Whitchurch-Stouffville Newspaper Index

Stouffville Tribune (Stouffville, ON), November 12, 1936, p. 2

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vibum volxlviii no32 stouffville ontario t hursday nov 12th 1936 a v nolan jjp publisher nyal pinol expectorant a healing remedy and prompt relief for coughs and colds bronchitis ami irritated conditions of the throat relieves tickling dry or tight coughs loosenes the phlegm and expels it from the bronchial tubes j m storey the home of quality drugs druggist defflih dr mitchell pays tribute to aged school teacher latest innovation in permanent waving no pedestal no excessive overhead weight no direct heat steaming time 3 to 0 minutes complete freedom at all times spiral combination and croquignole prices 350 500 750 cascades of soil selfsetting curls fingorwnve 35r haircut 21c 20c oil shanipoo facials manicuring bleaching tinting dyeing special prices for girls under 16 east end beauty shop marie brown corner main montreal sis phone 17c dental neil c smith ldsdd8 office over the bank ot commerce office hourb 9 to 2 a 1s0 to 5 so phone office 1011 residence 1015 a lifelong resident of bloomiug- tou district passed away at marki ham on sunday nov 8 when miss frances burnett aged 7g died atj the home of her sister mrs phillip jones miss burnett was educated at bloomington public school and graduated from the model school newmarket as a public school teacher she taught at dicksons hill where one of her entrance pupils was dr thos mitchell who paid a wonderful tribute to the life of the deceased when speaking at the funeral service declaring that she had much to do with moulding his life at that time deceased was a daughter of one daniel burnett and ot late years had lived with her sister mrs wm storry who died at bloomington about three months ago when she went to live with a halfsister at markham until recent years she was organist of the church at bloomington and a valued sun day school worker the funeral on tuesday was to bloomington cemetery service in the united church there was taken by rev c b jeftery assisted by dr mitchell the pall bearers were three nephews messrs herbert robt and wilbert burnett also don storry john whetter and j heels local market is farjjeaching stouffville shippers send their products thousands of miles by land and sea corn from the argkxtixk defrauded farmers in barley purchases get three year jail term farmers of siimlorlaml e s barker lds dds honor graduate of royal college of dental surgeons and of the university ot toronto office in grublns block phone 8301 markham every tuesday office in wear block insurance thomas birkett general insurance agency representing reliable companies including lloyds of london england phone stouffville 25902 see h o klinck obrien avenue tor your insurance needs in fire life automobile burglary and all casualty lints a c burkholder uukuraftoe canada life ajs8urano else automobile and fire honored their president the belief that women cannot keep a secret has been disproved since the visit of the lady bowlers on tuesday evening to the home of their president mrs james ratcliff the visit was most informal and was kept so quiet that even the husbands must have been dumb as to the whereabouts of their wives on that evening somehow the ladies of the green learned that their president had a birthday and this accounted for the particular time of year in which they took their first officer by surprise stepping into the ratcliff house without the slight est warning they took possession quietly and set about having a good time mrs george storey and mrs t b rae acting for the club spoke words ot commendation about the efficient work of mrs ratcliff who had filled the office for three years now and presented her with a piece of cut glass in the form of a vase with reflector stand there is not a town or village on this line of the cnk between tor onto and lindsay that will show an export trade as great or as varied as stouffville twentyfive years ago when tho business of any area could be accurately judged by the extent of business done at the depot of any town stouffville stood on top hut of course that kind of indi cator is no use now days when places 25 miles from toronto get practically all their supplies by truck and so it is not used any more as a fair measuring stick the other day the scribe happen ed in at the local depot when agent preston gave us some inform ation that we considered outstand ing in the matter of export data for a small community within ten days we found that the stouffville gold fish supply co had made ship ments of fish to points in alberta and earlier in the season to british columbia the goodall seed co limited shipped carloads ot seed grain to the port of london england for the british and european mark et stiver bros had just shipped a carload of clover seed to buffalo and r e brown consigned several carloads of turnips to points as far south as georgia brllinger bros were loading a carload of vegetables tor timtnins northern ontario these shipments were not extra ordinary said the agent they are being made at intervals all through the season when these particular products are market able as we said before the imports come largely by truck although mr preston pointed to bills of lading for live carloads of corn arriving uruoklin blackwater and stouffville wait ed vainly for lrmised cheques bethesda co e a grubin registered optomerist will be at his office in stouktllle very other moday end tuesday november dates 2nd and 3rd 1g and 17 and 30th december dates 1st 14th 15th 28th and 29th byes examined glasses fitted and repaired phone stouffville 2406 only 42 more days until christ mas mrs louis brulinger visited with mrs d snider in stouitvlle on tuesday mrs herbert hiese spent tues day with her parents mr and mrs louis brulinger miss reta mclntyre was in tor onto visiting friends over