The Seaforth News, 1923-02-01, Page 1.ma �o;
WHOLE;` SERIES, VOLUME 45, No. 5,
WIRY
, 1923,.
A
he Olympia
offers you the best variety of choices in candies that Seaforth eve
saw. Pay a visit and look our stock over.
„.`i' HOME MADE, CANDIES, pound. boxes, 35c or 2 for 60c
The best and choicest boxes of WILLARD'S AND ?ATTE1 ON'S',
CHOCOLATES, from 35c to $6:00.'
OUR ROME MADE CREAMS, 2 lbs. for 35c. Don't miss this chance
It's An Awful 'Thing To Be' Blind.'
J
.are cordially invited to attend an
na
es
$:
is
MIXED CANDIES, 20c per lb.
WILLARD'S ASSORTED, CHOCOLATES, which are hand -dipped,
not machine -dipped, at the lowest price Seaforth ever saw, 29c per, lb.
THE STORE WITH THE STOCK
91
.'The. Olympia
Confectionery and Restaurant
t F. D. llutchison's
BROOMS—At 60c, 75c, 95c and $1.00, are speciallygood values.
. Some brooms have nearly doubled in price in a few months:
AMMONIA.—Handy Ammonia,
at 10c, or
HONEY.—at 12c to 15c per pound is much more economical than
fruit, .jam or marmalade. Try it ,
PICCKANINNY PANCAKE SYRUP. We have been 6krttinate
enough to secure more of this beautiful syrup' in beautiful
syrup pitchers. Pitcher alone is worth 35c to 50c. C• %
Full of syrup i7
WOOL SOAP is also a first class
toilet and bath soap Y
CORN (to arrive). A splendid bargain in first-class
a
corn,I1 r. • - •:2FOR
regular a 18c,at Sc o
r
g, r M r
TOMATOES; -S ecial 2 FOR
P
ALUMINUM PEPPER AND SALT SHAKERS.— /I=
regular 25c each, special 2 FOR C"7
BROKEN FANCY BISCUITS.— 25 C
Special 2 FOR !•
-: 3'LBs, 25c
3FOR25c
BROKEN BISCUITS.—
Fresh and ,crisp
DAIRY BUTTER.—Don't forget that we have plenty of good dairy
butter which is kept in a specially constructed, covered,
cement container. The butter is thus protected from dust
and contaminating odors. •
Fresh Eggs, Fust Class Dairy Butter, Dried Apples and Poultry
alitre or dressed, wanted in exchange for goods.
F. D. ll'utchison-
P}IONE 166
Auk
omen's
vershoes
,Just receii'ed" a_` shipment from
the `Dominion Rubber Co., of
Women's Overshoes in High and
o
Low Heel, three and four buckle.
•
- These::are, made extra: high and
the three buckle is nearly as high
as the four bucklein Some other
makes, and made , of an extra
fine .quality of Chashmerette.
Bargains in Cloth Top Rubbers,
one arid two buckle Women's;
Overshoes,
RED VV
WIGG
• CHURCH CARD.
Seaforth Methodist Church.—Sab-
bath services, 11 a.m. add 7 p.m. Sun-
day school, 2:30 p.m., Pastor, Rev. R.
Fulton Irwin,
Pastor at both services. Prayer and
praise service at 10 o'clock. Sacra-
mental service following the regular
service in the morning Fourth ser-
mon to men in evening, subject: 'A
Badly Frightened King" (Evangelis-
tic). Song service at 6:45.
0.1
REBEKAH'S EUCHRE
The Rebekah's of Idelweiss Lodge
gave a progressive euchre in the
I,O.O.F, hall on Thursday evening
last,' about 30 tables being filled ivith
enthusiastic euchre players. Rev. T.
H. -Brown acted as chairman and
added to the enjoyment of the even-
ing with his witty remarks. The
prize; winners ' were as 'follows:
Ladies' prize, Mrs L .T. DeLacey;
lone.hand ,Miss Olive Taman;gentle-
man's prize, Mr. C. A, Barber; con -
Harr Stewart and
sol tion ,Mrs.S w
Mr ' Leslie McKay. The euchre was
followed by a short programme,
Solos were contributed by Mrs, Arn-
old Westeott,".and Mr. Oliver Elliott.
