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The Exeter Advocate, 1923-1-25, Page 5• , . 4m4444-4444,4;44.4,,,44044,4464,4"..4444.444444.444444.41 . . . . . .4.1.........011•14141.44MVIIMM.N.+0144114111111b, VCKLEY ONCHITIS 0 Ce116111COLD$ 5RONGMITIS MONEY BACK GUARANTEE leff to Wee Jane, Forsythe,. daughter of the her death. She was ablil to work aa late Ebenezer Forsythe of - Tucker- ' the garden laat summer. She wee a 9 ,,,,vive. She had been wag, e removed to the wash, locating first n WilantPeg, and a few years after h. grandsm) Vitalim J. °tterbei''' The .remains were interred in) Gtaellete lArke Keltoe, Mane afterwards retiring i „ ilton, and Henry of Tuckersmith, al- i cemetery, Hay. TorontO. He is survived by hie weds:. . : ow, font. ,sans Robert Of Wiarapeg,I, --.-40--- Garfield of Keilloe, Ebenezer of Ham-1iltori, sn two daughter, Mrs. Treble. of two Kellee, and Mrs. P. I-logan, of Toronto. .. Sunday the rvice church were conducted bY1 Mr; Eckert 1 clent, paseed away or January II. - d se.a, lathe IVLethodist Mr. DaviWitmer, a, re.spected real - of London, Rev. Rivers preached anra 111.V.§aik services in Empress Avenue Mrs. Sheckle, an old resident of 1ere 'IN/let/toast church at Londoin. !Stanley township, waa buried at the ,Mr„ and 4Vfirs. F. Marshall have sold Branson Line Meenartite cemetery last their dwelling on Brock Street to Mr!Saturday. Daniel McNaughten, who wish ll ortly I Mr. Oscar Duchaxme, of the Sauble or Detroit Tneaye ‘. move, therk.„ sr. mara•hau and Line left for family may continue here, or may ere' Mrs. Victoria Denorny. of the Sauble Line' to London. i is epending a few, weeks in De - The play put orehere by the ". A Exeber, tr'?„1,; ex High School Dramatic, Club, on Thurs-I P.A. ee, r . Routledge, of RegMee : day last wee fairly well attended and Sask., spent a kew days at the home was amereciated by all WhiOt 524w it. l'a his pent, Dr. Ariel Mrs. J. Rout- ledge, OYS IN AGRICULTURE left Hensall native a PexlmsYlvag4., .TWa sons sur ,s.ith in. 1912 he and(vve. The Junior Farmer Is Much to the Fore To -day. Badly Handled In the Past - Too Much Book and Not Enough Boy -He Is a Born. Club Man--Bural School Fairs and Boys' Clubs Are Making Active Young Patriots. The einging of Mr. Ronald Witwer was Mrs. J. C Gross of Kirchener,spent a1sr ape:cede:tell the week -end at the home of -M.r. E. A large number of local brethren notsenberry. and visitors were present on Monday night when. the new Iasi° SOLD' IN EX.baTER. BY mast commodious and beautiful one Mr Paul Masse, of the Bronson, Line nic Lodge Mrs. D. McLiachey of Kitchener ,is Room was dedicated, The room isa ,aisiting at the home of her throlihter. s ESL% W. C. Wagner. 'and reflects great credit on the bre- laft ort• Tuesday for Detroit, whiere BROWNING'S DRUG STOR.E _three. of Zurich Lodge: After the he wends to ..ir,eact the wt/e4 ceremnny a sumptuous banquet was Hay Council ,has appointed the foJ- 'served in the Tawn Halland this was to v...ag 1 officials far 1923 :-Clerk and . followed by a lengthy toast list.• end treaserer, Andrew F. Hees, re. Alter an illness Miss Edna McD.one ; township work, $360; re. telephone Hensall jad 'has xeturried tot-ton:dare to resume' d t" s in the Bank of 'Toronto. n180. re toad work, $20; assessor, W. Owen Geiger is, reeve of 'Hensel!. for Mrs. S. R Ste es of Toronto, nee the second time this year. His 'elec- iMiSs Pearl Dykes, and little eon, are tion at New Year was questioned on 'inisittinigMrs. Steven's grandparents, Mr the ground that he had not • resigned and Mrsa A Reichardt., • at a sufficiently early date from the 'Mrs. W. P. Dougall and young son school board. He withdrew and at of Hatnilton, are visiting Mrs. Andrew Doug,all, the former's irother-in-law. •••••••••••• the new election,' on Monday was op- posed by Thomas Hudson- Each cane didate received 124 vioteseand the clerk broke. the tie by, polling the casting vote for Mr. Gager. The late James H. Chesney, V. S. who died in, Toronto, and was buried at Egmandville, was for 25 years •.s. practising veterinary in Hensall. Dr. Chesney war married 43 years ago Mies.. Chamberlain of Niagara Falls, is spending a few weeks, with her par- ents, Mr. and Nies. WAG. Wilision, The funeral on January 22nd of Mrs Henry W. Otterbeim, onre of the oldest Mennonites