Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 6 Aug 1942, p. 4

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241 YONGE ST. ”73 ST. 1 L0. WA. 4501 _ Canada’s Leading Radio Company Phone 86 Ford V'8 New Carburetors (Special) Ford Model A Rebuilt Motors, Exchange $49.50 Ford Model A Rebuilt Carburetors, Exchange $4.95 PARIS AUTO SUPPLY AUTO WRECKERS ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE egcta Crisners Electrosave 10 Point Control Large Storabln 56 Ice Cubes TORONTO RADIO 8 SPORTS ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS TRADE-INS ACCEPTED MORE WOOL IS NEEDED for Canada’s War Efiofl Frigidaire, Westinghouse, Crosley $225.00 and up Reconditioned Refrigerators $149.00 and up PAGE FOUR Carleton Duflerin Durham Gray Hunting: Huron Lambton Total ................ 474,200,000 lbs. Total ................ 1,086,000,000 lbs. DEFICIT - - - - - 611,800,000'bs. You can see that with shipping space at a premium and with every merchantman a target for enemy submarines, the situation is indeed critical. More wool must be produced at home and it’s up to Ontario farmers to help produce it. The Ontario Department of Agriculture is working to effect an increase of 25% in this province. To do this, all present flocks must be kept, and in addition, 110,000 ewe lambs from the 1942 crop must be kept on the farm. If every present flock owner kept three ewes from this crop, most of the increase would be obtained. But since many sheep owners cannot accommodate any more animals, the Department is asking Ontario farmers to establish 1,000 new flocks which will absorb all surplus ewe lambs. Your Agricultural Representative will be able to put you in touch with men who have lambs for sale or men who wish to purchase them. In establishing 1,000 new flocks, it is intended that expansion take place by counties in proportion to the present sheep population. You will see what expansion must be accomplished in your c0unty in the lists below. CATEGORY "A" Renfre' Waterloo Lennox & Addinzton 5 More Flocka per Simcoe Wentworth Lincoln Township Required Vidoria Munkoka - CATEGORY “C" Nipiasing Bruce Wellington 2‘45“?“ York L-yf.rf:_ii3f£ . :55 §2fi2Â¥~k --I a- A Manitoulin Middlesex Ontario Rainy River North American Wool Produdion I94] Canada .................. 19,200,000 lbs. United States ...... 455,000,000 lbs. PRODUCING more wool to clothe Canada’s fighting forces and her civil population is a vital task which deserves the earnest consider- ation of every Ontario farmer. A brief study of the wool production of North America and of world conditions occasioned by the war reveals an alarming situation that calls for straight thinking and forthright speaking. THE RAM POLICY Any farmer starting a new flock of 15 ewe lambs or more may secure a ram for two years on loan from the Dominion Government. CONSULT YOUR AGRICULTURAL REPRESENTATIVE For complete information about securing ewes, ewe lambs, or rams, or about any part you can play in helping Canada produce more wool, consult your county Agricultural Repre- sentative or W. P. Watson, Live Stock Branch, Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto. CO-OPERATE IN ONTARIO’S EFFORT TO PRODUCE MORE WOOL. HELP INCREASE THE SIZE AND NUMBER OF ONTARIO SHEEP FLOCKS HON. P. M. DEWAN MINISTER 2 More Flocka per Township Required Frontenac Huldimand Perth Peterboro Hanan CATEGORY "B" LIMITED 1173 ST. CLAIR W. L0. 272! EASY TERMS Richmond Hill I More Flock per Township Required Algoma Brant Dundal Elam Glengmy Grenville Haliburton Kent North American Wool Consumption I94] Canada .................. 109,000,000 lbs. United States ...... 977,000,000 lbs. $11.95 W. R. REEK DEPUTY MINISTER Lennox & Addinzton Lincoln Muskoka Nipiuing Norfolk Northurnberland Oxford Parry Sound Prescott Prince Edward Ruuell Stormont Sudbury Temilkaming Thunder Bay Welland Extra care should be taken in the buying of shoes these days. They should be the correct size and Width to ensure plenty of foot room for walking. What is more, care in buying will mean added life to shoes. The first rule in making shoes last longer is regular polishing. A good polish- protects shoes by acting as a kind of weather conditioner, and makes them more pliable. This doesn‘t mean that rubbers and galâ€" oshes shouldn”t be worn in wet wea- ther. Shoes which are wet are eas- ily put out of shape. When shoes get wet and muddy they should be washed) off with a damp cloth and wiped dry. Shoe trees should be inserted immediately and then shoes should be allowed to dry slowly, but completely, away from direct heat. As soon as they are dry they should be given a good polish. Regular polishing and the 'use of shoe trees are of first line import- ance in extending the life of foot- wear and in maintaining a proper appearance. People