WWWWO W‘iWWOW Johnston & Granston MANUFACTURERS & IMPORTERS OF «JANADIAN & FOREIGN Granite Monmménts Phone HYIand 2081 Open Evenings Res. Phone 9788 Saterday: I see in the noosepaper whair 1 brand of siggaret is good for my dygeschen & a nother is ezey on my throte. My throte dont need bein ezeyi on & I dont bleeve eaten sig- garts wood' be good for my indyâ€" geschen. So I can use none of nee- ther. Friday : After supper tonite Pa Sed. to me Come in to the living rm. I want to tawk about sum of the grater things of life. We went in & shut the door & then I sek okey Pa what is it you want to no from me. & then the gathering ajurnd‘ed .& broke up. TRAVEL SERVICE Thursday : Blisters were a tellen me about it today. He sed as he were excorting Elsy home from the partie last nite he kep on' beging her for a kiss & she kep on sayen no and etc. Dont you like kissen, he sed he sed, & she replide Mebby. but I dont like beggerg, I like cave men. Wednesday: As I sed 1 wood do I got even up with Jane agen. I ast her did eneyboddie tell her how wanderful she are & when she sed no then I sed whare do you get the idear then. "1; ='éniakid will lern to use a charge acct. at a grocerie store. Tuesday : Unkel Hen wont ever Iern moddern ways it looks like. He was up to the citty 1 night recent & when the hotel clerk ast him did he want a inside or a outside rm. be sad inside he bleeved as it lookt stormy. Can you beet that. Sunday: I was over to J for the p. m. & Jake was quit sko< PLUMBING AND TINSMITHING CAN EASILY RESULT FROM HEAJV/l~ WINTER DIET Don’t suffer from constant headache, biliousness, consti- PIRKEIS‘ pation, coated "mm 7 tongue, etc. PASSPORTS ARRANGED FOR A. C. HENDERSON THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 25th, 1937. _ Richmond Hill Y. B. Tracy, Agent, Phone 169 Can. National Station J. R. HERRINGTON 93 Yonge St., Richmond Hi} C.N.R. Money Order Office SLATS’ DIARY 1849 Yongo St. (east side) Between Mertan & Balliol Sts. Steamship Reservations to Great Britain and the Continent. Premier service to West Indies A LAZY LIVER PHONE 71 GLENNS DRUG STORE EXPRESS TELEGRAPH Rail tickets and 5 Reservations Hot Water Heating- and General Repairs (By Oliver N. Warren) Thornhill, Ontario Insurance Conveyancing Estates Managed Rents Collected Rea! Estate is a vegetable cor- rective and will give quick relief. “also aids the stomach in its digestion. Sold for over 40 years. 31.00 II how erly Parké’s LIVER TO hi wunder sleeper A! his 11 at “Thankee, I will that.†He cast a look of dumb gratitude at George, his voice carried a plaintive note. “Great night for ducks,†Georg-e l'came with the gleam was a pathetic ) one. The hands were white, not the whiteness of careful manicuring, but rather the pallor of death or grave “Ducks? Ducks fly in the spring and. the fall. This is the season when the crows devour the corn and the buzzards flee the eagle. This is the He stagge poured him remarked absurdly season when the swallows gather i] the evening and? the meadowlark sing- in the furrOWS at dawn. Ahâ€" I rememberâ€"I rememberâ€"" George observed? that the fingers of both hands kept working in and' out spasmmï¬cally. He thought his visitor must have been stricken with a. fever or an ag-ueâ€"and small wonâ€" deii. What manner of man would choose a night; like this to be wand- ering along a remote highway? The man stepped slowly into the room, shading his- eyes against the glare of the electric light. Shamb- led, rather is the word. His gait was awkward and his manner semiâ€" apologetic. illness were A sound‘ at the back door startled‘ him. He shoved bagk his chair. Surely there was the noise of steps making itself perceptible above the swish 22nd roar of the storm. “Who’s there?†he cried. He saw the knob turn slowly and then the door was pushed slowly in- .Mary was upstairs asleep, worn out from the long drive. Gem'rro told himself that he would go to sleep pretty soon, too. But the pipe was pleasant and the contemplation of his own creature- comforts in a storm-tossed world was pleasa’nter. He raked up the logs in the stove again, elevated his stockingless feet to the kitchen table and gave himself up to solid com~ fort. The whole countryside must be swarming: and crawling with inter- ested Americans. But the peOple were Slow to friendship. Stolid conâ€" servat'ves mostly. which pleased George and Mary no little for they could stand their share of solitude. too. This was the holiday to which Mary and he had looked forward. Their first really. And it promised endleSS delights. The lush greenery of the New York State