Phone, King 16 r 26. . “0.- PAGE SIX THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONT. mhâ€"â€"' Wmâ€" SPINAL ADJUSTMENT OFFICE HOURSâ€"2 to 5 pm. daily. ‘ 2 to 8 pm. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. Morning calls at patients home. Phone, Willowdale 79 ring 1-4 Yonge Street Poultry Farm Opposite Orange Orphanage H, R. 1, Richmond Hill, Ont. BABY CHICKS BARRED ROCKS and S. C. WHITE LEGHORNS Guaranteed pure bred chicks for sale ' ‘ All eggs used in my Mammoth Buckeye Incubator Will be from the flocks o fthe well-known breeder, Mr. Walter Rose. Hatches off every week. March, April and May ....25c. each. PRICES {June . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 20c. each. July . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 18¢. each. 10% reduction on above prices in lots of 125 or more. 100% live arrival guaranteed. CUSTOM HATCHING BY ARRANGEMENT. Eggs for Hatching (White Leghorn Only) . :e Fertile Eggs From Our Own Flock. 80% Fertility Guaranteed. ' ' 3.75 Settin of 13 eggs . . . . . . . . . $1.00 Setting of 50 eggs . . . . . g Setting of 100 eggs . . . . . . . . . . . . 7.00 I TERMS:â€"Chicks and Eggs 10% with order, balance before delivery. DISAPPOIN ORDER EARLY AND AVOID .. 33": CHESTERFIELDS Made to order Makers of “BYWATER†CHESTERFIELD BED We do RE-UPHOLSTERING Reasonable Prices or TMENT. ~,vi.’;. .;:1‘.-‘,-fv{.r."_~_.t 2' ARMADY, FOR Il.li.ll. TllFl l'lllXCva WALI’S Registered Trade Mark Cash BYWATER CHESTERFIELD AND FURNITURE CO, Stop 5 Yonge Street LithSING‘, Ont. Telephone Willowdale 74 R. 5,. Terms lost Arrived-d federal oi CEMENT. ' We also handle Hespeler Lim , Star Lime and Arm and Hammer Plaster Paris. Poultry Feed of all kinds Egg Mask and Soralcli Feed. Bran and Shorts CokeuCoal-Wood GENERAL BUILDERS' [SUPPLIES Langstaff Supply Co, Ltd G. H. DUNCAN, Manager Nights, Richmond Hill 110] Prompt Delivery 13013 SERV’ICE Telephone Thomhill 51-r- 12 '1‘ ER ‘51†atâ€. $5» Save yourself at our expense Don’t try to do the heavy parts of the fam- ily wash. Let us help you. This new plant was designed and equipped for that very purpose and can give you as much or little help as you desire by means of ï¬ve differ- ent kinds of laundry serviceâ€"all moderate- ly priced. We use only soft water and pure soaps, etc. No marking, no starching, and each wash done separately. ,i We Call In Richmond Hill District WEDNESDAY, AND SATURDAY If you will have laundry ready when driver calls, you will assist us in a giving good service. If you only have driver call when phoned for, call up as early as Convenient. to insure prompt attention. 'onoNio Missal». .70- Lakeside 5280 175 Ossington Avenue, Toronto. glittering in the sunshine. ' ,becn a St â€"-â€".~.__ W. E. Lewis PNOTO DY ASllliY EkcanPEN rï¬ By the time the twins’ birthday arâ€" rived Jock was so much hotter that he had been able to sit up for a litâ€" tle whilc every day. 110 had begun Ito get better the minute his ll'fotlicr had come into his room and had put her cool hand on his forehead and by the 0nd of the week he was wcll on- ough for them to let the nurse go home. “I‘ve just been having a visit liero 11y to his Mother, “you and Jeannie ihavcn't let me do anything for him." “I’m thankful to be at home with lthem that I can’t bear to let them out of my sight.†she answered. ‘ies to tcll thcm about England and about The ocean. They loved to hear about {he Londoi‘ Zoo where children could ride on the elephant and about the crowded London Streets where 'everyone looks left-handed because they drive on the left side of the road instead of the right we do over here. She told them about the whale they had seen from the chip and about the sea gulls which circled round waiting for the table scraps to ,be thrown overboard; and there was ‘a great shining iceberg with towers and spires like those of a cathedral And she told them about the two sweet little 'Frcnch girls, Babette and Marianne, .who came over in the big ship to live i with their uncle in Montreal. were such quiet little things and al- 'though they did: 7t know a word of English, would sit braids her on the deck and stroke licr aand because she :11 .looked like their own Mother who had ( ,died. She knew th:-y would have a lhappy home in Canada for such a lov- ely Aunt and Uncle met them when ' ,thc boat landed. Vw'hile Mummy told them stories Jeannie worked bu=ily the W'el- come Home arch which they had set their hearts upon havirg. Jeannie 'made it all hcrself with many sug- gestions from Jock but wouldn't let Mummy touch it as it was to have isc for her. It was fin- .' to put up in the birthday 1 . n . \mornmg. “ll l‘oi'c \‘."ll we put it?†said Joanâ€" nie. “It‘s no use utting it over the n ‘3 . i’ront or the front door vhen 111nm v ' '« ‘(l 01‘ a l r" l, i.n....y is 1..51.c .. reacy “I know where I would like jsaid li'lummy. “a . gab: it,†. ‘, “Vthrc?†said the twins togethr‘r. ln- “Right there over Jock’s door. \‘Slde, so we can all see it and enjoy it I. iall day.†" ‘ So the Vv'clcome Home Arch was Iput up over the door. To be sure the letters were pretty straggle and un- even and there was :1 good deal mortn arch at one end than the other but the whole family was very much pleased with it.