Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 10 Feb 1927, p. 6

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All Kinds of Boot and Shoe Repair- ing Neatly Done Good Workmanship. Prompt Service. Shop in Winterton’s 01d Stand Yonge St. The Richmond Hill Furnishing Store Boys heavy rubbers sizes 2 to 4 regular $2.50 for . . . . . . . . $1.85 Men’s neck scarfs regular 2.50 to $2.75 for $1.95. Men’s one buckle goloshesâ€" reg. $2.35 to 2.75 for $1.95. Fine wool lined g1oves $2.00 to $2.35 Sweaters and sweater coats at reduced prices BY THE MOST MODERN METHODS Glasses if Required at Right Prices. Artificial Eyes Fitted. . «J‘ Open Evenings. Pnuhe Hudson 0461 for Appointment. OPTOMETRISTS EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS i'horough Eye Examinations and Glasses That Fit Perfectly. Special Attention, to Children's Eyes. We solicit orders for cut flowers for all oc- casions which will be promptly and cheer- fully filled. Richmond Hill - Ont. John Dunlop & Son FLORISTS NORMAN J. GLASS OPTOMETRIST AND OPTICIAN Ansâ€"167 Yonge Street, Toronto-2 (Upstairs Opposite Simpson’s) Elzin 4820 Professional Graduate of Owen A. Smiley Studio. CONCERT ENTERTAINER AND TEACHER ADDRESS Boyle Studio Special For The New Year Work mitts at $1.00 to $1.75. THE BIND OPTICAL CO. Boot and Shoe Repairer. 2513 Yonge St. North Toronto. (Opposite the Capitol Theatre) Phoneâ€"Willowdale 96W Thornhill Miss Marguerite Boyle Eyes Examined-- W. N. Mabhefi Electrical Contractor F. E. Luke SPINAL ADJUSTMENT PAGE SIX ELOC U TI 0N Telephone 54 R 2. POYNTZ AVENUE LANSING, ONT. GEO. KIDD OFFICE HOURSâ€"2 to 5 p.111. daily. 2 to 8 p.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday Morning calls at patients home. Phone, Willowdale 79 ring 1-4 rThe vVanfififsrfi agflk Canada again takes the lead. This time it lfilppens to be a young Toron- to boy named George Young who swam the Catalina Channel. Through his endurance and skill he battled aâ€" gainst beds of kelp and currents and tides spurred by his thoughts of home. By this remarkable feat he brings honor to Canada his home. He is Toronto’s acknowledged hero. Yours respectfully, Kenneth D. Frisby. Joan Selkirk, Dear Madam:â€" See Us Before You Go To The Rink! â€"- GOLOSHES RE-SOLED â€" SPECIAL SERVICE FOR OUT OF TOWN PEOPLE Phone 167 -- â€" Richmond Hill Goods Called For And Delivered All over Ontario there are numer- ous hills, valleys and creeks in which one and all may enjoy his or her favorite sport. These are healthful as well as exciting. Of course there are always a few who don’t like out door sports. Thanking you for the space in your interesting paper, I am, Richmond Hill ShoeRepairing Everybody I am sure will agree that winter time is a grand season. We have many favorable sports such as snow-slicing, tabogganing, skiing, hockey and skating and sleigh riding. Seeing the opportunity to write a letter to your valuable paper, I decid- ed to take for my subject, “Winter Sports of Ontario.” Dear 'Joan :â€" When I am taking the snow off the verandah the dog takes one handle of the basket and I take the other and go and empty it. ‘He brings the basket back himselt. When I am going over .to the‘ hill he always pulls me. When I go down the hill he always pulls me bat-k. One thing I like is sleigh riding, another is to get the Liberal and read the letters from the boys and girls. I. Remain, In a few words I would like to tell you about my Airedale pup. He is seven months old. Dear Joan:â€" LETTERS FROM OUR BOYS AND GIRLS We carry a full line of Quality Groceries and Pro- visions and solicit your patronage. We assure you of prompt and courteous service at all times. Skate Sharpening Groceries and PrOVlSlOIlS W. J. SNIDER & SON Schomberg Junction Phone King 306 Groceries, Confectionery Flour, Feed, Etc. WE DELIVER THE WELLMAN BLOCK Guaranteed Service S. BELGRADE Made Like New Also Rubber Boots JEAN MIDDLETON. (Age 11) . RR. 1, Richmond