Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 19 Feb 1942, p. 8

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{FEEâ€"Eitp supply [I _-_ .â€" urn“ Now that it is going to be hard’ It: a girll to buy a girdle, many a man will- harve to figure how to thin her figure. Phone PAGE EIGHT IO$O =01 1936 FORD SEDAN . . . . . . ‘ 1929 FORD OOACH (perfect 13 Plate (Standard) exchange . . . . . . . 13 Plate Heavy Duty, exchange . . . . . 15 Plate Ford or Chev. type, exchange 15 Plate Heavy Duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 17 Plate Heavy Duty . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . Welding equipment with torches, Garage Jacks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40 Gal. Steel Hyboy Tank with pump . . . . . . TRY OUR NEW BUDGET PLAN FOR AUTO REPAIRS, PARTS & ACCESSORIES 86 AUTO WRECKERS NATIONAL BATTERIES VKHORYLOAN SUNDAY FEB.22. Lo=o=o=o==o=3 When the hay burner comes in general use, we wonder if they will have courtesy cards entitling 01d- Ddbbin to a peck of oats? condition) truck & tank Richmond Hill . . $425.99 . . $135.00 lE'I'S KEEP fllln EMMA ewyyW/am PINKY-WHITE DIMPLES; a button of a nose; wee, slender fingers clutching at your coverletâ€"what kind of a world is this to which you will awake? Your life, we hope, will be rich in love and laughter. God forbid that your Canada should ever come'under the heel of a ruth- less barbarism, where babies are born to be the future shock troops, or the mothers of a brutal, military race. We promise that you shall inherit a Canada blessed with the liberty our fathers bequeathed to us. You shall be free as we are free. $4.95 $6.95 $7.00 $10.95 $12.95 $65.00 $15.00 $10.00 THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL. ONTARIO More than 5,000 European fugi- tives, and millions of fugitive doll- ars rescued from wrecked enterprises albroad, are finding a haven in Can- ada in the greatest industrial immi- gration the Dominion has ever known. Already an estimated $20,- 000,000 has been put to work in a wide assortment of industries. The fine Bohemian glassware that was the pride of Czechoslovak artistry and- was made only in that country is now being manufactured in Ott- awa under supervision of the B0- hemian experts who made it abroad. A group from Germany who rescued $700,000 is establishing Manitoba’s first beet sugar plant. A German manufacturer of period furniture now has a Montreal factory. The man who headed a State silk mon- opoly in Hungary is manufacturing fine silks in Ontario. The influx is helping Canada’s war efforts against Germany; a munitions plant at Sworel, Quebec, where $3,000,000 has already ’been spent, is virtually the transfer of part of the great Skoda gun plant from Czechoslovakia; the Bata Shoe Company at Frankfort, Ontario, it CANADA’S REFUGEE INDUSTRY turning out precious gauges used armament work. It is estimated that at least $500,- 000,000 of refugee money is seek- ing employment in Canada. Many of these refugees would have preferred the United States, but were barred by rigid immigration restrictions. Even if they had been able them- selves to enter, it would have been next to impossible to take with them the specialized workers as important to their product as is their capital. Canada is favoured because refugees see there the stability of British in- stitutions and justice, and the pro- tective proximity of Canada’s neigh~ hourâ€"their rbig‘gest remaining mar- ket. There has [been nothing like this industrial immigration since France drove out the Huguenots in the 17th century and laid the foundations of British supremacy in textiles and the great watch and clock industry of Switzerlandâ€"Frederick T. Birch- all in NY. Times. Are you a War Saver? If not, why not? So we gladly lend our money to our country in this crisis. We will buy Victory Bonds to the very limit. We must and we will make sure that the threat of a brutal way of life is banished forever. How To BUYâ€"Give your order to the Victory Loan salesman who calls on you. Or place it in the hands of any branch of any bank, or give it to any trust company. Or send it to your local Victory Loan Headquarters. Or you can authorize your employer to start a regular payroll sav- ings plan for you. Bonds may be bought in denominations of $50, $100, $500, $1,000 and larger. Salesman, bank, trust com- pany or your local Victory Loan Head- quarters will be glad to give you every assistance in making out your order form. National War Finance Committee, Ottawa, Canada 1941 EXCELLENT YEAR FOR