†The twins spent a happy day open- ing the English parcels. There were lovely pink shells which Mummy and Daddy had picked on along the sea- shore and which still had the sound of the ocean waves in them. Thci‘c were beautiful picture books from London and smocked dresses for Jeannie and a flannel suit for Jock. There was a darling baby doll and a sail boat which made Jock long to get outdoors before all the Springtime ponds were gone. , Then they had a little party in Jock‘s room and two birthday cakes with nine candles on each one. Not a very fancy party as poor Jock was 'still on a very careful diet, but the twins had a beautiful time all the same. They decided that even with Jock sick in bed it was just about lthc happiest birthday they had ever iad. “And,†said Jeannie, ,‘when Daddy comes home we will have a great big party downstairs and more birthday cakes and candles and everything." Do it well whate’er you do. Build it straight and strong and true, Build it high and clean and broad, Build it for the eye of God. In The City Shops Leaf green appears to be the fav- orite color for spring hats. Milliners say that there are more large head sizes this year than there have been for some time. More peo- ple are beginning to let their hair grow. Waist lines are slightly higher with tightly ï¬tted hips. Bows are much used as dress trim- ming, on the shoulder, waistline or :hel‘ to marry him- ingly orlout that he and Daddy Long-Legs To quote were one and the same person and hem, at the back or front, 5 in groups, large or small. ;all week, anyway," she said laughing- . i Mummy had such wonderful. storâ€". They ' THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1927. AS A MEANS OF CURE FOR SICKNESS OF ANY KIND IS THE MOST EFFECTIVE 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. CHIROPRACTORâ€"ELECTRIC THERAPIST Drugless Practitioner PATRICIA AVENUEâ€"NEWTONBROO A Dillllllll llllllllhAY i toolrery For The Sick Almost every sick person needs a special diet. Even if he isn‘t very .rtick he needs something a little more tempting , a little easier to digest Ithan the food which the other mem- ibcrs of the family are having. Beef Tca This is much more nourishing than ~‘ of the ready varieties. Remove an fat from half a pound of round steak; cut meat in small pieces; add oiic (up cold water, place in a quart covcr, and let stand for ten min- utc 1, put Jar in a saucepan of cold 'wctcr. Heat gradually on {be back of the stove, keep water just simmer- finfg for one hour. Strain add salt and ‘scrvc in hot cup. The pieces of meat ‘wbich are left may be addcd to sttw for the family. Chicken Broth Cut up a thrce pound fowl, put in soup kettle. add ten cups cold water ‘and simmer until the meat falls from lthe bones. Strain, let stand over- night to cool, remove fat; reheat and serve. (f, m Milk roast Place a slice of buttered toast on a soup plate. Cover with hot milk ladd salt and pepper or sugar accord- ing to taste. Soda biscuits may also be served in this way. Cup Custard One small cup of milk, one egg, one teaspoon sugar, pinch of salt, flavor with vanilla or nutmeg. Beat the yolk and white together, add oth- er ingredients put all in a large cup and bake in a moderate oven. The custard will be smoother if you stand ithe cup in a dish of water while it is cooking. : Tomato Soup | Use any of the prepared soups with ;milk instead of water. Or take one ‘can of tomatoes, let it boil and add ja scant half teaspoon of baking soda. Add one pint of hot milk, salt and pepper to taste, strain and serve. Tapioca. Custard One cup' of \‘vashcd tapioca, soak ,for half an hour in two pints (Sf cold lniilk. Put in double boiler and cook iuntil tapioca is clear. Add two tab- lespoons sugar, pinch of salt, yolks of three eggs and cook until like Icustard. Add vanilla or almond flav- orng and serve either hot or cold. This looks tempting served in glavs dishes and trimmed with beaten white of egg or with little bits of red ijelly. i .lnnlwt H.110 people don’t lqnow about juri- 'l rcver use it for the sick. It sy to make that a child can .prcpare it and it may lie varied with ditl’erent flavors and colors so as the linvalid won’t become tired of it. Get leithcr junkct tablets or liquid rennet at the drug store and simply follow the directions. Our Library Corner THE LADY MARRIED This is written by the author of The Lady of The Decoration and is a sequel to that delightful book. Six years after the Lady married her young American doctor he was sent to China to investigate an outbreak of disease. She followed him as far as Japan and after some travels through that picturesque country went back to teach in her old mission school. She was the means of saving Sada San a beautiful young Eurasian girl, from life in a tea house and of ‘re-uniting her and her American lov- er. Doctor Jack innocently aroused some jealousy in the heart of his wife by writing in glowing terms of a ilady doctor who was doing the work Ihe was doing. But when Doctor Jack became very ill himself and his wife was sent for she found her sup- posed rival to be a charming old lady with white hair. This book is well worth reading if only for its description of Japanese scenery. DADDY LONG-LEGS. By Jean Webster. Jeusha Abbot ,aged seventeen, was sent to college by a Trustee of the Home where she had been since her babyhood. As he wished to remain unknown to her she was just to call him Mr. Smith and write to him once a month to let him know of her pro- gress. She had once seen his shad- ow on the wall of the home and on account of his height called him “Da- ddy Long-Legs.