countryside in the Finger Lakes region had been a motion picture all afternoon of al- ways new and newer loveliness. No neighbors. No towns. No swanky clubs and! no din and blare of motor traffic. A house so big that they could have parked most of the friends they cared- about in it. No furnace, but fireplaces every- where. Solid, honest house with huge ceiling beams and walls: as thick as a Spanish convent’s. They had stumbled on this treasa ure entirely by chance two summers before and determined to own it. hi “I told her I .saw it coming in those lowâ€"lying black clouds. Dam thOSe low-lying black clouds. Darn- ed gopd‘ thing I shoved my foot down .on that throttle and kept the speed- ometer nosing around sixty-five all the way. Gee! Listen to it pour! Hate to be caught out in it." MMWWWWW-flammé WWWQOWWQW “Sit down, won’t you, Mr.â€" Mr 'om- 7v 1rd. A man stood before him. closing a door behind him, slowly, while 3 tempost’s fury tried to force it- he 1 ends of with them an THE LIBERAL SHORT STORY nt rogues in (21% nent blew up suddenly; one ent New York State wore a suit of shape- andJ a peaked andl :o woolen and of the nto ,ble the corn and the eagle. This is the swallows gather in .om atula he man’s appear~ ’ George’s eyesâ€"« hands. The eyes s thinking as he r, seaped with the supplies they had THE NIGHT OF JULY 3RD By Genevieve Forbes Herrick SW11] g in chair. George n the dirty co His going: to himsel claw a- arteries )W Mary ‘was When her v0 ing‘ sunshine had a treat for him. A {t of good farm eggs and ha “I drove to a farmhouse fc away. And Georgeâ€"we 1i gine it!â€"â€"in a haunted _h0us A vision of Joab Krehthe Joab Krehtha. Krehtha creek. What was the/connection? Finally George knocked the dottle out of his pipe and stole upstairs to bed. mg sunsnme his bed. “Hurry up th of July.†In the kit Suddenly, Joab Krehtha got up. He bowed ceremoniously to his hest, moved to the deer, turned the knob. The howling wind threw the door wide open, and the whipping, stingâ€" ing, tempest-driven rain beat in. Joab Krehtha kept walking. The night and the storm swallowed him. let looseâ€"and I loosened it. That’s why I come back here each year on the night of the third of Julyâ€"to repent, yes, to repent.†Joab Krehtha leaned forward with head bowed, staring. His- white hands clawed at his knees, his thin lips worked convvulsively, and his gleamâ€" ing: eyes seemed' to see that which George Akers could not see. An eerie sense of apprehension took possesâ€" sion of George. He felt uneasy. What “The ed, tht murder George Akers felt a sudden sen- sation of alarm, as if he had found himself, suddenly in the presence of a maniac. The man’s words certain- ]y heightened that impression. Then Joab. Krehtha‘s face broke into a smile, pathetic and‘ resigned. “The Fourth oflJuly, eh?†George broke in. “That’s right, it’s tomor- row. I’d almost forgotten.†“‘Tain’t that,†he said. “’Tain’t the lonesomeness. No. No! I tell you it ain’t lonesome. There’s too many folk I can’t get away from. I see themâ€"I see them! Men, wo- men and children.' Yes, children. Little ones. The woman and: the children,†he finished, his voice trailâ€" ing off, “had the longesi hair.†“Excuse me," he said.' “You don’t see what I see. You don’t recall what I do. I keep forgetting that.†“Was there something I could do for you, Mr. Krehtha? Is some one in your family ill, perhaps? If you need a doctor-†. “Every year,†the old man said. “Evel‘yl year now for one hundred aml‘ well nigh sixty years. Last year nobody was here. I sat alone in this very kitchen, and it was dark. The moon was shining. It was. like that other nightâ€"†“The Fourth of July? No, you're wrong. It was the third of July: Do you think I could forget? No. No. I tell you! They won’t let meâ€"†Fourth of July. What’s that? Nofh- ingâ€"only ashes and black stumpsâ€"â€" and horror! Horror! But all day on the thirdâ€"†“You talk‘lik’e an unreconstructed Tory,†saidl George. “Tory? I am a Tory. God bless my King. But I hate the Iroquoisi creek timber. Ien fro fishing Joab Krehtha sent him a sharp glance. “I guess: you mean the FC July, Mr. Krehtha.†“The Fourth of July.†H was low and ‘pitiful again “What?