Mr, George Cardno also, gave an ex-
hibition,of Highland claiming accom-
panied by Mr. Hugh Chedneyeon the
violin and Mr. L. ` T. DeLacey on the
organ. A Very nice lunch, was
served.
EPWORTH LEAGUE
The Epworth League met on Tues-
day evening and was in 'charge of
the Citizenship , Departtnent. Capt.
Bowers gave a very interesting topic
and an instrumental by Miss Daisy
Hamilton was enjoyed by all.,
Wprns in children, if they be not
attended to, cause convulsions and
often death. Mother Graves' Worm
Exterminator will protect the children
from these distreasnrg afflictions.
the
and
e are.
nee
TUESDAY
(Evening
FEB. 6th
under the auspices of the
SEA'FORTH RED CROSS SOCIETY
in aid of the
CANADIAN NATIONAL INSTITUTE FOR THE BLIND
MUSICIANS.
Miss Billie Chesney Abe Forsyth
Miss Edith Hunt Henry Forsyth
Miss Bell Forsyth James A. Chesney
Miss Elsie Dodds Herb, Fowler
Mrs. 3. D. O'Connell Gerald Holland
P. M. Chesney Thomas Baird
Hugh Chesney, Jr. Frank Lane
Earl Van Egmond
FLOOR MANAGERS
Harry Charters William McDonald
Crawford Simpson Ed. Rowland
During intermission slides wilt be shown descriptive of the work be-
ing done by the Institution, etc., etc.
ADMISSION — $1 PER COUPLE -
BASKET LUNCH—Bring your own dishes and eats. Put your
name ors your basket and get it checked .—Iots of good
coffee at the Hall.
DANCING COMMENCES AT HALF PAST EIGHT O'CLOCK
EVERYBODY WELCOME
SEAFORTH RED CROSS SOCIETY
Airs. F.-ISolmested, Mrs. Jas. G. Mullen;. 'Mrs. L. T. DeLacey,,
President, Treasurer. Secretary.
-Managing Committee -Jas. G. Mullen, L. T. DeLacey, A. D. Suther-
land,
U. F. O. BANQUET.
;;; The public banquet in honor of
Premier Drury, held in the Commer-
eial on Friday; was something like the.
playnof, Hamlet without Hamlet. Mr.
Drury was not able to come and
sent his colleague, Hon. • Peter
Smith. It must have been like a
dash of cold water to the minister,
who remembered the band and roses,
tendered in his honor last June,
and he took pains to state he had
previously made up hies mind never
again to be a substitute 'for any one.
However, about thirty-five were at
the banquet and needless to say mine
host, Mr. Dungey, left nothing to be
desired" in catering. Mr. William
Black, M.P., presidedandproposed
the toast to the provincial treasurer,
who responded in appropriate words.
Following the luncheon, a public
meeting was held in the town hall at
1,30 p.m., which was crowded to cap-
acity, expecting the Premier.
Mr. Kernighan, of Colborne town-
ship, called the meeting to order. He
stated that those who formed the As-
sociation did not expect it to be a
political organization. They only in-
tended it to bind the farmers togeth-
er fpr their own interests. •If' it had
not been for the U.F.O., however,
the Drury government would never
have been in power.
Mr. Andrew Hicks, M.P.P., said
the farmers had been harder hit dur-
ing the past two years than any other
class of the community, and that the
number of first-class farmers who re-
quired loans was surprising.
Hon. Peter Smith entered into de-
tail instead of the
tail how he was pres
Premier, and then said he was sure
that any man who could say so many
naughty things of his opponents as
Howard Ferguson, could never be
Premier of Ontario. He then went
on to tell what a bad record Ferguson„
had in power and spoke at length of
the Provincial Highways and the
need of widening out the roads for
telephone and electric wires and said
when the farmers saw what a nice
fence the government would build for
them, .they would: willingly give the
landl He admitted these roads and.
