HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-01-07, Page 1r.
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VVifHOLE
THURSDAY,
----�—_�SERESs�AFaRTIx .._, ®r,aarARro
xJzsnAr,JANUARY1926.'
7, 152,1.
0 ; NEXT -.MONDAY NIGHT. hid been at k `'
Lions Club sae starting their eve, but had an wr
d
in and new year with giving up l ,
g P ochre and Dance m G Deceased was
1Y lift tare
wor up to New Year's
The Lionannounced his' intention
first activity in theerr
a ofhis position.
bang-up En
V t bort iii North D
•t1. tint room on Monday evening,
Jan. I needs but
c' o.
i
Lions even
ings =before,. The Lions service club
t'
always gives a real night of pleasure
and good fellowship,e so remember
the date,•and do not, miss this op-
portunity of assisting a club of reel
service to the community,
S•EAIrORTH WINS FIRST GAME
fries township, near alt, about �r 76
ye at Woodstocke stud-
ied tlie ministry,o entere
and them took charge of
a-genral store at Ayr •for four years
going from there to Galt, where he
lived for five years, until moving to
Seaforth. ,Fifty-two years ago he
was married to Miss Elizabeth Rey-
nolds, who died two years.. ago last
May. One son, Mr. Ernest^;Chitten-
den, of Seaforth, survives; also five
grandchildren, and two . foster-chil.
whom he brought sip, a tie Iy
I Ith at 8 30 This Years ago,
Regularly
little advertisement t d As a young man h
people who College t N
•
have enjoyed one of these Lio t r •� _
Kot LUllC1ies
at all hours
HOME ..MADE SPECIALTIES
Prices Reasonable
See our ad, next week
OUR
The Olympia-
Confectitmc!r'I, and Restaura t
IIUTCIIISON'S
'FOR HOLIDAY GROCERIES;
FRUITS. AND CANDY. The Salvation Army. -_. Sunday,
Sunday,
CHOCOLATES
H B COL TES at , per ,pound 25c, evening service 7 p Sunday
CHURCH CARD.
The North Side Church,ybyth
services, 11 a.m. and 7 p.tn. Sun-
day school 2:30 p.m Pastor, Rev. R.
Fulton Irwin.
Pastor at 'both services,
Jan, 10th, morning ser
vice 11a.m„
m,;.
s in charge •of
Clubs
school 3 p, m Service
Lieut. Tidman,
CHOCOLATE MARASCHINO
CHERRIES per lb. 60c
MIXED CANDY, Royal, &c 17%c
Cut Rock.. 20c
'Fancy- 20c
Jellies &
Creams- .. 25c
�b-,aOIIS
lb)
1b
MIXED CANDIES, ineludiirg Choc-
olates, (Reimports) and Jellies
&c at per lb 35c
MIXED' NUTS at
TABLE RAISINS at
MALAGA GRAPES at
ORANGES, Seedless Navels"at:30c,
40c, 50c, 55c, 60c.
Mincemeat, Peanut Butter; Maras-
chino Cherries, Cabbages, Onions,
Roquefort Chee:,e, &c,
RIED APPLES have plumped to
6c,
25c
35c
25c.
BUTTER, EGGS, &c wanted.
We lavish all our customers and
' friends a Merry Christmas and 'a
Happy and Prosperous New
Year.
F. D. HUTCUI v+'N..
Phone 166
We wish
our -many customers
s
r.
appy N`ew Year.
In.ithe 'opening game in this group,
of the. Intermediate O. ill. A. 'Sea- Orville Jone�s, of Fort Saskatchewan,
forth defeated 'Wingliam at Winghain Alta and Mrs. Malcolm MeDermid
on Wednesday night last by a score of 14ullett. -Two brothers survive;
of 4-3. The ice was in good con- Rev' Ge ge Chittetideu, of Bowling
dition. and the boys took to Wing-, Green, Ohio, and Mr Da i
hatn's new big aiena like 'ducks to
water. • The •ice sheet 'in the new
Wingham rink is 75 x 175 feet.. Near
the end of the 'first period Seaforth
scored for the first time, ,this +belt"g
Mi
,
den, of Grand 'Rap idsv d Chatten-
ch. Another
brother, William, died in Detroit, at
almost exactly 'the same time that
Mr. Chittenden passed away herr,
wed 'bl ftalhf rmemttenden was always a faith
Y a Wfnghant-tally three ,b -If -the PresbYterien
minutes later. • There was no score church. T.he 'funeral on Tuesday,
i, the second period. The final per which Was private, was conducted by
sod saw some fast clean hockey, Sea -Rev' Dr' Larkin. The
forht scoring' first,4Vin ha, were :Messrs. Geo. D. Ferguson, then
and in the last 'few g en twice, iHartrF, HenryEdge, A.D
scored. twice more. minutes' Seaforth Y Ssetter-
land, John Maent h and Sidney
!Sea -forth —. Goal, G. Stewart; de- Deem' Interment was made is;, the
fense, A. Reid, 5'.'Cudenore; ,forwards 'Maitland Bank cemetery.