†“Isn’t it thrillin old me the eggs tic mind butchered, burnt, th THE LIBERAL, RICHMOND HILL, ONTARIO July. What’s th ashes and black 1'! Horror! Bu iaresay you’ve no t on that score,†eggs tol a man up long before him. ce woke him the momâ€" was streaming across venture ‘Iing! It’s the Four Chl [d m who they slaught V scarlped, tl' The lady me abot 'k n Ruâ€? acon His voice hir 1‘ E noug JD to But possibly the discharge is im- portantâ€"maybe we shouldn’t disre- gard it. If we find water seeping through a wall into our house, de we keep mopping it up and cover- ing the wet spot with a picture or piece of furniture? In haste a plumb- er is sent for. We want to have 'the leak found and fixed even if it is necessary to tear down the wall. With few exceptions! a discharge from the ear accompanied by same 105s of hearing in that ear, means deep seated disease. This disease may appear very innocent but when least expected it may flare up with disastrous results. DISCHARGE FROM THE EAR â€"â€"- JUST A NUISANCE? “Why worry about a discharge from the ear? If the ear is. kept clean and a piece of absorbent cotâ€" ton put in it for a cork, one can forget about it. It is true the ear may be deaf but if the other ear is all right one can hear enough for practical purposes. Just put up with the discharge as long as you have no pain.†Not long atro, John, who hm] bnen apparently in excellent health, comâ€" plained of a headache and not feel- ing up to the mark. Simple reme- A HEALTH SERVICE OF THE CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANI'E ny. I’ll said I don or parlor car he Canadian Pacific Railway Angus Shops at Montreal are humming with activity these days as the Company continues its comprehensive programme of air- conditioning. In the current year, airâ€"conditioning equipment will be added to 136 cars, including standard sleepers, dining cars; tourist sleepers, parlor cars, and day coaches, and these, in addi- tion in the 130 cars air-condition- er] in 1936, will permit a. very tled here before the Revol- War. He was against the and they say he was the incited the Indians and ;he settlers in the Wyom- r massacre. And now his [ks around these parts evâ€" on the anniversary of the itiox How did 3} ahtha told you WES -I forg‘ Canadian Pacific Extends 801'2‘6 ext you ju the throughou trar what the Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian Medical As- sociation, 184 College Street, Toron- to, will be answered personally by letter. surgeon. He is able by various meâ€" thods of examination to diagnose the true nature of the trouble. He is able to say whether simnle treat: ment is sufficient or Whether opera- tion is necessary. Operation does not always stop the discharge,'but it will reveal. the true nature of the infection and; should prevent the dreaded Meningitis. ' One has ample time usually, to seek advice and help for the dis- charging ear but to procrastinate is often fatal. ' There is-n’t going to be much pri- vacy in this old world any more. A scientist now claims he can photo- graph people’s thoughts. Wifeâ€"It’s nearly six weeks now since the baby was born. Have you been to the court house and tom the registrars .y-et? Husbandâ€"No, if they live Within five miles radius of this house, they won’t need to be told. t worse sleeping and parlor cars for use on trains between Montreal and Quebec, Montreal and Ottawa, Toronto and Ottawa, and trains HARRY ‘R. RO SE we IT g of tourist < mscontmentz mcouver and to is a new 2 re of the 193' ll supplemex Office Hoursâ€"Every Monday and Thursday Afternoon ‘ and by appointment Toronto Offices: 100 Adelaide Street West 40 Yonge St, Richmond Hill 1T tri bet John became The 11 trains betwee! Montreal and Tor‘ 1nd interesting tea.- 7 programme. This at 11‘s 1t Air-Conditioned Service char Montre Airâ€"con ROSE 8: HERMAN B ARRISTERS-AT-LAW )UI‘ ada itic ear 831‘ een ‘his ill )1‘ a; D 9390900900039000 e Eâ€... rrt ._,e 5..., Mill Ym k is 9 cannot MgMil ‘5 l 3 1t: 9: chance: 1' xel to dem supply. stripped, as in lower right, and insulated to keep out heat, cold, and dust. The pictures a; the left show some of the material é Milk is one commodity you 0’ cannot afford to take 8 chances on. You are wise §to demand that your milk Car “M supply reaches you in the best possibie condition. 'You can be assured of a o dependable supply by hav- 3 ing our driver call daily. g Phone 42 Richmond Hill 1 43-00000'360 oooooW Blessed is that chruch whose choir is not a battleground for pre- ferred position and unseemingly jealousdes. ' uepencaam Milk fm- YOur Tabh FUR Dependable Milk & Dairy Produce 'ount the ‘MOOOOOOWOW G.’ S. WALVVIN, Prop. Richmond Hi1} Dairy R. H. KANE TINSMITHING QACES - PLUMBIN( HEATING .ed sleepers and lounge 'e also provided for the neer" service between St. Paul, and Vancouver. dea of the work connect- airâ€"conditioning is given ictures above. Cars are PAGE SEVEN 4 Yonge Street Telephone 13 in t1 bitten nks I] ‘umps LOUIS HERMAN 111 Equipment