'their cost had been severely criticiz-
ed. He also touched On the 0. T. A.
He, said Mr. Drury was brave in op-
posing radials and giving the munici-
palities permission to build their own
railways.
Mr. W. Black gave a short address
on the needs and benefits of nr«aliiza-
f 00.' 'He said the frir+,on between
Premier Drury and. Mr. Morrison
does not amount to anything. but the
press lied been tearing 4t to pieces
ever since the nremier'spoke last
summer at Cirand Bend.'
As there has neverr been a Political
U. F. O. organization in Centre Hur-
on. the matter was -brought tin for
consideration. and it was derided to
tnraatlize a sir;etv to he callerl ,.the
ventre Hiirnn• United Farmers' Assn-
q.tirsn. with the foltowin nffi,rrre',
Rresartent, E. ` F,1tn'i arty. :,,Ce-
nresiilettt, W. 5 merville T�nSC;11oo.
eecre+a v treaatirer, 1:ir. A. Mr:Gavin,
McTtillnn: 11Hrertnrs, 1ST; T ami) rni-
hor,ie: Mrs, W. Lino rnthnru"•::Mrs.
F. rla,:4 reeef ee • \ST. 'l set+;e. Tfie,rr,+-
fl:. 17 1 s' -Mr- 1\,eill4,, S To-in
T0i s, Russ®is s ArrT +;Aeon,
..sir (: T m ,I,.a, I., C C „,t„ A
T. Conner, Clinton: Mr, Reid. Goder-
ii'l1,.;Jaltlec Moly d7Cair Bt•tissels•.;
A STRONG SERMON BY
REV. R. FULTON IRWIN
On Sunday . evening, ve ing; Rev. R. Fulton
Irwin gave the third of a series of
sermons to young men in the Metho-
dist church here to a very large con-
gregation. His subject was, "A young
man who fought for his purity, the
one referred to being Joseph, in
Potiphar's house. Every man, the
speaker said, some where and some
time in his life, is called upon to
make,the choice in the hour of temp-
tation as to whether he shall stand
before the bar of his own manhood,
pure and clean, or fall like a man of
straw. No young man should "Took
askance at a pure, clean oid age in.
somebody else and say they were
simply fortunate. That was not the
explanation, the speaker said. It was
rather because they determined they
should not be conquered by the
forces of evil. Every man with a
price.
clean life must be willing to pay the
The usual thought before the mind
of the libertine is "Shall I be able to
escape the public eye, or evade the
law?" not remembering that there is
a higher than either—The Law of
God—which no man can escape. In
the course of his sermon he denounc-
ed the man as unworthy of recogni-
tion who will send a young woman
on . the down grade, then hold his
-head high and pass her -by on the
other side of the street. Sbme men,
he said.:could let the women folk at
homesplit the wood and shovel the
snow while they, lay in^bed•, Those
same men with smirkin gentility
dance attendance on the immodest
half-dressed young woman when she
appears on the Ball rofim`floor. If' a
photograph of their thoughts and de-,
sires during the evening were made
the'picture would be such that even
Paris or- Vienna would ban it, and
those places admit pretty dirty stuff.
These same men would hardly be.
mannerly enough to' lift their hat to
a modest young woman going with
Bible in hand to teach her Sunday
School class, trying to make her life
const' for something worth while.'
Mr. Irwin said he had little regard
for the young woman who covered
her eyes with a hymn book ;during
such an address in' make-believe mod-
esty, while .that same young woman`
will leave her dishes or face unwashed
while she feasts thosese same eyes on
some dirty little novel that can be no
more touched without pollution than
one can touch pitch,' or that same
young woman will :unblushingly sit
beside a : young man in some low-
down. show laughing and talkinn
-,while one of her sex is giving such
immodest exhibitions as to be equal-
led only in some pagan land.
COURT SHERWOOD FOREgT-
At the 'annual meeting of Court
ri,erwond Forest No. (tO65 Ancient
Order of Foresters, on Monday even„
;ea, the, last year's office -s' were re-
eieeted for the term of 1923 W. 1)
Hoag GR'..; A. W.'S+nhie 'S.C,R •
T). males teean Ger' F' T . T24x.'Serr^-
tory: 11, Bristow. S,II1,; ' Tnhn
4inith T ICT.