†A relative of one of her school friends, Jarvis Pendle- ton, fell in love with her and asked It ï¬nally turned an expertâ€"“Every woman can have we are left with the impression that all the bows she wants now.†she married her benefactor. l l , I l l l l l Your. , FM/p W 0Mf0R7 5;; .. b clear through and the other is that you can purchase it off us at a fair price. ABOUT DECORATING The mild weather during the early part of March fooled many of us into thinking that Spring cleaning time had really arrived. Then. just as we were all excited about it, the weather man dropped us back into winter again with a thud and spoiled our plans about get- ting our house-cleaning done extra early this year. If any rooms are to be re-dccorated, however, it isn’t too early to plan about materials and colors and get what things we need. , Styles and tastes in household decoration change with the passing years. We think the wallpaper designs of twenty years ago are hideous and perhaps; in another twenty years someone will be thinking the same thing about the papers we are usrng to-day. Still we are learning more about color schemes all the time. We know to- day as they didn’t know twenty years ago that red will paper has a bad effect on the nerves, that green is a good color to live with and that bluc's ard greys are depressing unless used in a very sunny room. Light colors will lighten a dark room and make it seem larger, and a small room should never have paper with a large pattern. Dark colors absorb the light while light colors reflect it. A dark room with a northern exposure may be so treated with white ceiling and woodwork, cream walls and yellow floor that almost as much extra light is drawn into the room as if an extra window had been cut in it. When "buying wall-paper, if you are going to co the papering yourself, get- the semi-trimmed variety. hand of trimming of? one edge with a pair of scisors you just knock one end of the un- opened roll on the table and the edge comes right off. Professional paper-hangers don’t like this kind of paper as they say it doesn’t make as neat seam-s as the kind they trim thciiiselves. l have found it. most satisfactory for using myself and can’t see anything wrong with the joints. ’ Plain paper or plain painted walls (if pastor is good) make a room look even larger than does a paper with a small pattern. To drop the ceiling treatment as far as the tops of the doors is another way of making a room look larger. It gives the eil’xct of a large ceiling space and one gets the impression that the floor space is large too. I An expert pzipcrhanger gave me the following tips. Perhaps everybody knows them but they Were a great help to me when I was learning. Always start papering at the door frame or a window frame the corners of a room are often crooked. Test your strips for traightr‘ess occasionally with a pluntbline er a heavy button tied on a Don’t try to turn a corner without cutting the strip the whole way down; 0in if it is only a few inches it will make wrinkles which will crack when they dry. Use thin paste for heavy paper and thick paste for thin paper. Fill small cracks and holes in with paster of Paris. cover large ones with cotton dipped in the paste and smooth- ed on. . If you are lucky enough to be getting new curtains at the same time don‘t choose them just because they are pretty but rather with regard to the color scheme of your paper. Flowered curtains are best with plain walls and plain curtains with flowery walls. I have never tried papcring a ceiling myselfâ€"I am sure I would wind myself up in the strips of wet, pasted paperâ€" but al- most anyone can paint or tint a ceiling. A small table is better to stand on than a step ladder for this job as one can do much more without climbing down and moving. When you are re-hanging your pictures hang them so that the middle of each picture is about the level of the average persons eye. Let them lie flat against the wall and see how much more restful your room will be than when you have to look up to see the pictures. a l LOANS INSURANCE HERRINGTON FINANCIAL AGENT Phone 87 REAL ESTATE BONDS .l. R. RICHMOND HILL ONTARIO. &%w 0 c Notice as 30% A car of Heavy Western Oats about to arrive. A car of Gluten just recently unloaded, also a supply of Bran, Shorts, Cracked Corn and Corn Meal, Dealers and» Big Egg Scratch Feed at $2.50. Regent and Dandy Laying Mash. Blatchford and Purina Feeds. Purity and Royal household flour, $8.50 per barrel. Solvay Coke Pocahontas Coal Cut Slabs Cut Hardwood HERE is comfort to be our coal for One ecause it is clean quality found in two reasons. is l. D. RAMER Richmond Hill From the Elevator l“