N. 'Govenloalt, R. Kerslake, F. Willi ; triunity offers its sympathy The o the
Stubs., Muir'and A'beriiart. s 'bereaved in their hour of sorrow..
.Among those from a distance at -
ton 'Monday night in an Intermediate
W'ingham Ivlelntyfe sand dangly+ern-law, 'Mrs.
defeated Clinton at 'C1in- tending the funeralwere Mr. Osborne
041.A. game 'by a score of 5 •to 2. mei', of St George, Ont,; Mrs,
Ice was heavy and going hard'for'the'drs of Galt, Mrs. Wray Paget
M
both teams.Dot Refdwas referee, Tontoand Mr.
aAlfred 'Chnttenden, of fio-
t.
Seaforth
Clinton plays at i _
'on
Thursday night of this weep. A JOHN A. M t
game is expected. good
Meter an illness er nearly two years
Mr. John Alexander 7vreCnae died at
MISS FRANCES WINTER. his home in Seaforth on Sunday,
an -
The passing of Miss Trances Val- uary 3rd, 1926, aged 62' years nd 2
eria Winter on Saturday morning, months. The late Mr, McCrae was
January 2nd, at the Seaforth, hospi- born in McKillop ,township, son of
tal, cast a shadow -of sorrow over Mr. and 'Mrs. Roderick McCrae and
the community, Miss Winter had was a resident o that township
been stricken with a severe attack until after his marriage, when he
of appendicitis and was operated on went to -the West for •a few
the previous Saturday,b Returning, he lived in ! pyago.
but failed to McKillo un -
rail .til retiring to town five years ago.
toj Miss She A Annie Baras ed, united in daughter of
Air, and. Mrs. Bryan /Barker, who
survives together with a son and 'dau
Four brothers us sand two sisters'at home.
also
survive, Roderick, Malcolm, Duncan
and Harry, all of British" Columbia,
and. Mrs, Hugh` McIntosh of Toron-
to, and Mrs. E. McLaughlin of Iona,
Ont, The funeral took place on
Wednesday afternoon from his late
residence. on George street, the sere
IIim .Ament, Seaforth,. and Mrs, i rices being conducterl by Rey. Dr,
Hodgins, ICin'cardInc. The funerals Larkin, assisted by Rev, - J. A. Fer-
took place on Monday afternoon, guson, ,l:nterment was made in Mait-
from the family residence, North land Bank cemetery, The pallbearers
Main street. the services being con- were Messrs, Robert Boyd, Bryan
ducted by Rev. " Dr, Larkin. Infer- Barker, John Moore, Robert Gibson,
ment was made in Maitland Bank Mr. cLaretii and Geo. O'Rourke., •
cemetery, - Atnong those from a distance who
attOne of the most effective cerins- MR. A. •K, QHTTTENDEN. McIntosh,n s hfuneraloto,aril issMr, Hugh
I.f London.
Toronto; arid Miss Harris,
fuges on the market is Miller's Worm - The town *as startled in the fore- of Latour. The fmmun have the
Powders. They will not'only clear I noon of Saturday, sympathy of the comtnunit
the stomach and bowels of Jan. 2nd; when bereavement.
community their
y She was the youngest, daugh-
E[iCmi �'e• ter of the late Robert Wittier and
Dance __rs. Winter, and Seaforth has al -
G. W. V. ways been her home. She had just
A. Hall recently completed a coerce in elo-
cution at.'the Toronto Conservatory
Mon, 11
f h of Music'and her ability to capti-
vate her audiences makes one be -
830 p m. Bove her career might have been a
Good Prizes notable one. Her father, , the late
Lunch Provided Robert, Winter, died in March, 1922.