are walking a great deal more, now that the tire and gasoâ€" line shortage is what it is. Shoes, therefore, are playing a much great- er part in everyday life. Vaughan Township roads are in excellent condition and members of the Municipal Council at Monday’s meeting expressed satisfaction with the amount and quality of the work done this year. “I think getting the gravel on early in the season is an excellent idea," said Reeve Scott and all members agreed that it was a good plan. Keep the maintainer go- ing now and we will have good roads all year, they said. “We must re- member," .said‘ councillor James Rob- son, “that the decreased traffic is. helping our roads. There’s a lot less traffic than in other years.” GAS. TIRE SHORTAGES PUT SHOES ON SPOT People Walking More, Must Learn to Care for Footwear VAUGHAN ROADS IN GOOD SHAPE THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO Mr. LeFerle pointed out that the rostal employees are undertaking this task without any extra pay and in addition to their usual duties. For this reason. he said, it will be helpful if the public lends assistance wherever possible in seeing that the' rubber gets to the post offices or the depots which in many cases will be set up near the post office build-1 mg. The drive is being timed' to coin- cide with the end of the summer resort season, when summer resiâ€" dents can readily part with such things as the old tires on their boat docks. At the same time it will be' a convenient period for a scrap rub- ber cleanup in Quebec and Ontario farms and rural homes. Before the campaign opens resi- dents in the rural areas of the two provinces will receive from the post offices post cards describing the de- tails of the collection system and pointing out the various items about their homes that should be contri- buted to the War effort.‘ Rubber tires from summer resort wharves and docks, other discarded! automobile and tractor tires and) tubes, rubber boots, old‘ swimming tubes, hot water bottles â€" rubber articles of any and all descriptionsI are required in be reclaimed andl tr'ansformed‘ into necessary equip-l ment for the armed services. LIBERAL ADS GET RESULTS If you have something to sell, hell 6000 readers about it through a. classified “and” in The Liberal. The cosit ‘is smali and you will get re- sulrbs. During the campaign rural deliv- ery patrons are being asked to pile their scrap rubber at the foot of their mail boxes, to be transported by the rural mail contractors» to their post offices. Patrons of rural post offices are requested to bring their scrap rubber to the post office when calling for mail. “Once again,” said: Mr. LaFerle, “the post office has provided an ex- ample of the highest type of co-op- eration. I am confident that with the help of this outstanding trans~ portation link the campaign will be a marked success and- will tap an excellent source of much-needed rubâ€" ber.” This campaign will apply only in the two provinces, but may be ex- tended to the rest of the country later on. Residents of cities and towns are excluded from the cam- paign because this would bear too heavily on post office facilities and because urban residents have local salvage committees to carry out the work of rubber collection. Nearly 10,000 rural post office employees have been enlisted in a campaign beginning August 24 and continuing through September 8 to collect all scrap rubber in Ontario and Quebec rural and summer resort areas, it was announced today :by Hon. W. P. Mulock, Postmaster Gen- eral, and Charles LaFerle, National Salvage Director. Rural mail contractors, stage ser- vice contractors and‘ rural postmasâ€" ters whose services are being volun- tarily given for the drive are repre- sentative of more than {”000 post offices and over 3,000 mail routes. They will perform the vital task of seeing that the scrap rubber donat- ed by the public is collected. The nearest salvage committees will in turn. see that it reaches the govern- ment-owned F‘airmount Company, which handles the prodruct. RURAL AND SUMMER RESORT RESIDENTS URGED TO CO-OP- ERATE IN GREAT SALVAGE EFFORT â€"â€" NEARLY 10,000 POST OFFICE EMPLOY- EES PARTICIPATING Men, Women Over 40 Feel Weak,Worn, Old 1’) Does weak, rundown. exhausted condition make you [eel lagged out. old? Try Os: . Contum general mnlumtunulmts. omen 11 ed after 30 or 10. guppllea Iron, up. phosphoxlm. vlun'nn uyy..