the week end dont overlook the yps on fri day evening rev l e atkinson will bring the missionary address miss reta chapman of aurora was the guest of her alma burkholder for last week at stouffville from the argentine the corn conies in by boat to montreal and from there rail to stouffville the freight alone from montreal runs 3 00 per car but when this is spread over the number of bushels in tho shipment it does not seem high those who imagine the day of the railroad is over have but to ponder over the business transacted by a village like stouffville and they will realize that there is much for these roads yet especially in the matter of long haulage lemon ville only prize plowman 10 vga iis briarbush hospital main street stoucrille license no sm graduated nurses la attendance private semiprivate and public wards ambulance service 0 phone 191 mrs e r good superintendent ot cousin miss a few days mr and mrs max fines and family of vandorf spent sunday at the home of mr and mrs clarence atkinson farmers have their root crop all in or put into pits away from jack frost and a good many fields have been fall plowed mrs enos blackburn and son bert and his two daughters all of uxbrldge wero here visiting mr and mrs rolph allin for a day victor appleton has purchased farm near stayer reduced round trip fares for your visit to the roval winter fair 11v j ul ff a1aiv1 toronto november 18th ml uii lo 26th good going 1 1 c nov isth to 26th sjjxexed good returning till nov 27th at agencies only leave leave stouffville toronto a 715 am standard b 925 am awnaaru b 1100 am c 130 pm c 345 pm tta e 530 pm b s40 pm c 545 pm b 1015 pm hoi onty c sat a dally except sun 4 hoi b sun only e dally except sat sun k lol tickets and information at mansion housk stou ffville phone 181 allen wells ten year old son of elmer wels of leroouville won 2nd prize in the york county home ploughing competition there were fourteen entries in his class of boys sixteen and under allen also receiv ed the prize for being one of the youngest boys ploughing engagement announced mr and mrs thos it farrow stouffville wish to announce tho engagement of their second daughter florence edna to herman bruce beach younger son of mr and mrs frank beach of siloam the mafriago to tako place quietly early in december library meeting the monthly meeting of the public library board of stouffville will meet in the library on thurs day nov 12th at 730 the prompt attendance of all the members will be much appreciated by order of the publicity com mittee of the board salary increase at a meeting of the stouffville school board on monday evening miss k houston was granted an increase in salary of 100 per annum effective january 1st next miss houston joined the continua tion staff after her graduation five years ago at a salary of 1400 but when the general cuts were im posed all over the province her salary was reduced to 1200 and tho increase granted miss houston is the first upward turn since the lower salaries wore effective farmers be more careful this is a most astonishing case stated crown attorney conant in whitby police court tuesday the most contemptible i have ever heard this man in my opinion is a villain a rogue a cheat this man steals things that others have earned by the sweat of their brow under another administration this man would he tarred and feather ed and i would hale to prosecute those who tarred and feathered him he should be given the maxi mum penalty defrauded farmers the crown attorneys declara tion came after six witnesses farm ers from brooklin blackwater sunderland and intermediate points testified that the accused maxwell d sidey alias kerr alias rogers alias fettery had between the 24th of september and the 28th travelled through the district and purchased barley from tho farmers stating that he was a representative of the maple leal milling co of toronto numerous farmers in the stouffville district were victimized witnesses claimed that after arrangements had been completed the accused had a transport from lindsay pick up the purchases amounting to some 856 bushels and told the farmers that a cheque would follow in the course of a few days directed to oshawa roy junkin owner and driver of the transport stated that they hauled four loads and that when each time they came to whitby sidey would telephone and say that he was instructed to take the loads to oshawa where they were sold to hogg and lytle the fourth load testified junkin was taken to toronto purportedly to be turned into the maple leaf elevators there as it was evening the the accused instructed him to visit his sister in toronto overnight and he would dispose of the load in the morning in the morning the accused in structed him to take it to oshawa where it was sold on the way to oshawa sidey told junkin that he was to go to cambray and pick up a load of wheat didnt get cheques at cambray junkin stated he was unable to locate the farmers whereupon he telephoned the ma ple eaf co at toronto and they informed him that they did not know of any such person as sidey and further that the elevators into which junkin was to dump wheat were lettered and not num bered as sidey had informed him junkin immediately interviewed the farmers and learned that they had not received their cheques the provincial police wero called in and provincial constable ii clark and provincial constable fred jarvis after investigating notified all police the accused was picked up in toronto last thursday a month after he had disappeared and was brought to whitby to stand accused trial jack mcgill bookkeeper for hogg lyttle oshawa testified that they had bought the barley from the accused and had paid him 65876 for the tour loads sidey had told them that he purchased the grain in the muskoka district on the last load they had told sidey that they could not take his barley at the quoted price and sidey had taken about four