Music byBesides her mother, twvo brothers and
Stewart's Harmony two sisters survive, Rufus 'sof Sea -
forth; Robert, •-of Goderich; Mrs
Boys _ b t•
Community Songs etc.
You are cordially invited to be
present and join, in the fun.
Admission .50c Tncluding tax
worms but the s cad that a zcreaveineni.
will prove a very< serviceable Medi- greatly
cmc for children in regulating the resident, Mr. Alfred Kings-
ford
infantile System and maintaining it in
a healthy c.ndrtion. There is noth-
ing in their composition that will in-
jure the most delicate stomach when
di
ire, do
s ns
are
followed
and
they
be
e
Y Can
-given
to
children in
the full
as-
surance that they
will utterly Y
'
destroy
all
worms.
ews r
re-
spected r '
Chittehcten, had passed away
suddenly. He had not been feeling
well the night before, and suffered' a
sudden attack Saturday morning
which
r
p ovetl fatal. ;Mr. Chittenden
had been employed in McFaul's and
MacTavish's' store for the past 39
years and had a great many' friends
both in town and in the country, He
FUNERAL OF MRS. CAMERON.
The Second Lyceum Concert
ra
r
9
11
i
+• aG
t
r f
l
1 t
1
t
+� 1
n 3 ,
Y 4'.
S ,1
9 •r , . �
Th
UIric
Magic and Mystery Entertainers
will appear in
CARDNO'S HALL
January 8th
Friday
ar8
The Ulrich Company' are high-class entertainers, ivin
unusual and varied performance. Theya most:,
perform 'many feats o of magic,
materializing flowers; faces and life-sized ghosts.They also produce
a complete Spirit Seance, and expose the tricks ' of many so-called
mediumw
Admission 50c,-..13eseitved Seats 10c extra.
Plan now open at Aberhart's Drug Store.
The -funeral of the late Mrs iohn
Palm
Beach,ox'lorida, on Tuesday, ho died at 'West
,19th, t ..x p.
ace ace a,,,ati the ...I --
forth Presbyterian church on Mon-
day aftern000n at 2 o'clocic and was
largely attended. The services were
conducted by Rev. Dr, Larkin; as-
sisted by Rev, T. IL Brown. The
pallbearers were Messrs,' Bert.
Biel George Cardno, Robert Broad -
foot, William Knechtel Alex. Broad -
foot and Arthur Routledge, Inter-
ment was made in Maitland Bank
cemetery. The , following is a clip-
ping from a Florida paper received by
Mr. and Mrs. Alex, Proadfoot, which
describes the accident;
"Fate, ite
S en1C
d to
her
fellow
e
e ow
nurses, S took
a strange hand in the
tragedy which btfell Mrs. Cameron,
who came to West Palm Beach abogt
two months ago. About the time
she ,received her injuries, which prob-.
ably will cost her wife,, she was en -
route to Good Samaritan Hospital
to go on duty nursing, her patient,
George Coleman, an aged winter
visitor who is in a 'serious condition
suffej•ing from a fracture in his hip,
sustained_ in 'a similar accident sev-
eral weeks ago, %'According to W, D.
Betts, driver of a sedan -preceding
R. P. Humphries, Ferguson ambul-
ance driver, out of the hospital
drive, Mrs. Cameron was first seen
standing on the west side -of the
North Poinsettia avenue opposite the
driveway, ,It was just 7 'o'clock.
She started to cross -the street, step-
ping from behind a 'ear going south
and immediately in the path of a
northbound machine, The next few
minutes saw spectacular events: In
the crash, Mrs. Cameron -was hurled
onto the radiator of the car, which
struck and carried her .along the
street for some 355 -feet, it was said.