-.. Help: you get. normupo mpggzvfin vltaui‘zfri troduatorz alumna: blots only 3 sale at w 100d drug stores ovorywhere. Want Normal l;ep, Vim, V’itality? ‘ Six Room House in Richmond Hill, modern, with large lot. This attractive Richmond Hill home is to be sold to close an estate and is worth investigating. Richmond Hill Home APPLY AT THE LIBERAL OFFICE FOR SALE TO CLOSE AN ESTATE RICHMOND HILL FRAME COTTAGE, lot 54 ft. by 150 ft., 5 rooms with pantry, washâ€" room and back kitchen extra, hard and soft water inside, hydro, cellar, furnace, garage, chicken house, gar- den with fruit trees and asparagus bed. Apply 47 Richmond St., Rich- mond Hill. DeLAVAL MILKERS. Immedriate: delivecry on a limited number. Also. Woo-db Grinders and Coolers, Wgw Maire Coolers. Toronto Radio 824 Sip-orig, 241 Yonge St, Wa. 4501. SEVEN ONLY Model V820 heavy steel electric welded furnaces, brand new, except radiators; have been used in testing; absolutely guaranâ€" teed. Will sell and' install at a good reduction. Apply H. McMillan, Armitage, Ont. GASOLINE RATION BOOK for car license No. 2M802, book No. 831143912. Reward. Apply Liberal Office. $115.00 MONTHLY, new four-roomed' cottage, back kitchen, 1/2 acre, near stop 22 Yonge Street, Richvale, 64 Edgar Avenue. Owner will be on property Sunday, August 9th. LLOYD’S CORN SALVE contains Benzocaine. The new local anaes- thetic. Puts corns to sleep immedi- ately. Get a jar to-day. Scotchmer's Drug Store, Richmond Hill. SEVERAL BALLS of binder law-inc; blacksmith’s portable forge; greenâ€" house wood material to build lean-to about 20 feet long. J. H. Young, Steele’s at Bayview. HIGH QUALITY and fine service at prices that mean a saving can be had at MOR’LEY’S, Richmond Hill’s Self Serve Grocery, 69 Yonge Street (formerly Skeele’s), phone 40. NEW TRACTOR manure Spreaders; binders, new and used; tractor plows, new and used; three 10â€"20 tractors; home made sling ropes; also hay track equipment. Floyd R. Perkins, phone 21w, Richmond Hill. BTUJLLD‘ING about 15x60, Manitoba siding, double wall, suitable for h-ens. Apply L. Stephenson, Oak Ridges. FOR SALE OR RENT 1986 FA‘RJG‘O 1/2 ton. panel. Apply Chas. White, Elgin MilLs. 6 LEATHER SE‘ATEZD dining room chairs; 1 sideboard; music cabinet; veranda hammock; piece of linol- eu'm' about 10’ x 12’. Apply 10‘ Eliz- abeth St. 12 SOW‘S due this and next month $45 and up.. Also 1 boar. A. Olesen, phone Richmond Hill 45122. A USED HOT WATER BOILER, in MAN’S BICYCLE with 2 carriers, $12; also a quantity of red‘ currants. Apply Chas. Baker, 222 Oak Avenue, Richvale. UlSED LUMBER ALN‘D B'RlIICK. Ap- ply 4th house south or Urange home, Yonge St. 5,0 FIVEâ€"WrEEK-OLD New Hamp‘ shire cockerels. Apply phone 232â€"J Richmond Hill. good repair, suitable for bungalow Apply T. H. Trench, phone 17‘5w. McCLARY ELECTRIC RANGE McCLARY ELECTRIC RANGE in good condition. Phone 2324 Rich- mond' HiH. RATESâ€"Five lines or less, 25 cents for first insertion and 15 cents for each subsequent insertion. Over 5 lines 5 cents per line extra each insertion. IF CHARGED 7 CENTS PER LINE. THIS IS THE DAY OF ADVERTISINGâ€"MAKE THE MOST OF IT Classified Advs. PERSONAL FOR SALE LOST THURSDAY, AUGUST 6th, 1942. GIRL for farm home for couple of months. Apply at Liberal Office. MAN for harvest work, $3.00 per day, will provide transportation $0 and from work in the Richmond Hill district. Apply Bermor Farms, teleâ€" phone Richmond Hill 4446. White, 28 Edgar Ave., Richvale HORSE suitable for light garden; work; also one-horse plow. Partiw culars to Box 202 Liberal Office. TRANSPORTATION to Toronto by gentleman leaving Richmond Hill between 7 and 7.30. Apply at The Liberal Office. DEAD HORSES & CATTLE want- ed. For free pick-up phone RIC'H- MOND HILL 7 0R KING 24r4 0R MAPLE 2937. We pay telephone- charges. GORDON YOUNG LIMIT- ED, Toronto, phone AD. 3636. PRINTING for every occasion. If you need printing of any kind con- sult THE LIBERAL, phone 9, Rich- mond Hill. ALL KINDS FURNITURE repairs. upholstering. cabinet work, wdod carving. Estimates given. N. G. VanDyke, 33 Hunt Avenue. The Second Instalment of the current year’s taxes is due on GIRL'S BIJCYCILE in good condition. Apply W. F. Sheppard, 46 Balsam Ave., Toronto. A YOUTH 15 available for tempo; ary work, harvest help, near Richâ€" mond Hill village preferred. Phone 169 Richmond Hill. STORE AND DWELLING at Wilcox Lake, $25.00 per month with oppor~ tunity to make money. Possession- Sept. 1. Apply phone Richmond Hill 14112, J. Vanek. PAPE-Rtl-ILANGIER to decorate five rooms. Phone 1114. FARM, 150 acres, goodl farming dis- trict, 20 miles northwest of Toronto; possession March 1, 1943. Apply er- enings, J. G. Malloy, 7611A Euclid Ave., Toronto. Pay promptly and avoid the penalty which must be added after AUGUST 20th Richmond Hill, July 30, 1942. Used Cars (Reconditioned and Guaranteed) 1932 FORD V-S 2 TON TRUCK - Long wheelbase. Oven-hauled. Little Brothers FORD AND MERCURY SALES AND SERVICE RICHMOND HILL PHONE 174 TAXES MISCELLANEOUS TO DIG WELL. Apply Mrs CARS SOLD “As Is” FORD A TUDOR $125 ALSO 2 GRAHAMS 2 CHEVROLETS BARGAINS AUGUST lst WANTED $275.00 TO RENT R. LYNETT, Village Treasurer.

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