cents less saying that he would be about breaking even clarence fairmau f gray wil liam heron a g duff g saun ders and m burrows identified the accused but each told the court that sidey had given a different name so many fictitious names were supplied that crown attorney con ant asked if his vocabulary was not exhausted with the hearing of eacn wit ness the accused declined to qes- tion except to inform the court that some of the stated losses were out a tew bushels here and there there is always a different be tween the pui chaser and the other said the crown but you got all the proceeds had bad record the crown read sideys criminal record which included seven charges of theft one of forgery two of fraud and one of attempted fraud the accused said that he had just got out in february given three years sidey pleaded guilty to the charge of fraud and when asked by magistrate ebbs if he had any thing to say before sentence was passed declined the bench asked sidney what he had done with the money and he said he had spent it and invested some you have a very bad record said magistrate ebbs it is a mean offence that you have committed there is no reason why you should not receive the maximum three years wanted in toronto at the close of the case the ac cused was taken back to toronto to stand trial on other charges and magistrate ebbs asked that the press warn farmers to be more careful in dealing with strangers whom they have never seen before particularly in trusting such large amounts of grain to strangers with out proper identification charge dismissed arising out of this same case roy junkin was arraigned before magistrate ebbs on a charge of conspiracy to defraud and the charge was dismissed this charge was laid when sidey the j was at large stated crown attor ney conant the complainants in this case felt very much aggrieved and as sidey had not been appre hended it was felt that junkin could help materially i dont think there is any criminality he bears a respected name in his community i would say that the crown has no evidence to offer i would ask that this case be dismissed magistrate ebbs concurred with the crowns plea and dismissed the good work completed cost of water mains exten sion is 1450 about 30 members of the stourf- vllle horticultural society visited unionville on tuesday evening as guests of the flower lovers there mr clark addressed the gathering on home beautlfication and mr j b spencer ottawa president of tho ontario horticultural society was present and proved an interest ing guest send the tribune to absent friends the cost of the water works extension just completed at the west end of the village is found to be 1450 it was disclosed this week when all accounts in connection with the undertaking were finally in councillor a e weldon chair man of the water and light com mittee under whoso direction the work was initiated and carried out estimates that a direct benefit will be felt by some 16 householders thoso on main street who were constantly menaced with frozen pipes and those on the back street where the pressuro was inadequate fn addition a reliable main passes about 16 vacant lots which may be built on at any time the general benefit to the rate payers comes from the fact that every water pipe is now removed from under tho main street pave ment from the extreme west end at alex scotts to cnjr tracts these pipes were liable to burst and cause serious damage to our fino pavement and their removal has been urged ever sinco the road was built in 1930 in the light of all this there is littlo doubt but that every rate payer will readily sanction the ex penditure made by the chairman of the committee who largely directed the work and to tho council in general for backing the scheme a nice feature of it all said councillor weldon to the tribune is the fact that the entire expendi ture is paid for out ot surplus funds in the water works account and thus local taxes will not be affected in any way whatever john lehman was bookkeeper with pioneer firm here later became accountant with maple leaf milling co died at family home here following a number of years ot rather poor health johu a lehman passed away at his home in the west end ot stouffville on wednesday evening nov 4 about 7 oclock in his 65th year a largely attended service at the late home on satur day afternoon conducted by rev t laidlaw of toronto was follow ed by interment at st johns cemetery norway mr lehman was a member of stouffville united church the late mr lehman was a native of stouffville born in the east end at a time when that part of the village gave promise of be coming an important business centre his parents joseph lehman and his wife sarah boadway lived in the vicinity of montreal street the father being a millwright with a business connection extending far beyond his home village joseph was the son of a pioneer farmer to the altona district and his wife was a sister to our mr isaac boadway when a young man the subject of this sketch john a lehman be came bookkeeper with edw wheel er sons and left stouffville with that firm when they moved tb cataract near orangeville later he was identified with the maple leaf milling co at montreal and then toronto in the capacity of accountant he retired with broken health in 1929 and came back to stouffville to live in the brick cottage he had erected for the comfort of his aged mother during her declining years and which she occupied until the time of her death john lehman is survived by his wife who was a montreal resi dent and by three sons ross and glen of toronto and charles of detroit an only daughter miss myrtle lehman lives in toronto two brothers of the deceased jacob and wilmot both live in noth bay two sisters florence mrs f l gardiner is a resident of springfield ohio and rachael mrs chas hockaday ilves at littleton near denver col those who attended the funeral from a