Richmond Hill Public Library News Index

The Liberal, 29 Sep 1927, p. 7

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"gln case of breaks Or bum brakes Who Pays the Damage P YOU DO ! RICBm'OND HILL We solicit orders for cut flowers for all oc- casions which will be promptly and cheer- fully filled. OPTOMETRISTS EYESIGHT SPECIALISTS .l‘horough Eye Examinations gndQlasses VThat Fit Perfectly. fipocial Attgntion_t() Children's Eye's Open Evenings. Pnune Hudson 0461 for Appointment. Richmond Hill - Ont. John Dunlop & Son All Kinds of Boot and Shoe Repair- ing Neatly Done Good Workmanship. Prompt Service. Shop in Winterton’s Old Stand Yonge St. ‘qent For Automobile Insurance. TEL. 118 THE BIND OPTICAL C0. Oven-kisf .1715 MODERN ARROWROOT 2513 Yonge St. North Toronto. (Opposite the Capitol Theatre) J. & M. STEIN Phoneâ€"Willowdale 96W Unless You Insure Withâ€" W. N. Mabbett Electrical Contractor A. G. SAVAGE C. H. Sanderson, Richmond Hill. rep- resents the Fuller Brush Co. in Mark- ham Twp. and will gladly give service to any patrons in this district. Include Ovenâ€"kist Biscuits in Your Order Boot and Shoe Repairer. It bontains maltâ€"to iid diges' tjon! Limeâ€"to strengthen growing bones! Canada's new! est. tastiest and most nutriâ€" tious biscuit. Children love them! Telephone 165 Richmond Hill FULLER BRUSHES THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 29. 1927 Richmond Hill, Ont. POYNTZ AVENUE LANSING, ONT. 3 5 f PER Pal/ND FLORISTS Obtainable From GEO. KIDD ONTARIO O" When a concert under the auspices of the Thornhill Band was held in Victoria Hall. Mr. Jas. Fox, Toronto humorous vocalist who was always popular with a Thornhill audience was present, also Mr. Jas. O’Brien, of Lasâ€" kay, recited. The accomplished pia- nist Miss Flora Langstaff was engagâ€" ed as accompanist. was held in the Library room, memâ€" bers present were: W.T. Storey, F. McConaghy, H.A. Nichols, W.H. Pugsley, W.A. Sanderson, T.F., Mc- Mahon, Wm. Harrison, P.G. Savage. When the Buttonville Harvest Home services‘in connection with the Methodist church. Rev. John Vickery This Week of 1895 When a meeting of the Board of Management ref 7 the Public Library When ‘Robina Beloved wife of A.B. Davidson of Newmarket passed away at the age of 34 years. When Messrs R. Langstaff a__nd F. McConaghy returned to the Toronto School of medicine on Saturday. When York Township Fall Fair was held at Lansing. Good premiums were given for stock, farm produce and Ladies work. When the first wagon manufactur- ed in the Maple Carriage works was rolled down stairs, it looked splendid. The proprietors reported orders com- ing in rapidly. This Week of 1889 When at Trinity church, Thornhill by the Rev. W.W. Bates, M.A., Rect- or. Robert G. Davison, son of Wm.,F. Davison, of Toronto, was united in marriage to Annie C. youngest daugh- ter of the late Robert Arnold of the Village of Thornhill. At the Experimental Farm, Nappan Nova Scotia, figures have been colâ€" lected on the average cost of keeping a ewe for a year, also on the profits The quantity and quality of the pro- duct which the sheep-breeder will have to market the following yearY are largely determined by the care which the flock received during the fall months, September to November, and the spring months from March until June. While most breeders re- aliZC the influence which proper care at lambing time will have on the num- ber of good lambs raised, few consider the breeding season and the period just preceding it as worthy of any especial attention; and yet the old slogan of live stock breeders, “Breed, Feed and Weed,” can be applied at this time to as good or better advantâ€" age than at any other period in the year. At this time the breeder should select the sire of his hext year’s crop of lambs. Nothing but a good pure- bred should be used; one that has been inspected and passed as a good representative of the breed. Strict selection of the ewes should be pract- ised, and all those of poor mutton and wool type should be culled; also those that have shown themselves poor breeders. Any ewe which is a shy or non-breeder is a distinct loss to the owner and should not be retained in the flock. Careful Handling of Breeding Flock Essential at This Season VARIETY NOT a big