in. Ontario, was largely at- tended. ,Mrs. Otterbein, who was in her 97th year, had been ia remarkelKy good health up to a short time before `Winter 'portsin, (Contributed by Ontario Department ot Agriculture, Toronto) In agriculture the boy has arrived. He was a long time coming. His way has been as tortuous as a wild grapevine, and at times his reluctant feet lagged distressingly. Be Did Not Get a Fair Show at First. To bring the boy into general agricultural work and study, all man- ner of efforts had been made. He was bullied and bribed, cuffed and' coaxed, pinched and. patted, whipped and wheedled; yet scarcely a foot had he voluntary -gone forward until very recently. The Old Castor Oil Policy. At one time, figuratively speaking, he was held by the nose while naus- eous doses from text -books of for- bidding terminologies were forced down his unwilling throat, in order H, Edighoffer, $120; auditors, P. J. Haberer and K, Rutledge, $12 each; caretaking, Mrs, H. Rupp; members. of Board of Heade; A. Heideman, san- itary inspector, C. Either for 'western dive and B. C. Edwards for k ea s t en% d - . A domestic science course will 'teach a, girl to cook, almasit a1 th.e things a man doesn't care for. .111.•••••00....• Well, why shouldn't the bride have lots of cloths? It sail], probably be a long time before she gets any more. eeeeieee 1 yee0 .4;14';;17:27e"310'* ' '• -Or area. merle the countries of the world -Canada has long been without a peer as a aummer resort. To -day it challenges the hitherto undis- , puted supremacy of Switzerland in the realm,. of winter sports. Who has not heard or read' of St. Moritz, pride of the Swiss people and for \ long years the winter time Mecca n -of Europe? Canada has a score or . more of places where all that St. Moritz can offer in the way of win- . „ter sports Is not only duplicated but surpassed. The fame of these is spreading beyond the confines of this continent to lands across the seas. No longer is the Dominion pictured as a land which hibernates through a 'Wag and trying winter pegiod. The truth regarding the invigorating and exhilarating win- ' ter pinnate of this country, with its foy giving and health impartinT Sports, is as great an advertisement for Canada as the enthusiastic laud- . ationseof the glories of its summer end early felt 1 • Quebec, the ancient and pictiir- , Psque, Ottawa, a capital to be proud Clear as Crystal -7 The absolute purity of. 111 GREEN TEA is reflected in every cup. The most delicious GREEN TEA in the world. JUST TRY IT 1.1 872 to give him a taste and enthusiasm tor farming! But to -day we have the boy gen- uinely interested in agriculture; opeii- eyed, open-minded, open-handed. Open-eyed, for he is looking at farm- ing in a new light; epee -minded, be- cause he is now regarding agricul- tural instruction with a sympathetic understanding; open-handed, for he is ready, even eager, to seize the hoe -handle and wield it as proudly as if it were a field marshal's baton. Too Much Book and Not Enough Boy. Early methods to bring agricul- tural knowledge and the boy together failed because they lacked that most important thing in teaching known as "point of contact." There was too much Book and not enough Boy in the minds of the pedagogues. The lad gagged and choked mentally at a too early memorization of learned and (to him) meaningless phrases. It was like a Chinese dinner course, reverse action, starting with the des- sert and ending with the soup; but in this case the nuts were usually too hard for the youngster to crack. The Boy Is a Ganoter-a Club Man. Boys are gregarious; they nock. The boy, whether he lives in the city or the country is by nature a gang - titer. But call the gang a "club," and it gives an air to the affair, although the latter word has not al- ways had an attractive meaning to the lad. The club collective is always more attractive than the club correktive. The Boy Wants to Be a Doisr of Things. There is another powerful instinct in the boy: "Johnny," enquired the Sunday School teacher, "would you like to go to heaven?" "What's doing there, teacher?" was the eager response. There's the case in a nutshell. Your real boy wants to . be where they are -.ping things, and he -wants to do thein in company with "some of the other fellers." School