Hill, January 31, 1927 Richmond Hi3}. Ont., ‘ Jan. 30. HELEN HALDANE Yours truly, Richmond Hill, February 8, 1927 JOAN Yours truly, SELKIRK One cup milk, two eggs, one cup sugar, one tablespoon butter, two cups flour, three teaspoons baking powder. Beat well, pour into a but tered dish and bake thirty minutes. Boil threeâ€"quarters cup brown su- gar in two cups water, thicken with one tablespoon cornstarch, add one teaspoon butter and flavor with van~ illa. Fill as many cups as you wish to make one quarter full of sliced ap- ple. Put a spoonful of sugar in each cup, then almost fill with batter and steam for one‘hour. Batter for pud- dingâ€"one cup sugar, one-half cup melted butter, two eggs, one cup milk two teaspoons baking powder. Turn out and serve with foamy sauce. Suet Pudding One-half cup suet, one-half cup molasses, one half cup milk, one egg, one-half cup raisins, one-half cup nuts chopped, one-half teaspoon soda, one cup flour, pinch salt. Steam hour in custard cups and serve with plain sauce One-half cup butter, one cup powâ€" dered sugar. Cream together and add one teaspoon vanillaeand one tab}?- spoon lemon juice. When ready to serve stir in one-quarter cup boiling water and the beaten white of one egg and stir together until foamy. Rice and Date Pudding Vary the rice pudding by using dates instead of raisins. Many peoâ€" ple who do not care for rice will en- joy it when it is cooked this way. Hot Desserts For Cold Weather, Seasonable Recipes Such is the. power of suggestion. Doctors ne‘er let a patient know how sick he really is they know thit the has a great deal to do with bodily ailments and they govern themselves accordingly in the sickroom. A doctor one pulled me through a severe illness by treating me as if there wasn’t much the matter with me. At the time I was a trifle indignant at not being taken more seriously but I realized afterwards that, had he let me know how ne tr my feet were to Death’s threshold I would certainly have let go of everything and slipped over. So Although it may not be quite the right time of year for making resolutions let us make one now and try to keep it. Resolved to be a Sunshine Scatterer instead of a Sob Sister. But ifinstead you had happened to rneet the John comforter mentioned above your reply to her comment would be, “well, it’s no wonder I look sick. I’ve had a terr- ible winter, just one cold after another, I’Ve never had a chance to pick up. And then this weather is so trying etc., etc. And you drag yourself home, filled with self-pity and a feeling of what’sâ€"the-use and with a firm conviction that you will have to get away to a sanitarium before it is too late. a special smile for the occasion and fooled yourself into thinking that you look as well as Nature ever intended you to look. And along comes Mrs. Woebegone and knocks all the wind out of your sails with the information that “you Ibok simply terrible, you really should consult a doctor." There is always someone to take the joy out of life this way, generally it’s a woman as men don‘t comment on ap- pearances as a rule unless they can say something flatterâ€" ing. They seem to know by instinct that a little bit of blarney is a big help in the business of living. The people who “scatter sunshine in such a simple way" are always the most popular one in a community, we love to see them coming along the sheet as we know they will have something nice to say. They are not perhaps quite as truthful as their mournful sisters but surely the little fibs they tell are put down to t‘ eir credit in Heaven‘s ledg- er. Their creey little lies do them a lot of good in this old world and will never be counted against them. If you have been feeling miserable and rundown Mrs. onyful says. “my you are looking well,” your answer will probably be. “Yes I’ve had a pretty good winter. A few little coids, of course but everbody had those. I’m really feeling fine now.” And you go on