GREAT-WEST LIFE -Els,ewher»e in th’s issue appears an advertisement showing some of the preliminary figures from the 50th annual statement of the Great-West Life Assurance Company, published by N. H. Brown, a representative of the Company in Richmond Hill. Passing the half-century mark in business, the Company has paid to policyholders and [beneficiaries a toâ€" tal of more than a quarter-billion dollars. Payments to policyholders and beneficiaries during 194,]. were $15,884,814; of this amount $113.18,- ‘4190 went to living policyholders. Business in force climbed to a new high total of $660,457,610, increas- ing over $20,000,000 with new busi- hess placed in the year amounting ‘to $62,766,744, an increase of $9,364,- 879. Assets now total $180,608,957, up $7,096,628. A SIMPLE CASE That your gwernment needs your money does not need to be argued here. War costs rise every day. So does the danger of losing the war. It is quite plainly a case of pay or be defeatedâ€"as simple as that.â€" London Evening Free Press. A41 THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 19th, 1942. Lectule by Dr. Blake of Christi! St. Hospital On Friday, February 20th at 8.15 p.m. at the Thornhill Public School Dr. Blake, Neurologist on the staff of Christie Street Hospital will speak on “Neurological Problems as Related to the War”. Dr. Blake has had a wide experience at Christie Street and Neurological clinics throughout America. This- will be the sixth in the course of lectures on “The Emergencies of War” spon- sored by the Thornhill Red Cross, and the general public will be ad‘ mitted if accompanied by a member of the class. Historic Trinity Church will cele- brate its hundred and twelfth anni- versary on Sunday, March 8th. Rev. F. D. Coggan, M.A., Dean of Wy- cliffe College, Toronto, will preach at the morning service, while Rev. W. E. M-ackey, Vicar of St. John’s Church. Weston, will conduct the evening service. Mr. C. Watson and family and Miss Irene Archibald of Schomberg spent Sunday with friends in the village. Valentine’s Day was celebrated by a large group of people at a tea and home-baking- sale sponsored by the Young Ladies’ Guild of Thorn- hill United Church. The sale was a great success and all who attended enjoyed themselves thoroughly. The Sunday School ‘and Congre- gational Supper will be held March l6th at 6 o’clock in the Sunday School room (If the United Church. The children will provide the entertain- ment. The World Day of Prayer will be observed in the Anglican Church at 3 o’clock Friday, February 20. All women of the community cordially invited. On Wednesday evening last the C.G.I.T. held an open meeting in the United Church Sunday School room. All those who attended were greatly surprised and pleased at the work they have already done. I THORNHILL UNITED CHURCH Sunday, Feb. 2I2nd “0 come, let us worship and bow down: Let us kneel before the Lord our Maker.”â€"â€"Psalm 96:6. Rev. Eldridge A. Currey, B.A., B.D.V, Minister S. Floyd’ Davies, Organist and Choir Leader Miss Ruth Hicks, supplying 10 a.m. â€" Sunday School. Lesson [ Topic. Jesus Aprpoints and Teach-es The Twelve. Golden Text, “Never I man so spoke."â€"John 7:46. 11 a.m.â€"â€"lMorniing Worship. Sermon subject: What God Does For The Soul. 230 ‘p.m.â€"Men’s Class in the church. 7 p.m.â€"Evening Worship. Sermon subject: What Is Religion? FELLOWSHIP PERIOD Immediately following the evening service; you are invited. “The real difficulty with thousands in the present day is not that Christianity has ‘been found' wan-t~ ing, ‘but that it has never been seriously tried.”â€"H. P. Liddon. “The Lord is nigh unto all them that call upon Him, to all that call upon Him in truth. He will fulfill the desire of them that fear Him; He also will hear their cry and will save them.”â€"Psalm 145218-19. SOMETHING TO BE CHEERFUL ABOUT It; is a gratifying indication that Canadians generally, due to the widespread increase in employment, and with the industrial payroll at a. new high, find themselves alble to lay aside a portion of their earn- ings for future use. Very wisely they are not spending all they make, and this saving is an essential de- velopment in the country’s war economy. It requires no gift of prophecy to predict that before this world-embracing war is ended the wisdom will be‘amply demonstrated. Saving now guarantees future secur- ity.â€"-Halifax Herald. LaGrove Beauty Parlor OPEN EVENINGS All Types of Permanent Waves Phone Thornhill 102 THORNHILL YOUR LOCAL COMMITTEE

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