Fairs Have Helped the Farm Boy. If your oven is slow to you will find Egg.01 leavening with a slow or hot oven. ust as slow to act'—:its double action insures Powder ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER' immonammisammair Only a Youth, but Never Knew a Boyhood George Adams is a very weak bol -hes so weak he can't even turn the pages of a book without feeling pain. He has a good many brothers and sisters and his parents are very poor. So when George put on long trousers -he was just 12 at the time -he became a man and -took upon himself the task of earning money for the family. . He went la Laura a trade in an iron foundry. where fumes and hard work undermined a weak system and sowed future trou,le. Now and then one other woritin„,.• member of the family would cease us..ning through sickness or loss of job, and George would have to keep, his nose to the grindstone ' a few more hours each day to make up for it. His life was just work, work, work, until one day he drop - pe cT on the floor. The company physician, who examined him, pre- .__ -- CRAIG. -The village council scribed a year or two at due Muskoka Hospital for Consumptives. Ile can't met Thursday night, but held only a understand why he never had a boy - vary short session,. A few officers iirreo.ebauntdbneeanteatortlythheapgpoyo-d htheinkgnsowoes were appointed for this, year, Another separation from his family safeguards tilOMinatitan i2s to be held to 'fill the. them, He's content, and he still has place of those resigned. Some trouble • hope. is being experinnced in getting a full ' There are many just such deserving comic:it-Mrs. Rev. McCormick ,who hes bee-ne quite ill is recovering. -Mrs. Maim is on the sick Est. 1 - neer* BAYFIELD-There died at Virden, Man, .on 'way 7, a former and most highly respected inesident of this vil-1 IIIBBERT-A gamer higliy • ear e :- ton, in her 98th year. The remains' 1the person of Wm. Colquhoua, died at lege, in the person of Eliza Jane Hous-' ed resident of Hibbbert townslap, En were brought to this village for bur- his home in Moorefield, at th I age ef lel. 74 years, A day or so before his --- death he .suffered a stroke of paraly- ST. MARYS-The death ,occurred on g3 wh.ile in the stable attending a Jan. 13, of Mrs. Andrew Snoddy, who eeerse, Reeve A. A. Couquhoue ef has been a resident of this district ; Hibbert is a 'son a the late wiras Lor fifty years. aire. Snoddy, who was Colquhoun. th 72 years of age, came from e Coun- ty of Antrim Ireland, with her husband the late An,drew Shoddy, who died 1 EGMONDVILLE-A quiet wedda fourteen years ago. They settled in, ', wa solemnized at the, mans>, an J.-1, St. Marys, where the home has re- 'lith at seven o'clock, when ;Miss 1„ - mairked -ever since. ' onn Margaret Pearson, cd •nt 4+1'0' - - -----... ter of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Pearson, was TUCKERSIVIITH.--The Church . Of united in marriage. to Mr, Hartman St. John, the Evangelist, Windsor, was Hiusser. They will reside in, Seal.: ..h the. scene of a pretty winter wedding Moncla.y morning of last week, when Helen Josephine Woolley, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Woolley was marnied to Wiliam Alvin..,1kAnGeoch of NATaikerville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Wm McGeoch, formerly of Tuckersmith. • . • SEAFORTH-A pretty wedding was . solemnized on Jan. 17th at, St., Jaxne • Church, Seaforth, when. Anne Ney'lile , -large, and. the lad signed up with a 'eldest daughter of Mr. ii.a. lira.- Jas. lumber gang working nearby, -..sawing Neville of Sarnia, was united in ma:- logs, stripping. bark and driving the riage to 'Joseph Miles McMillan, only teams. Altoether these two Jobs. Leaormwet:ilazdield3 sou of the late Duncan. and Mrs. 