Then sh'b bounced to the hood and
fr',i the -e thrown to the pavement,
rolling clear 'cf the wheels of the
machine Betts and the ambulance
driver who had seen the whoie ar-
cidcnt in the fewminutes r it, -took
them to travel'.; down the hospital
driveway to the street , picked up
the injured Woman and three- min-
utes later had her in the hospital,
IShe was unconscious; 'Surgeons 'im-
mediately were called but despite
their efforts it' was, feared East 'night
ISSUE X'lo, 1
Just a Message of Thanks to you for the generous share
your patronage which we -have enjoyed 25
clueing the year 1925
and to express ,the hope that the service of this store has
given you some pleasure
And with the pleasant memories of the year 1925 still closely
clinging we wish you
A Nappy and Prosperous
New Year
that Mrs.
Cameron cannot lF
at the hospital said
lice have no report of thervci o
but attendants
pjtajacdei
that: as far as they know the driver
at the had run aaway; atr which s least htruck e thewoman
to
put in an appearance at the hospital"
Mrs. Cameron passed away the
next morning about 9 o'clock, From
the hospital she was taken to'the
undertaking parlors, where a lovely
service was held at which Mrs Mi11er
sang "The Beautiful Lail on High."
The remains were shipped.on _the 5
o'clock train for Seaforth. She had
made many - warm friends in. the
South and the patient whom she had
been nursing kept calling for her and
wondering why she OM not come.
CANTATA ENJOYED.
The cantata entitled "The New
Born King," by Chas. H, Gabriel,
which was rendered by the choir in
the Northside United church, Sun-
day evening, Dec. 27th, was a decided
success, and drew a good ero.rd. But
owing to the storm a s,,ecial request
was made to have it repeated Sunday
evening, Jan. 3rd. This time the
church was filled.
Several members of the choir had
severe colds, but nevertheless were
there to do their bit. One of the so-
loists, 'Mr. Ed, Chamberlain, was un-
able to be present, Mr. Eyre, of Sar
nia
who
was,visiting sit
in m
tow
g n very
ably, filling the' gap The 'other
soloists' being Miss L. Wankel and
Mr Richardson, wlio took their solos
exceptionally well.
The ladies' quartette, Mrs, Tyer-
man, Mrs. Cluff, Miss L. Wankel and 1
Miss J. Hays rendered sprite very fine -
numbers as did also the mixed guar
tette, Mrs. Cluff, Mrs. Westcott, Mr.l
Bateman and Mr. Savauge,
This is an entirely new cantata.
The theme -11 through is the birtlr,of
of Christ, and the music was quite
cheerful, reflecting the Christmas.
spirit.
The splendid way is which the
cantata was rendered reflects a great
deal of credit. •on 'Mr. Chas, Howey,.
A,L.C.M organist and choir master.
Mr. Howey has only been in Seaforth
two months and has already won a
name for himself as a leader. Th's
cantata being, a sample, we may safe-
ly look forward to many real treats
in music, :
Fred. S. Savauge
Jeweler & Optometrist
Opposite Post Office,
Phones 194. Res. 10,
y the New Year kee
Y to Smiling
Prosperous l
. La OX
Phone43
SEAFOR'T`H, JAN'Y 6; 1926..
R. PATRON, Esq.
EVERYWHERE,
DEAR SIR:
The past year brings a realization of our obligation to you for{
•
youri loyal friendship and our,. 1926 resolution is to advance every
effort to merit a continuance of that esteemed friendship, by courte-
ous service„attractive stock and by trying to free our customers from
the delusion of PRICE"buying:
What you can get for your old car next Spring doesn't matted
so long as you get a new one, and your radio Set has no value otbesl
than being a first-class one. ._.Just so with what you wear. If
yom,can depend oa?your dealer, you won't buy a blind horse and
you have, too, in such dealers, every., confidence in, his monetary
quotations.
We fully intend to adhere strictly to the Golden Rule itCall ou
business dealings and trust thereby to merit a snappy
New Year:
'Your Respectfully,
CHISELEURST, ,.
Wins Prize,—Hearty congratula-
tions are extended to Miss Janet
Chappel, daughter of David Chappel
' pupil 'of S. S. No, 7, Hibbert,
recently received the word of
and
her success in an art contest onen BRIG.UT
to rail schools : in Ontario. Miss'
Chappel's art was an illustration in
water colors of "Fires and; their.
Prevention." Much (credit- is also due
to her most efficient teacher, Miss
Elva Bolton, who has so carefully
instructed the pupils of that school
Dress We11,And Succeed
Tailoring and Haberdashery
PHONE 42.
far the past three years,
Ary