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The Goderich Star, 1922-03-16, Page 5PAUL MIR era Prices' Are Away Dowo Saw Are triad Eve hewer Thu in Pre -War Days Keds was saw V.P. Kodak $11.24 $151 14 bold Jr, 1145 1101 111lsdak O. 12.40 15,10 21 Kodak Jr *4.51 11011 3A :Kodak els. 2141 2101 Now l* the Time to Buy That Camera. at CAMPBELL'S DRUG • TOR Phone 90 .The Square Browner w.0 a.w $ eittils Ittie 1 e. 2 Taws s 1.110 .2x1 Ng„ IA Souls 4.11 1.141 e14.2 linmais 1.40 4,51 k i20 Inwilt 140 5.111 r SOLD IAL TLS �•,ii�',1R PERS A Monument to lie'hrected in Square at Head of East Street—Commit- teeH tc . Named to Have Work Done About fit pe ns urn out to theineeting held at the town hall on Friday evening last of the contribu- tors to the Soldiers` Memorial Food. The meeting was called in order to arrive at some final tonclusion as to what to doo and totake *termtto have this carried to ca .. completion. Although it was really decided at meeting some -considerable time ago that m,a onument' should be the ago ;of as memoriale the question twee again thrown open, but the only motion was Model Theatre 'WEEK ;CHARM 20 TO 25 Monday and Tuesday ALICE LAKE IN • "Over the Woreg Two -Reel Comeilg' "Crowning Torch?' sda bu a Wednesday and T sd y ANTONIO `MORENO 1N The Secret of the Hills. ...Big V Special Comedy: "Mules,and :Mortga • a" Friday an Saturday 'CQNSTANNE T A LM ADGE " Romance and Arabella!' Camnpbell Comedy "The Storks Mistake . _. Matinee --Mon. and Wed. at 4.15 p. m. Saturday at 3.00 p. 1W- • • Coming --Princess Mary Wedding on. Fri. and Sat., . March 31st . and ..April 1st. • ',l'wofull showa'. every night coni. teeming at 7.30 p.; in. ofavorofa t moved one in monument,. . u by Mr. Geo. Williams, and seconded by Mr. Chas. Darrow. The question of a site was one -which caused a great deal of d' scui- sionold with this was involved the question styleof monument, ,of iii um , as it was pointed out the style of monu- ment which might be, suitable on one. location might not be aiiitable for A- nother. It was decided t(, *elect the site first andthen the style °Vele u- ment could besuited to the location. Monument men would wept to know tire location before theyWould. nib - mit a design as suitabl Ven.. Archdeacon Jones -Bateman advocated the formation of a plot at the intersection of Elgin and Water- loo streets and the erection of the monument there. There . was room for a plot 150 feet seross. This lo- cation a-ca ioo would be in view frem the Square and would have the advant-" age of the, monument being in a plot oaf its owe and in a, Ioeation not so public- as 'the Square, ' which.was . the centre ..of ..every celebration - in the. way of street carnival and what not. The, monument would be something in the nature of a.shrine and on that acepunt would he better away from the Square.• k The advocates of the square as the location pointed out that many old people who got down to the square would not be able to get to the other location,• that the situation on the square at the edge of the park at the head of East street was the most prominent point in the town, anyone coming to town off the G. T. R. would run •`'right into it," it was by East street that the , soldiers left, ' they 'went to the „east, came bark by East street, etc„ and that this was the lo- cation picked out by a monument man who 'had been in town. This would mean the cutting out offour trees in the park. Mr, T. Pritchard,., Mr. H. T. Edwards, Mr. B. C. Mune Pings and others spoke in favor of this location, 'On the other hand. it was pointed out that a monument on the square would be hidden by the trees, except from the one view from. East -street, that falling leaves; would stain it, and that a clear open spate was the pro per location for a monument, with low bushes about it possibly, Dr. Field was an advocate of this. view and Mr. II. Sturdy also spoke along these lines. There sae a metier' by Arebda�e oou Joass-satemraan, seconded by lir. Jnus. ,ioisamellatentamt time the n omwurment be Located at the interamietion of Wat- eriou street and Elgin *venue. Stored in amettemeet by M. Mime►. Inge, seconded by Mr. H. T. Edwards, that the issonuusrsat be located is the square park at the bead of East :,t. Moved in amendment to the a. amend .nt by Dr. Field, seconded by Mr. H. Sturdy, that the monument be located in harbor Park. In eke general .diseussian