr. Stuart Jaffary stressed value of making the school the cen- tre of community education and re- creation, and the importance of ridd- ing the countryside of the “suit- ‘case†teacher-“.The term could be applied to others in any community in church or society where leader- Iship of the “suitcase†variety. There certainly could be a “suct- case" minister, but Heaven forbid him from any communityIâ€"Cold- water News, Ont. is â€"________â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" Interesting Sidelights on the War __________â€"_’-â€"â€"â€"- Drivers of private automobiles in! It takes 50,000 tons of wood every year to make British women's shoe heels, and this requires many ships to transport itâ€"ships badly needed for munitions and essential supplies. so a new slogan ‘over there’ is “Low In a recent air raid on the Eng- lish southeast coast, a bomb almOst cut the village inn in half. This annoyed the landlord, for he had to carry out the dartboard and hang it on a wall outside, so that the local darts title match could be continued. The “Salvage Sallies†are hot on the trail of silver paper, old iron ,sinks and bedsteads, even old bones, any sort of scrap, in fact, that may be utilized for munitions. The Sallies are a regiment of British lassies and ladies recruited to tell housewives what and how to save. Capt. Seymour Berry (son of Lord Camrose, newspaper magnate) re- Icently arrived at the scene of an air raid on an English coastal town, and expressed amazement that a kitchen boiler should have been hurl- ed right into the middle of the street by the force of a bomb ex- plosion. He and brother officers officers found it a convenient seat for the greater part of the night. In the morning a naval unit arrived and pointed out to them that it was a magnetic mine. RECRL‘IT 8,300 MEN A WEEK IN CANADA During the five week period be- tween June 1-1 and July 21 over 42.- 000 men were recruited for active service in the Canadian army or the equivalent of two and one half divi- sions. On July 21 there were 31,607 troops outside Canada and 101.965 in Canada, a total of 133.572. 1‘: I materially narrowed as a result of '- the misfortunes of the earlier stages the I“ ‘ STILL DOING BUSINESS Italy's reonicing at the fall of France in the belief that it heralded the immediate end of the war with an Axis success, has proved prema- ture...Italy seems to forget that, while the junior partner of an agâ€" gressive enterprise has dropped out. the senior partner is still doing business, not only at the old stand, but in many distant parts.â€"Grimsby Independent, Ont. SCIENCE AND THE FARM \Vith an industry dependent so largely on overseas trade. and with these markets greatly reduced and future demands extremely uncertain, technical agriculture has before it a great field of work. Canada’s larg- est market, the home market, should be more fully exploited; much atten- tion has been given to selling apples and poultry in Great Britain. prob- ably too little to selling them in On- SINGLE COPIES 50. $1.50 PER YEAR IN ADVANCE No. 6. Ithrio and the Prairie Provinces.... ‘Careful planning by agricultural ‘lcaders and by individual farmers iwill be absolutely necessary in order ifor agriculture to play its part suc- cessfully in the years aheadâ€"Pic- tou Advocate, N.S. Add to list of similes: As useless as a Minister of Defence in the new French Government.â€"Petrolia Ad- vertiser-Topic, Ont. LOYALTY'S RALLYING POINT Others may effect to scorn our fealty LO Royalty, may refuse to see how monarchy and democracy can ex1st Within the one national being, but to us. it is a very clear concep- tion. It 15 not only to a man that we pay our homage. Britain has had bad Kings who have inspired en- thusiastic loyalty, because of the position they held. At this critical period in our history, we have a 00d King, and thus to allegiance is a ded personal love and devotion, which serves but to deepen and enrich the Spll‘lt: Britons will always fight for Britain, but it is the physical head of the state, the enthroned person- age of majesty, the carefully guided leadership of a kindly ruler, which brings out all that is firm and rock- boundhall that is great and invinc- ible. 1n the British character.â€" (From the Windsor Star.) \/ . (“Le ,THE NESTS ARE POPULAR SINCE THE BOSS FEEDS I ’ A HEALTHFUL CONCENTRATED SPRING RANGE. TOO. at LESS FEED COST? what they need to make eggs. programme. it ncr supplements needed. cost. Phone 10, The Elevator MADE TO TilUil ive prices. latest styles to suit your i clothing requirements. your disposal. made. Phone 49.] Let us take care of ;.;_ “Are YOUR layers on this common sense, ECONOMICAL ' feeding programme â€" this plan that GETS more EGGS Whole Oats, in hoppers and Scratch Grains. It saves extra work. Put your layers on this common sense low cost feeding system NOW. ‘ Get more better quality eggs and get them at lower feed $2.60 per cwt. I. D. Ramer & Son .-»._-. I . Mex; ~ '1. ATTRACTIVE SUMMER SUITS We have a fine assortment of attractive summer suit- ings, which we make to your measure at most attract- Newest colors and materials, ndividual personality. We invite you to make our store headquarters for your Our personal service, backed by years of experience in the clothing business is at If You have not yet experienced the thrill of distinct- ive Richmond Tailors clothes we invite you to give us a trial today. You will be surprised at the mod- erate cost â€" really no more than you pay for ready- RICHMOND TAILORS' J. A. Greene Pressing Requirements. will call or you may take advantage of our low cash and carry prices. Hens fed Ful-O-Pep Egg Mash the Ful-O-Pep Way get just I It is a simple, labour-saving Just one-third each of Fulâ€"O-Pep Egg Mash, No wet mash Richmond Hill MEASURE-u and the Richmond Hill your Cleaning and Our driver