i=0 fl ARMORIES AURORA Miss Audrey I. Stephens, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. E. T. Stephens of Richmond Hill, is cne of 202 stuâ€" dents recently listed on the honor roll of the College of Business Ad- ministration at Syracuse university. She earned average grades of “B†or higher during the spring semester which ended in June. Miss Stephens, who has completed her freshman year at Syracuse, is majoring in journalism. Miss Ella Burns, a popular brideâ€" to-be was the recipient of a beauti- ful floor lamp recently when a numâ€" ber of her friends were entertained by Miss Lee Emmerson at a card party and shower in her honor. The members of the local Bell Telephone staff at Ya. supper party held this week presented Miss Burns with 21 Sandwich Toaster. A euchre under the auspices of Vaughan and Richmond Hill Veter- ans Women’s Auxiliary will be held next Tuesday afternoon at 2 p.m. at the home of Mrs. Fenner, Oak Ave. 0:0] Mrs. J. E. Smith and Miss Betty ISmith left Monday for Saskatoon, Sask. where they will attend the an- nual convention of the Canadian Weekly Newspapers Association. Ml‘. and Mrs. Fred Mitchell of Miami, Florida, are visiting with Mrs. Mitchell’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Moore, South Yonge Street. Mr. Paul E. Angle attended the annual convention of the Canadian Florists and Gardeners Association in Montreal this week. Miss Jane Vanderburgh, who has been recently appointed to the Wil- berforce teaching staff, is spending a few days at Cedar Hill Farm. Butler (announcing in a loud‘ voice): Three cents!†Mr. Bob Clarke -of Wilmette, Illi- nois, is visiting with his grandpar- ents Mr. and: Mrs. Thomas Moore, LSouth Yonge Street. Mr. Penny (to butler): Announce Mr. and Mrs. Penny and daughter. A. W. Procter, M.L., of Fingal, was a week-end guest of the Rumbles of Cedar Hill Farm. Mrs. Iï¬'edi Clark of Syracuse, NY visited this week with Mrs. A. G Savage. Mr. W. D. T. Atkinson of Ottawa visited this week with his mother Mrs. Frances Atkinson. Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Trench and Miss Margaret Trench are holiday- ing at Lake Rosseau. Davies’ Dry Goods Store THURSDAY, AUGUST 13th, 1942. Thursday, August 27th CARNEVAL & DANCE Simplicity Patterns .. We still have a few large size Ibex flannelette blankets, 70 x 90, pair ............................. $3.25 Ladies and Misses’ Wash Print Dresses, sizes 14 to 44, price from ............................. $1.29 War conditions are causing a scarcity of many house- hold commodities We have, however, secured a few dozen of “Gotham†full fashioned hosiery, sizes 9 to 10%, price .................................. 98c. Also a few dozen of other well known makes, sizes 9 to 10%, summer shades, price ...... 89c. to $1.25 Russ Creighton and His Variety Band Richmond Hill Admission to Dance and Draw 25c. DRAW FOR VALUABLE PRIZES GAMES & FUN FOR ALL Aurora Boys Band SOCIAL AND PERSONAL MISS E. ORME 0:0 ‘ Newmarket Lions†Club annual lcarnival will be held next Wednes- day evening, August 19th. Several ‘iof the Newmarket Lions helped in {Richmond Hill with we dance last ’night and it is expected a large lcrowd from this district will take in lthe Newmarket event next Wednes- day. There is 3380 in lucky number prizes and many feature attractions. NEWMARKET LIONS‘ CARNIVAL'. NEXT “'EDNESDAY The funeral was held from her late residence, Friday, August 7th at 2.3-0 p.m. Interment followed in King cemetery. DIED KERER, Edna L. Cain â€" Suddenly, at her late residence, lot 35. conces- sion 7, Vaughan township, on Wed- nesday, August 5, 1942, Edna L. Cain, beloved wife of J. Albert Kerr, dear mother of Bill, Ted and Margaret, in her 52nd year. The first regular dining car ser- vice in North America was estab- lished in Canada seventy-five years ago on the Great Western Railway, now part of the Canadian National Railways, according to a writer in the August issue of the Canadian National Magazine. The following year, 1868. George Pullrrran built the first regular dining car for the ser- vice which now bears his name. day afternoon, August 6th, 1942 at North Toronto by the Rev.. E. J. Taylor, Marie Stovella, only daughâ€" ter of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Gillies, Thornhill, to Peter Grant Ferguson, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Peter Ferguson, London, Ontario. ENGAGEMENT Mr. and Mrs. G. Wilfrid K-effer, Maple, Ont, announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Dorothy Ag- nes, to Mr. John Henry Walker, son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. S. Walker, Newmarket, Ont. The marriage will take place early in September. Mrs. J. F. O'Neill, Elgin Mills and Terence attended the Matinee starr- ing Gloria Swanson in Toronto on Saturday and were received by Miss Swanson back stage after the show. Mrs. O’Neill nursed Miss Swanson through a serious illness in New York some years ago. MARRIED FELRGUSON-GILLIEIS ~ On Thurs- CANADIAN RAILWAY ms 6. M L- Miss Ella Burn: visited with Mrs. Lever at Flesher-, ton and walked in one Derry Dayi Parade Celebration at Markdale un-i Popular Bride of Tins Week Pre- der the auspices of Victoria R.B.P.