that fol•' lowed Mr. J. 3, Melwen expressed himself in; favor of the Waterloo -El - Sin avenue intersection, Mr. Fred turdy pointed out that if the idea. that the monument was to be locat- ed at the head of the street by which the soldiers left was to be taken into account, the monument should be at the head of Kingston ston street as it was by this street that the most of ,tho soldiers (the 161st regiment) left . On the vote, the amendment to the adnmendnient (in favor of harbor park) was defesited substantially. Then came the amendment (favor. ing the location on the ,Square at the head of East street). The vete on thee was close, 22 votes being counted in favor of this and 19 against This d when waset "ed and the de aced carr( to vote su a the o r3 :i Amendment ry s put motion, 25 voted for it. ° The matter of the selection of a design and carrying out the work was left to a committee, live mein- i tedthe meeting, hers to bas n , ppo by �. i ^i. and Goderich township (which is eo- operating in the erection of the monument) to name a representa- tive, also if Colborne township de - dice to co-operate, the council of that township to name a represent*. tive. The names of T. Pritchard, H. T. Edwards, C. Garrow, Archdeacon Jones -Bateman, W. Lane,Mrs. W, L. Horton, Mrs. Geo. Williams, player Wigle, C. A. Reid, Dr. Field and Mrs. Vox. were • nominated and a ballot was taken and the following were declared elected: Mrs. W. L. Hotton, T. Pritchard, Charles Gar- row,Archdeacon Jone- $&temanand Mayor, Wigle.. This committee is at liberty, to carry out the work or,, if the members' wish to come .bask with their recommendations for final ap!. proval. Mr. W. H.bertson and Mr. if. L. Salkeld were ppointed to wait on � the Col rne. to shipand ascertain if it • wishes mime.mime.o be included in the contributors to the memorial. At first. Colborne was in favor of o' something in wayof doing me g the ame- morial itself; now it was understood it might be the council would like to be included with Goderich and Gode- rich township in the erection of 'one memorial at Goderich. et Owing to the ` coming removal from town of Mr. .Wyvillle Millar,. the treasurer ofthe fund, a new __app pointment became necessary and lvlr. Geo, Williams was named as treas- A meeting of this committee„ was held on Monday evening, when .May- or Wigle was- appointed chairman and'' T. Pritchard secretary, and it was decided to advertise in the local papers, in the Montreal Star and' the Toronto 'Globe for designs and pri- ees of meinoriais ranging, from: $5000 to $7,000. C. P.R. WIN TOWN LEAGUE CHAMPIONSHIP Drew Mace Plat Against lace, As- ses McDonald Stand is !vete, Playing in half an inch of water on Thurelay night. March title, the Drew Maes,. stutter working their way through to the ninalsi, loa;t the town league championship to the fast C', P. It. teats b y the score of 3.1. The Scotchmen by greet hockey, boat no team can outplay luck and a good team. The C. P. R. has a good team; the players aro all epecdy, combine ni ely and carry good shots. They sw t up and down m two, threes and sorii times fours, leveeing mostly a- roe d the Drew Mace goal. 'Their pas es were sharp and AS a rule ac - cur tea though many of them were de in the earlier' part of the and they were repeatedly eel - off lgame, ed bit The C. ?. R. defense was very good, Wiggins and Snaith, tvea big fellows. played consistent hockey from gong to gong. Not only were they strong defensively, but they were both good on returning the puck, Wigkins woe- ing coring the C. P. lt.'s last goal in the se- cond peeled. The three C. P. R. for- wards worked well togetbet, Taylor and Brownlee being perhapsthe psk of the teem. Angus Dceo a1d was, vi t,o t a do t the stsr o£fle me iv in a phenominal exhibition of net tending. There were titres when he saved shot after shot unassisted, .and at various; stages of the gaits he could be core. • A. good story is told of twin broth- era, one of whom was a elergyrian and the: other a doctor., - A short. sighted woman congratulated the lat- ter on his admirable sermon. ' "Excuse. me, madam," was his re- ply; "over there is my Mother, wino preaches; 1 only: practice." pared to a baseball player, dropping' his stick and eateliing,t'he?, puck with his hands.Twice during t e seeend . the period when Taylor and Snazel, re- apectively, were coining down the .ire he rami