157, etndrtart.; S.B.'
nn<e , rreeti TR T',. t,.,,st'" a .
"7, n FT,'s' T. A4. r'5 -,l,0
r.,ox. Cnnl•t Sherwood Forest .meets
the last Monday of each motithr
ytv.olp AL MEETING OF
-CATHOLIC.' WOMVLEN'S LEAGUE
Thee election of officers at the an
nual meeting of the Seaforth sub-
owision of the Catholic Women's
l.eagtie resulted as follows:—Spirit
nal adviser, Rev, Father Goetz;
president, . Mrs. Frank Sills vice-
presidents, Mrs.' Duncan, Mrs.
O'Neil; Mrs, A.. O'Leary; con sec.,
Mrs. W. H. Bullard; res; sec„ Mrs.
Canning; welcome sec., Mrs, K,eat-
ing; treasurer, Mrs. Finlcheiner.
• i he annual report was read by the
recording secretary and; showed that
during •the past year considerable
has been accomplished -with but a
minimum amount of effort. In order
to complete the membership as speed-
ily as possible, so that new activities
; c
may beornmenced -at once a mem-
bership euchre will be held in the
Parish 'Hall.. on Monday, Feb. 5th,
from 3 to 5 p.m. for which the price
of admission will be the membership
fee. By increased interest and effort
the new executive hope to make the
coming year even more successful
than the past.
WHICH WAS CORRECT?
In reporting the Northern League
game played in Goderich on Friday,
January 19th, in which Goderich won
by a score of 4 to 2, the Goderich
paper's were unable to decide which
one of the Reid brothers played the
better game,
The Star says: "Reid and Co. is
correct. There were three Reids on
the team and each of them had a big
part in battle,. "Dot” turned in the
best exhibition for them and had the
local old-timers wanting to know his
prescription. Though not so speedy
as in days of yore, "Dot" can still
cover the short route to the nets
in pretty snappy fashion and he did
it quite a few times on Friday. He
always terminates his trips with a
bullet -like shot which, gives a goal
tender an exciting second or two.
"Dot got Seaforth's two counters,
which shows his workmanship is as
good as ever.
"Reg. Reid showed some smart
bits of hockey and time and time
again he outguessed the localites, but
he did not work persistently enough,
to be of great value in his team. He
has a wonderful turn of speed and ap-
parently relies on this to carry him
through, for he did not stick -handle
very much, being content to trust to a
long shot. which headed for the corn-
er of the net to heat the goal tender,
but -he trusted too 'belt oil, -:Friday.
The 'Signal say,: "Reg. Reid and
Govenlock were 'the most effective
men for the visit•8rs. though "Dot"
Reid got both goals for his team.
S. C. I. DEFEATS MITCHELL H.I.
Mitchell High School played the
return game of the W.O.S.S.A. series
here Tuesday night' The ga"'e was
clean and fast, Hart. of Seaforth star-
ring in the goal. Moore was the best
of the visitors. The only scoring was
done in the first period, Meakins and
Nicholls each getting one, while Mit-
chell got only one.. Seaforth meets
Clinton next. The teams• lined up:
Seaforth—Goal, W. Hart; right de-
fense, C. Munn; left defence, W.
Brokenshire; right wing, A. Meakins;
left wing, F. Crich: centre, S. Nich-
oils; subs., C. Aberhart and J, Archi-
bald.
Mitchell—Goal, McClocklin; rght
defence, Moore; left defense, Myers;
r. wing, Blowes; left tying, Rnnnen-
berg;. centre Brown; subs., Merry -
field and Stoneman.
A Corrector, of Pulmonary
Troubles:—Many testimonials could
be presented showing the great effi-
cacy of Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil in
correcting disorders of the respiratory.
processes, but the -best testimonial is
experience and the Oil is recommend-
ed to all who suffer from these dis-
orders with the certainty that they
will find relief. It will allay inflam-
mation in the bronehial tubes.