distance were mr and mrs j e lehman and mr and mrs wilmot lehman and daughter jean all of north bay mrs f j irobertson montreal mrs m a lennox miss verlie lennox mr and mrs a lennox mr and mrs f w phillips and mr and mrs c e lehman all of detroit with the churches cinust church anglican rev f herman rector sunday november 15th 1936 22rd sunday after trinity holy communion 300 pm public worship slouffvtliie congregational christian church arthur greer pastor wednesday s00 pm prayer meeting mrd sargant bible class teacher ot college st baptist church will be in charge sunday november 15th 1936 1000 am sunday school 1100 am morning worship subject consecration there will also be a child dedi cation ceremony 700 pm gospel service t j dennett of toronto will ba the speaker stouffville mennonite church rev i brubacker pastor sunday november 15th 1936 regular preaching services stouffville presbyterian rev w h fulierba sunday november 15th 1936 200 pm sunday school 300 pm- afternoon worship everyone cordially invited stouffville united church l e atkinson minister wed nov nth 8 pm prayer and fellowship meeting sunday november 15th 1936 1100 am morning worship subject revive thy work 230 pm sabbath school 700 pm evening worship sub perils of the middle road mou nov 16th at 8 pm tho weekly yps the strike of aid the ladies a two act play presented by the womens institute ojf unionville un der the auspices of melville w a will he held in melville church on friday evening nov 13 at s pm this play conies well recommend ed as a humorous and well render ed play come and spend an enjoy able evening admission adults 25c childreu 10c melville interesting fergus wedding a very happy event took place in fergus on the evening of october 30 1930 when miss vera marian willis daughter of mr and mrs b willis of fergus became the bride ot mr j barton lymburner youngest son of mrs jas h ratcliff of stouffville the ceremony was performed at the united church parsonage by tho pastor rev dr bishop the bride who wore her travelling costume of navyblue trimmed with rust was attended by miss jean mcdonald of fergus while the groom was supported by mr wm deacon also of fergus after a dainty wedding supper at the home of mr kenneth lym burner the happy couple loft for a short honeymoon trip in southern ontario followed by showcr3 of confetti and good wishes on their return they will reside in fergus the veterans wish to thank the citizens of stouffville and ringwood for their generous response to the appeal for funds on poppy day the amount collected totalled 4900 r burkholder preat o lehman vice president dont forget the play to bo given at melville this friday evening mr and mrs lon lehman spent sunday with john ash and family rev john and mrs mcewen at tended the fowl supper and concert at churchill last thursday mr clarence wideman motored north last weekend to join the hunters mr and mrs forrester and family are enjoying the convenience of hydro mrs n gayman and b gayman at tho homo of mr and mrs arnold mortson we are sorry to report mr wm mckay is laid up with an injured foot miss marjorie lehman is home again after having spent the past week nursing at victoria square if you attended guild at the grant home last wednesday evening it will more than likely go down in memory as one of the finest and most enjoyable evening in many a day weekend visitors mr and mrs harry wideman and daughter carol with mr and mrs nigh mr and mrs earl tale and family the guests ot tho houck family mr and mrs wm klees and family visited rela tives at cashcl on sunday wood lots soared to 60 for tho high at henry hoovers sale on tuesday he realized 416 for just a littlo over 4 acres archie flem ing bid tho high price for lot rumor ed to be wanted for church wood at melville other lots of courso were as low as 500 with an avcrago price of 20 stouffville baptist church c s megrath pastor wednesday 8 pm prayer meet ing in the church basement friday 800 pm bible study meeting in the home of mrsthomp- son we were glad to see so many young people at the meeting last week let us do our best to be pre sent this week- sunday november 15th 1936 1000 am bible school classes for all ages 1100 am morning worship 700 pm gospel service proceed ed by short song service rev hl davey our returned missionary from liberia will be the speaker at the evening service mr davey is no novice but is a man who has had several years experience in missionary work in the heart of africa ho has a story to tell and your heart will be stirred as he is a forceful speaker bo sure you hear him you are cordially invited to all of our services sixth line baptist church rev w e snutllcy pastor telephone 1003 wednesday 800 pm prayer and bible study service sunday november 15th 1936 1000 am sunday school 700 pm church service texts deut 329 and tit 214 the ordinance of baptism at the close of the service itiblo thought for this week isa 557 let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return un to the lord and he will have mercy upon him and to our god for he will abundantly pardon lemonvtlle bloomington ballantrae united churches rev c b jcffcry pastor sunday november 15th 1936 1045 am ballantrae 230 pm bloomington 700 pm lemonvillo bixxkvhngton nnd ringwood christian church rev e morton preacher the things that need reviving most these days are not our ires in our homes and places of business but our love for gad and our faith in god that kind of revival is tak ing place these nights at tho bloomington christian church tho two young women with us have seon souls saved in other fields and are here in that same kind ot business song service at 745 sunday november 15th 1936 tho anniversary services on sun day will have mr and mrs wallace from the faith mission toronto at 1100 a m and tho kinsmen quartetto at 700 pm mr raymer will preach come early

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