out and tackled them like a good full-back in a rugby game, Alt. analysis of the shots tired at his nets shows that he was='shot at 93 tinier and only, let three pass, eight of, these saves being unassisted. Of the Drew Mac .forwards Murn- ey and Skipper McDonald were the best, both of these iad, s „. !avis b „playing town hockey. Skipper McDonald' wait in and out of nearly every play.. Murney scored the Drew Macs' only goal when .he shot from center and scored, eleven minutes after the first period had started, Roy McDonald on ,the defense was very effective, playing hard .all the time and eireak mngup many of the . C. , P. a. rushes. The first period opened with a rush .to the C. P. $. getting away wa good start and keeping the puck a well down towards the Diem ''Macs' end. - Four minutes after the genie had started Turner and Snazel took the puck down for a goal. After it was faced off again, the puck was lost out a' window, and when the new puck was put into play Brownlee immediately. took it down for a second goal. Dur- ing the last few : minutes of this 'pee- led urns scored the Drew Macs' M x oniv goal. The Drew Macs started out in the second period to retrieve their lost fortunes, but they seemed unable to nenetrate.: the C. P. R. defense. Eight minutes. after the period had started Wiggins scored off a rebound. from the boards behind the . nets. The last period was scoreless, the C. P. R. working 'to kill time by shooting long shots the length of the ice and not following them up, while the. Drew Macs worked their heads. off trying•to score, the game ending 3=1. Referee Swarts -handled the game well during the first period, but in the last two periods he seemed 'un - 4 • GOVERNOR.GENERAI► HONORS CHAMPION FIRST AID 'FAM OF CANADA. Team front the Grand Trunk shopsiirat aim! (anibulanee work). Dr. t'. team. The nieinbcrs of t1 winning at Stratford, tint, wee received 1A. Iiodgetts, 1lirertnr General of St. tears from left to right are: Top from the halide of the Governor -Gena John Ambulance Association, Exam- row: ill. G. It. Deaton, instructor; Med the teams from the various rail.- F. Bradly.; J. Weiss (Captain), J. V. 'd lurcht w Fir ld h Robertsrte (Supt. b. evil at O a. tm� Mennen; J. :Rabe � a a ( ►} departments, r is ate. , Maii II ( �'va �S mines, old a u le � ani ie 4H n , ► the Montiranibert Trophy emblems- of 'the Dominion before awardin Stratford Shops); Sitting --3, Miller, tie of the championship of t'anada in premier honors to this Grand Trunk 1t. Weir and A. T. Cooper. THE LAND OF .PROMISE . IFAS very* large and a nice belan ee There w ere a number oftadiea goes to the credit of the Acthar iir«bthe chores besides those already di Yn A ill t Amusing, Pr tty d V ry cls. named, o mee,Pand the young• ladies in the �, in tho selection of the various ones g Y Ask.CeIraEto Givo You 56 QT'S tiUR 'PHONE NUMBED ]tL THEY • 0 MOR[A oa mutoig, o e `en b. e. in whish Dudley Eric Musical Church Arthur r it y l en i Wilson) was the pleased victim, Were Ar r � irct to -tnka the leading parts splendid d , Itno>t Church thu a discrimneation was exercised, and.. its a pretty addition to the lierforne Kum eburch talent has nuMY sue- r Once.. one thinks over the various chat ae- tern one 's forned to the comment, Who could ae°vensc an ner- retation, .of the character Indiana as Mew F. Saunders?. Vim but Mrs. Dunlopoul sowell h vetakenthe ofmenTrimble,re n o free. Andwoo who Miss Nairn an r. ' as. Thomson sou vgivena parts ofMiss .op ton a Lane andColonel Butler Street t representation v he re res the gave? 2 e y g And so on l through t as all h her to i' characters. Mr. F. Weir surely mis- sed s oiling whenhe noto into the, ministry, judging at least y his... siplendid_. personation of Rev. i d e Cutt o Franklin �aund er. Tom my needed a big black moustache to transform him into en ideal Tucker Doolittle, postmaster and storeefeep- er. Mr. Kenyon was Obadiah Me - Puff, who looks after the. eatables; Mrs. D. Thompson, Martha McPud%, his wife, -who 'Poke after hirci; Mrs. Donaldson was Mrs. Sunday; Mrs. W. Naftel was _Mrs. Doolittle;: Eric. Nilson was Leonard Dudley, 'Tucker Doolittle's head clerk; Miss M. Gibbs, Cynthia Key, a teacher of music. Eloise and Pauline, who with In- diana, ,were .the daughters of Rev. Franklin Sunday, were-innportant. a d leading panto assigned to Miss M. Stoddart and' Miss II'. Belcher., The