STRAND
11'TRE,
T
Wed:, Febm 7th
INSTRUCTIVE,- CHEERFUL, OR-
ATORICAL and EDUCA-
TIONAL.
;ecture
Prof. -N. Richardson, L L D,
The famous and pbpular Psycholog-
ist, Physiognomist, Journalist and
Orator.
SUBJECT:
Smiles, Love and Laughter
also 'MUSICAL PROGRAMME
ADULTS 25c CHILDREN 155c
8:15 P.M. SHARP.
GODERICH: WINS.
In an overtime game in the •O,ILA.
series played at Goderich on Tuesday
evening, the locals Post out by a score
of (to 2. The Seaforth team had the
best of the play throughout the first
sixty minutes, but the score was tied
two all when the ga 'e ended: There
is considerable .criticism of the ref-
eree's work. In the first ten minutes'
overtime Seaforth weakened badly,
and Goderich counted twice, making
the final score 4 to 2 in favor of the
lakeside town,
On Thursday night Seaforth defeat-
ed Mitchell here "6 to 2 and the fol-
lowing evening won on Mitchell ice.
OLD TIMES DANCE
To avoid confusion at the old times
dance in aid of ,the blind in the
Strand Theatre on ,Tuesday evening:
February 6th, the Red Cross wish you
to remember that it will be a basket
lunch --you bring your own dishes and
eats, put your name on your basket
and check it. At lunch time you will
get lots of good coffee in your own
cups. After lunch check your basket
again and get it when the dance is
over. Dance will be over when the
music stops. A cordial invitation is
given everybody to attend and a good
time is assured. The object is a
worthy one and warrants ,a bumper
attendance,
CONSTANCE.
Don'•t forget there is to be an At
i•Iome in the Forresters Hall on Fri-
day, February 9th.
Mr. and Mrs. Adam Nicholson
visited friends in Goderich last week.
The many friends of Mrs. Wm.
McIntosh are sorry to hear she is not
improving any, but gradually grow-
ing weaker.
The Kinburn Methodist church is°
having a social evening in the church
on Friday night, Feb. 2nd. Don't
forget to come and draw a ticket for
your partner for lunch.
Mr. Robert McFarlane and Miss
Pearl Mann, only daughter of Mr.
Moses Mann, were united in marriage
lest Wednesday by the Presbyterian
minister of Clinton,
„ There is nothing repulsive in Mill-
er's .Worm Powders, and they areas
pleasant to take as sugar, sq that few
children will refuse, them. In some
cases they cause vomiting; through
their action in an unsound stomach,
but this is only a manifestation of
their elegising pouter, -no indication
that they; are hurtful. They can be
Hee
Ye
The chances are abont three
to one that it is your eyes thay.
are at fault. Better have them
examined. Our advice to you
will be conscientious and per-
fectly free, If you need glasses
to aid your eyes, we will be
pleased to supply a perfect cor-
rection for you at most reason-
able prices:
We carry the latest and most
becoming styles constantly in.
stock,
Fred.S.Savauge
Optician
Practising under Government
License No. 289.
Phone No. 194. Evenings No. '10
CIRTISPDPITIIT
To Asthma Sufferers. Dr.- ), D, -
Kellogg's Asthma Remedy comes
like a helping hand to a sinlulxg -
swimmer. It gives new life and hope -
-'something he has come to believe
impossible Tts benefit is top evident
to be questioned—it ,,`i i n. best
q s its Wn
argument—its • own best advertise-`
meat. If you suffer from asthma get
thoroughly depended upon to clear this time -tried remedy and help like
worms from the system. I thousands of others.
Dinkier and Tea Sets
Special January Discount still on,
Whteware---At Bargain Prices.
Granateware---Everything in kitchen needs.
Smallwares in great variety.
Come and See
BE- TTI E BROS.
TLEE
[a esn't leak be-
cause it's made in
one piece-- that's
why we guarantee
sattsfad1as or your
mossy back.
Complete tine of Rant-
leek Rubber goods.,
Prime from 4oe to 114-75
Urnbac:
6,4Cat,A,Citiol'im
1,1