‘ sented With Set of Dinnerware No. 282. ‘ __ Telephone 119 . l5c., 200., 25c. HAD FIRST DIN ER 0:0 LIBERAL ADS GET RESULTS If you have s-omeï¬hi‘rmg to selfl, te‘l'l 6000 readers about it through a. classified “ad†in The Liberal. The- cost ‘is small» amd you will get re- sullts. As a little token of our regard and good will, Miss Blurns, we who are gathered here and many others who could not be present, ask you $0 accept this gift, and may it be a means of having you remember us all in the years to come. However, our concern is not so much with these things now as it is with the great future before her. A week hence and there will be no more Ella Burns among us; in her place will come Mrs. Vincent Mc- Cullough. Increased opportunities for service will come to her in her new role, and with the eagerness that always is shown by her, she will seize these opportunities and make the most of them. Greater op- portunities will come to her also for the perfection of those personal qual- ities that now endear her so much to us, and of these opportunities, too, we know she will take the great- est advantage. So to-day, on the eve of her wedd- ing, we salute her, and rejoice with he1 and the good man she is to marry and, with all our hearts we wish them every happiness. Her influence even at that un- canny hour, however, remains with us. Sorely tempted though we may be, we do not yank the instrument from the wall or cut the wires. And why do we not do some such thing so that once again we may sleep in peace. Is it not because we fear the soft voice of reprimand that will come from the lips of MiSs Burns? Can we not, even as the ringing of the bell continues, hear her say? “Are you not ashamed of your- self? That little telephone bell has a quality all its own. It may not have the tonal quality and appeal that characterize chimes, but it is a medium through which a great service is rendered to you and all telephone patrons.†’ Presentation To 1 Miss Ella Burns And after you hear the soft voiced Ella in one of these famous little speeches, you are bound to say, or rather you would be bound to say to yourself, had you yanked the phone from the wall: “The gal is right. Often and often I have sat and listened eagerly for that little bell to ring and summon me to hear scme voice I wanter to hear.†So thus does our gracious guest make her exacting and difficult dut- ies less onerous. As the saying goes now-aâ€"days, she makes us take it and like it. We, in the rural parts where party lines flourish, can scarcely be blamâ€" ed if we do not agree that it is al- ways an all round blessing, espe- cially at 2 and 3‘ a.m. when it may ring and ring not for us, but for someone else who cannot be awak- ened. Perhaps a key may be fc'tmd in that observation to the reason why Ella Burns has so many friends. In business she has one of the most exacting and difficult positions in the community. Among other things ‘t is her duty to make people like the telephone and consider it one of man- kind’s blessings. A large number of friends of Miss Ella Burns of Richmond Hill gathâ€" ered Sunday afternoon at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Russell P. Fox, Mill Road, and presented her with a beau- tiful set of dinnerware. The pre- sentation address was read by Mr. Russell P. Fox and all present joined in extending best wishes to the p0p- ular bride-to-be who for several years has been local manager for the Bell Telephone Company. The‘ committee arranging the event in addition to Mr. and Mrs. Fox in- cluded Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Greene. Poets have immortalized the smile of graciousness and kindness and have put high value upon the laugh of good nature and sincerity. One of them has ventured upon a thought the truth of which is uni- versally accepted, namely that the person worth while is he or she who will smile when everything goes dead wrong. ' The presentation address read by Mr. Fox was as follows: We are gathered to honour a lady who may be truly described as the friend of everyone she knows, but who, in addition, has become one of the personalities of Richmond Hillâ€" a most interesting and fascinating personality. THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO The crowd at Wednesday night’s street dance was estimated at well over 3000. There were over 400‘ more paid admissions at the gate this year than last year. You can’t believe everything you hear nowadays, an dnot all that you see with your own eyes. For travelling the bride wore a rose crepe dress, navy hat and ac- cessories. On their return from points west they will reside in To- ronto. R.C.A., son of Mr. W. J. Hack- ing, B.Paed., and Mrs. Hacking of Toronto. The ceremony was per- formed by Flt.