your way simply walking on air. We all can scatter sunshine in such a simple way, By saying to everyone we meet, “how well you look today I" Is there anything more depressing than having a friend say mournfully, “My you look tired and worn out, you look as if you needed a long rest.” When anyone tells me that it makes me feel so blue that I begin to think that I am just about ready for a good long rest in the cemetery. Perhaps you really are tired and worn out and know it only too well but you have bucked up and tried to look cheerful and alert Perhaps yo‘u have donned your best bib-andâ€"tucker, put on AS A MEANS OF CURE FOR SICKNESS OF ANY KIND IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE PM E TREATMENT IN THE WORLD TO-DAY. INQUIRE FOR NAMES OF PATIENTS WHO KNOW THIS TO BE TRUE AND TAKE NOTHING ELSE FOR THE IR TROUBLES. ‘ a 7 E E CHIROPRACTORâ€"ELECTRIC THERAPIST . .. e Drugless Practltloner PATRICIA AVENUEâ€"NEWTONBROOK Plain Pudding Sauce THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONT. Apple Cup Pudding Cottage Pudding Foam y Sauce THE POWER OF SUGGESTION Serve hot with camel sauce. Carmel Sauce Stir one-half cup sugar and two tablespoons water until the sugar melts then let cook without stirring until dark brown. Add one cup boil- ing water and let simmer to a thin syrup. Richmond Hill Public School, Sr. room Senior IV. Class Standingâ€"Dorothy Duncan, Isobel McLean, Mary Kirk- land, Frank Mathews, Bartlett Smith Dorothy Mason, (Marguerite Thomp- son, Jimmie Grainger, equal), Noreen Haworth, Marjorie Lumb. Junior IV. Class Standingâ€"Eleanor Drury, Olive Wilson, Philip Graham, Gilbert Forest, Edward Arnold, (May Plewman, Bernice Healy, equal), A1- fred Stong, Mae, Sheppard, Lola Jon- es, William Cross, Mildred Rand, Mar- garet Trench, MetroAKozak, Austin Tuck, Mary Brillinger, Phyllis Rob- inson, Betty Rumble, Lloyd Thomp- son, Kenneth Frisby, Graham Ellis, Jean Middleton, Walter Young, Claire Cook, Morley Sanderson. Richmond Hi3! Public School P931¢w§¢£ulét9r 5 y” / In order ‘ u ‘ {T to lay lots of 5 eggs, hens need a dozen J little things they pick up ranging in summer, they can’t get in winter. The hitters. tonics, digesters, herbs and minerals necessary to egg~development are combined in Pratts Poultry Reg- ulator. “More Eggs” guaranteed. 5913’s; DJIJS'QBJQ; Carin}; ‘Vrft! {Jr 3mm; poumzrsoogc FREE PRAJZ‘L FLOOD C0. ot'_CANADA_linIIMd 3'2'3 ‘C‘SFIS'w TA‘C-Eii'l’éroneéfs' Report For January Car load going at Rock Bottom Prices Call and get them. All your needs in Flour and Feeds, Meat Meals, Grits and Shells. Deliveries Tuesday’s Phones Day 139m Eve. 82w CORN Richmond Street The Producers of the York and North Toro A few Mackinaw’s left at $5.95 Boy’s Bloomers, good quality, Cost Price Men’s & Boy’s Hockey Boots Also clearing out of old stock, Boots and §hoes at Cost and numerous other articles. Underwear, sizes 36 to 42 at $2.75 BYWATER CHESTER‘FIELD AND FURNITURE C0. Stop 5 Yonge Street LANSING, (5m. Telephone Willowdale 74 R. 5 min [LIL'H-nx I‘mxcu or WALES Skating Sat. Eve., Feb. 12 PHONE 86‘J Blocks Made To Order Or From Our Stock At Yards Richmond Hill AS .‘lAN’. Begiuered Trade Math Open Every Saturday Morning ATSO’CLOCK AND TUESDAYS 6-9 RM. VVimQr GOOdS THE Come and See fer Yourself J. W. WELLMAN Good Band in Attendance ARENA GET OUR PRICES ON (3E 31 IZN'F ‘V ()RK IT WILL PAY YOU THE YORK MARKET YONGE STREET Icers of the district and householders of North North Toronto will find this a splendid market. to $3.25, Pure Woo! Combination CEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT Clearing Saie of AT THE CITY LIMITS 3479 YONGE STREET :rgURSDAY, FEBRUARY 10, 1927 J. F. BURR Wm G. S. REAMAN CORN W. G. BALDOCK, Chairman of Committee “BYWATER” CHESTERFIELD BED Cash WES'EERFHELDS RICHMOND HILL RE-UPHOLSTERING Reasonable Prices or Made to order Makers of We do Richmond Hill. CORN Terms

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