variety of - ' makes of tires, but a real assortment of Goodyear types, sizes and tread designs. No matter when your car was madeâ€"there‘s a tire here to fit it. And you'll like the price, because there‘s variety there, too. Save time and trouble! Buy Goodyears from us! More people ride on them than on any other kind. For service sake, buy at home arold Reid’sGarage “ Way'Back in Liberal Files ” DO YOU REMEMBER DO YOU REMEMBER Breed, Feed and Weed " Should Be Slogan of Sheep Breeders. ELGIN MILLS. Telephone 116 r 3. of Richmond Hill preached a most ex- cellent sermon. When the Maple football club jour- neyed to Toronto Junction to play their return game with the Carlton Wests. The boys of Maple were very successful and by all round good play- ing ran up a score of 3-0. When an interesting programme was given in the Methodist Sunday School. The Superintendent being Mr. Switzer who gave an address of we]. come to the many visitors present. Vocal solos were rendered by Miss Ethel Switzer and Miss Violet Storey, Mr. A.J. Hume gave an address on “Our Sunday School.” This Week of 1905 When a very successful Harvest Home Festival was held at Zion Methâ€" odist Church. The programme con_ sisted of repitations by Rev. H. Lee of Unionville and Miss Stock of Toronto. Addresses were given by Rev. Mcâ€" Kinley, of Thornhill and Rev. Camp- bell of Richmond Hill. When the brethren of Richmond Lodge held an informal meeting in the Lodge room and spent a pleasant hour with Bro. R.E. Law, on the eve of his departure to British Columbia and presented him with a purse. When Mr. T. Herbert Lennox had his office at Kellys Hotel every Wed- nesday. DO YOU REMEMBER This Week of 1902 When Mr. Henry J. Saig‘eon who taught the Jefferson school for a number of years resigned near the close of the summer vacation and a- ccepted a position .as principal of the Public School in Manitoba. When Oscar W. Conlin late princiâ€" pal of the Richmond Hill Public School passed away. When Reeve Savage had one of the finest mushroom beds ever seen for a- long time. When it was announced that Mrs. Armand Savage would receive at the home of her mother, Mrs. Wm. Trench. When a cricket match was played between the married and the single men here. Where Lawyers Lawrence and Boyd acted as umpires and W.A. Glass kept the score. When Mr. F. Bowes of' Concord preached in the Methodist church at Maple on Sunday morning. All lambs should have been weaned about the last of August. The ewes are flushed for three weeks or more in September on clover aftermath or rape supplemented with a small a- mount of grain, such as oats and bran. Ewes which are in good condition and gaining in flesh at breeding time, will drop and raise a larger percentage of lambs than ewes in poor condition. At the Nappan Farm twenty ewes which were not flushed dropped twenty- ,four lambs and raised twenty-three of \them. Twenty-four ewes pastured on clover aftermath dropped forty lambs and raised thirty-three. Allow the ewes to remain on the clover or rape for only a few hours a day when first put on this feed or bloating will re- sult. After breeding, the ewes may be wintered on good clover hay and turnips with little or no grain until before lambing time. A meeting of the Richmond Hill Branch Bible Society was held in the school room of the Methodist church. The chair was occupied by the pastor, Rev. T. Campbell. All trucks Insured for Public Liabil- ity and Property Damage. which may be expected when the flock is carefully selected and culling practised. The average yearly feed cost of a ewe, over a period of six years, is $8.72. The profit over feed cost is $8.46. A non-breeding ewe re- turns only her wool to pay for her keep. The average value of this is $2.40, so the loss to her owner is $14.