â€"Lieut. Henry Cotton against a background of palms, fern and gladioli. Mrs. Ruth McGillivray of King played the wedding music. Given away by her brother-inâ€"law, Mr. W. Preston, the bride wore a gown of white sheer With fitted bodice, finger tip veil caught with white gardenias and she carried an arm bouquet. of red roses and white bouvardia, and her only ornament, HACKINGâ€"McCARTHY On Saturday, August 8th, Kim- bourne United Church, Toronto, was the setting for a pretty wedding when Marjorie Gertrude McCarthy, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Mc- Carthy of Markham became the bride of Cpl. David James Hacking, a string of pearls, was the gift of the groom. The bride’s attendants, Miss Margaret Hacking, sister of the groom, as maid of honour, and Miss Marion Scrivener, as bridesmaid. were gowned alike in pink and blue sheer respectively made on long lines, full skirt and sweetheart neck- line. Each wore shoulder length veils of matching net and carried bouquets of pink roses and blue cornflowers. Mr. J. M. B. Logan of Ottawa, uncle of the groom, was best man and the ushers were Fred Spear and Joe Muir, R.C.A. A reception was held at Glenview Terraces, the bride’s sister, Mrs. Preston, receiving in blue sheer with white accessories, assisted by Mrs. Hacking, mother of the groom, wear‘ ing orchid triple sheer with black accessories. Both wore corsages of gladioli. OVER 3000 AT DANCE YELLOW FREESTON E PEACHES No. 1 GRADE NEW POTATOES MEL‘BA EATING or 6 QT. APPLES COOKING B‘SKT. 39C TISSUE You’llsEnjoy7‘g Shopping at \VHITE SWAN MELBA WE DELIVER DU'IIISK FIRST ROYAL YORK GRADE LB BUTTER MARVO WAX PAPER A x ‘CU glï¬idded Wheat 2 pKG523c SPAGHETTI NABISCO CATELLI’S FRANCO-AMERICAN 15 oz. MACARONI ms 250 FRANCO-AMERICAN WEDDING WESTON’S LIBBY'S Pork and Beans BREAD??? 22 150 ROLLS PRICE DAILY 24 oz ’1 IN 40 FEET SUBS. 1 7C The next regular Euchre will be "held on Monday evening, ’August 24. The winners at the Monday even- ing euchre held at Richvale School were: Ladies, lst, Mrs. Bowen; 2nd, Mrs. Sparkes; 3rd, Mrs. W. Smith. Men, lst, Mrs. Allison playing as a gentleman; 2nd, Mr. Rowden; 3rd, Mrs. Rowden playing as a gentle- man. The September meeting, which would ordinarily meet on the four- teenth due to Labour Day, will be held instead on Monday afternoon, August Elst. ‘Cards and letters of appreciation are being received by the Bran-ch for cigarettes which were sent. this sum- mer to our local boys on active ser- vice. Dear Friends:â€" Received 300 cigarettes today and I sure was glad of them. They really come in handy as they are very scarce. Well, thanking you all again for the cigarettes, I am closing. Your friend, :Spr. Gourlie, D. J., B25507, 6th Field Co’y., R.‘C.E., Third Division, Canadian Army Uverseas. Richvale Red Cross TELEPHONE 40 37c RICHMOND HILL 14c 15c Thursday, Friday, Saturday, August 13, 14, 15 ERROL FLYNN. OLIVIA DE HAVILAND in “ They Died With Their Boots On †CLAUDETTE OOLBERT, RAY MILLAM) in “ Skylark †suuws START AT 7.30 PM. AND 9.30"}‘31. D.S.T. “ Hullabaloo †- REGIS TOOMEY, ADELE LANGMIRE in “ Bullet Scars †FRANK MORGAN, VIRGENIA GREY in Wednesday & Thursday, August 19, 20 Monday and t'uesday, August 17, 18 “’flllh 01' GREEN LGE 5 CELERY STALKS SIZE YELLOW CORN CARNATION MILK LARGE GREEN VIN EGAR HABITANT CONDENSED KRAFT \VHITE or GREEN CABBAGE ROSE LIFEBUOY SOAP HABITANT CONDENSED Vegetable Soup 2 TINS 19C CHEESE CONCENTRATED SUPER SUDS FRESH DAILY CARNIVAL & DANCE and His Orchestra GAMES AND MANY OTHER ATTRACTIONS $50 in Lucky Prizes MARKHAM Wed. , Aug. 19 20 oz. TIN Markham Community Soldiers’ Fund THIRD ANNUAL INSURANCE LIFE. FIRE. ACCIDENT. SICKNESS PLATE GLASS, AUTOMOBILE SURGLARY, GUARANTEE BONDS SPECIAL RATES TO FARMERS Entire Proceeds for Overseas Boxes Lucky Number Admission Ticket 25c. White Ma1t12 02‘ or Cider BTL. RUSS CREIGHTON ON ALL CARS TARIFF & NONTARIFF‘ CO'S A. G. Savage CAKES TALL TIN‘S HEAD OLd Post Office Richmond Hill PKG SELF SERVE DIOZ. â€"INâ€" 10c. PAGE FIVE PHONE 40 -5c 29c 20c 37c 19c IOc