prevailing malady overtook MameRobinson, . Miss ` Stoddart. the .day before the C. -P. R. --Goal, McLeod; defense, first ,performance and with only r; Smith, Wigging; tenter, Smnazel; r, days preparation Miss Runic step- 1. wing,Brownlee; . ped into the breach and took the pert wing, Turner; of El'oiee admirably. It was an all- b. Bowler: .. x cesriful 'entertainments to its credit, On :the slhoulders. of hire:. Dunlop. sometimes given by the chole, soiue- Wh lel h v given u h i t president of • the Arthur Circle. ,a , times by the Arthur . Circle,_ some- large amount of .responsibility in times by some other organizations, conncetion with the event fell and but eessibly there was never a more C d 1 & 1 she deserves great praise for the sue. pleasing event put on than the must- part ,E li e p sido t eessiful issue. cal comedy "The Land of�,!'Proinise, f the C 1 ' h , h but , given under the auspices of the Ar' N 1 d Ai J . Tho o Keep your eye on the.spot where thur Circle last Thursday and Fri• could have a the t the frost goes out, and get something ing variety in the.style of tlw e h i (' 1 1 R tl m that will grow. day nights. There was a very please hog a - i betweenand The difference musical numbers, and alt were so o Perk is that nature makes thhog well sung that .the production was squeal and pork makes the tonaunier pronounced • by all as an entire sue- d hY lli g h "did squeal. cess,; The audience both evenings h Able to see the many rough plays of the C. P. R. players on which. they should have been penalized, but en the whole they got along very well, although the crowd seemed to think that he was not quite fair with the Drew Macs. The. game •was refought' 'in the dressing room after.the battle was over, by, several of the fans, dfo a time it looked s if hefriends the C. P. 'R. would be havingwreaths deliv t ired at their doors. ow that the ��e�eihampion>ihip is decided let us all be friends again. Drew Macs --Goal, A. . McDonald; defense, R. McDonald,. Malcolm .Mc- Donald; center, Murney; r. •owing', Babb; 1.wing W. McDonald; subs., • .l:eferee--Dr. Swarts. Goals: lst period—Turner, 4 Min. utes Brownlee, E3' minutes; Murney, 12eeninutes; 2nd period •-Wiggins, 8 minutes.. Penalties: 4st period --nil;. 2nd period --Plug. McDonald, G. Smith H. )Murney, W. Snezel, Turner, W. plc• Donald, 1 min. 3rd period—Murn- ey, Wiggins, W. McDonald, Plug Mc- Donald, G. Smith, 11. Murney, 1 min. star caste surely. In theinterval between part i. `and Part 11 Miss EstherHume sang ,a solo, Break of Day," with good ef- fect, We would like to go over the various musical numbers ° and give all the performers their mead of praise for their part in the very inelodious, tuneful and most• amusing produc- tion, but really it needed to be heard to be appreciated. en Agree li:. .. more n t at than ,anything .: else, Quality in clothes denotes a man's success s � in life, Ogility is not guaranteed by high _. f prict�s..'You are sure a when it onlyyou n u st good judgment . in eel ecting .:the ` puce to buy from, in Qodcrich it is m . Martin the Tailor LOVELIER i SUCCESSORS To D.MILLAR & SON INGS FOR SPRING per. Monday morning we turn. oar atterition to opening up the Cases of .New Spring Merchandise that have been held in re- serVe durthags the OPening 8ale. We invite you to come in and 'see the new lines New Organdies "'Fashionyes . Beautiful New Yoilei This choice of new Voiles is truly remarkable for range of shades And designs NEW SPRING COATS -'-Ready for Showing Shown in shades of Beaver, Sand, Navy and Gopen in the season's most favored anodels New Silks New Ginghams New Velours New Palm Beach New Prints New Neckwear A fine-qualitySwiss Organdy in Tomato, Nie, 'Rose, Chin and Lavander. This is a new tine we have just opened up. NEXTWEEK—There will be a Further display of %ging VY'eaa abler—` O`CT CAN COUNT ON THIS STORE BEING TO THE FRONT WITH QUALITY FIRST MERCHANDISE Aeolem mlonamr D 4 • a MOST A�� •IAFTHE MILLAR �STO K IS SOLD 4„. .-�I�S aid SALE The Sale has been a wrony derful� 'success and we thank you -foe; the kirli.d (reception given us, and for your assistanC ! in clearing the Miilar stack ---And now a word about some special lines we will show at specsl prices in each .departrnentuot' the store' Weaskthat you come in and see these lines 1 See the New Spring corsets .14, See the New Spring suiting. S. A. GRAY &CHAS.;- V. CARTWRIGHT.