- 78 per year. The ewe which is a poor milker, and rears only a small lamb, returns on the average $7720, which is not enough torpay for her feed. Telephone 1535 Express and Long Distance Moving Sand and Gravel Delivered Dump Trucks for Hire By Hour or Contract Professional Graduate of Owen A Smiley Studio. A. C. HENDERSON PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING Hot Water Heating and General Repairs THORNHILL. ONT. CONCERT ENTERTAINER AND ‘ TEACHER ADDRESS Boyle Studia Marguerite Boyle Elocutionist Thornhill WILSON’S CARTAGE DO YOU REMEM BER ? THE LIBERAL. RICHMOND HILL. ONT. Telephone 54 R 2. MAPLE Miss Remember that, however pcwistcnt a staain you are treating, many short application of the remover are better and safer than any Violent or pro- éonged treatment, as you will not ant to ruin or weaken your material. Chemical stains on white material should be doctored with some bleach- ing preparation, but never make the mistake of trying a bleach, such as salts of lemon or peroxide, on a color- ed material, and never use a bleach at all u less you are sure other methods will ail. But you will want them for such stains as ink, or any medicine a stain you are treating, many short tackle.. If you have left it all behind at last Why that’s enough, you’re done with it, you’re through; This is another chapter in the book, This is another race that you have planned, Don’t give the vanished days a back- ward look, ‘ (Start where you stand. The world won’t care about your old defeats If you can start anew and win suc- cess, The future is your time, and time is fleet And there is much of work and strain and stress; Forget the buried woes and dead (10- spairs, Here is a brand new trail right at hand, 'The future is for him who does and dares, Start where you stand. 01d failures will not halt, old tri- umphs aid, To-day’s the thing, to-morrow soon will be; Get in the fight and face it unafraid. And leave the past to ancient his- tory; What has been, has been; yesterday is dead And by it you are neither blessed nor banned, Take courage, man, be brave and drive ahead, L Start where you stand. h The main thing to remember in the treatment of all stains on clothing is that it is always best to try the simpl- est treatment first, suéh as a little ammoniawater, or, in - the case of grease spots, ironing through a thick sheet of blotting paper. Don’t forget that the best thing to remove paint is turpentine, and this should not harm your material. Fruit juice stains will usually yield to simp- le- borax. But they are best treated first with cold water or hot water, or a few spots of pure alcohol or benzoin to dissolve. Milk or cream or chocolate stains should be treated as grease, and are best treated with petrol, which, how- ever, should not be rubbed, as that will tend to spread the oily mark. Start where you stand and never mind the past, The past won’t, help you in begin- ning new, The holiday season, with its pic- nics and general festivities, seldom passes withbut leaving its legacy of tiresome spot and stains on the clothes which we value and which cannot be “tubbed.” COMING .' Eyesight Specialist 167 Yonge Street, Toronto 2. Toronto‘s able eye specialist mav be consulted about your eyes for glasses at H. F. Austin’s Drug Store Rich- mond Hill, Tuesday afternoon from 1 Wm t0 8 P-m- October 11th Canadian women's golf champion, scored a. sensational 77 in the qual- ifying round in the United States National Women's Golf champion- ship tournament, and won the gold medal. Geo McDonald says you can’t beat Wool- nough’s Haméss come in and see it when in Toronto. START WHERE YOU STAND II. Woolnough Phone Elgin 6980 Cor. Queen and Ontario Streets Toronto. MISS ADA MACKENZIE Helpful Hints F. E. LUKE Chocolate Stains Richmond Street Richmond Hill W. G. Baidock Limited 11,12,13&14 FARM MACHINERY DEMONSTRATION Blocks Made To Order 0r From Our Stock At Yards Chairman, JAS. McLEAN Richmond Hill; Vice.â€"Chairman, MAJOR GEO. B. LITTLE, Agincourt Secretary, R. J. ROGERS, Newmarket Treas., G. M. DAVISON, Unionville Ontario~ Plowmen’s Association Toronto Municipal Farm YORK COUNTY Stop 19, North Yonge St. Our Radio Season opens this year with the finest Atwater Kent Radio Sets‘we have ever sold. All six tube single dial control in beau- tiful Walnut Cabinets. Our stock is com- plete, and we invite you to come into our show room and see and hear the sets in operation. See Atwater Kent and judge for yourself. Atwater Kent Radio Sets Tuesday, Thursday, Wednesday, Friday, GET OUR PRICES ON ( )E ME‘cN'l‘ VV ()RK IT WILL PAY YOU OCTOBER YORK COUNTY LOCAL COMMITTEE HNTERNATIONAL CEMENT MIXERS FOR RENT G. S. REAMAN AND Richmond Hi1. PAGE SEVEN Ontario

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