'Mc- intrartmleat. htedpttihmise dfao3; PLUM OS SeafOrth. . little more than sleep. Nature re - Insulin la now sa6d to be a Sure belling' at this heavy burden -con - Rural School Fairs have done much to interest juniors in agricul- ture. To be an exhibitor, and per- haps a winner, at a fair has awakened the ambition of many a boy. To be able to show and win implies a knowl- edge of growing things. To know how to grow things mean observ- ation, study and industry. .The first Rural School Pair was held in 1909, three schools malting, and had an attendance of 250. In 1921 there were 449 fairs, embrain. ing 3,847 schools, with an attend- ance of 345,259, over halt or whom -were juniors. At these fairs practi- cally every branch of agriculture was covered, and the total entries of ex- hibits reached about 200,000. Home Garden, Acre. Profit, Baby Beef, and Hog raising contests have also stirred the farm boy to action and study. • towns might be;amed as worthily eontests and eahibitions are held at claiming the attention of thosaywho the Montreal Ski'Club,,while every delight in the season's sports. But 'other winter sport has its special the Canadian winter of 1923 be- place on the program. It is doubt - longs, for many reasons, to the old, ful if there has ever bee4 anywhere substantial, and progressive city of such a remarkable program for win - Montreal. if that municipality', in ter sports, varied as it is by which the past and the present, the masquerades, balls and other social old and the new so harmoniously functions, and torch light parades blend and combine, had nothing amid the most striking natural sur - else to point to but Mount Royal it roundings. There is the glamor of would still have much to boast of. romance over all, but there is also But in addition to the famed tobog- behind it the spirit of real Cana- gan slide of- that same beautiful dianism that knows how to blend height, there are many attractions its play and recreation with its work to charm and delight every visitor. 'and its belief in the land that it It would indeed be almost impos- loves. sible to detail in a single article Montreal has. spared no effort to the variety of the winter sports and show that Canada as a winter resort recreations that Montreal will afore need take second place to --none. throughout the -balance of • this Even now the success of its under - month and all of February. The taking is assured. One f)f the Winter Sports Committee, .selected greenest auxiliaries to that success by the citizens, is responsible, for is the Canadian National Raitways, the • arrangements. which hold par- which sees in such plans and pro- ticular appeal to all'interestecl in grams an opportunity, net only of skating ,skiing, curling, snoWshoe- developing business, but of spread - hockey, the -yachting, toboggan- ing knowledge of Canada beyoad ing and the like. Every SaturdaY. Of. and a host of other cities and In the period named, special Ski its own boundaries as well as P among Canadians themselves.Publications Branch, Toronto. cases in need of treatmen at tn Mtlekoka Hospital. Will you lend a hand. Contributions may be sent to Hon. W. A. Charlton, 223 College Street, . iToronto. . Junior Farmer Improvement Associa- tions. • These associations, are made up of young me, many: of whom have, beta' trained through,- the School l'airs, and some of when). have taken short courses under the Agriculture.1 Representative. They are local lead- ers in educatjonal, business, and so- cial endeavor, as well as being fore- most in taking up new. methods of, agriculture. They have been active in organizing and conducting Inter - Association Debates, ,County Judging. Competitions, Ploughing Competi- tions, panquetsn- -Public Speaking Contests, .Baseball Leagues, and Field Days. • These Junior Ploughing Matches have revived a long neglected phase of agricultural endeavor, and old ploughmen have expressed great sat- isfaction with the work of the lads. Live Stock Judging Contests took place in thirty-three counties last year, and there have been. many Inter -County competitions. Tho win- ners had a free trip to the Chicago International Live Steck Show, and came back with a bigger vision of their calling. -- "Don't Werry About Me" Tom'S Assuring Mers..,ge On a little farm away up north Tom lived with his parents and one brother. His f Aber, well up in years, found himself unable to continue -the hardwork of farming, so Tom took up' the. burden. The income was not , t sumption claimed another victim. cure for diabetes. Mter trying various ways to over- come his phyaical weakness. he went Muskoka Hospital. His par- --- FULL A.RTON-Mr. Chas. Lander teontethearellen about him, they send HphasoVe8iselidYGenilr.6SoMf c;'Nir.eLanilabrilanezdkYe'r II\ Inliheari ctohaso 'n d Percytuacktee nd ' T1 , g the creamery for fourteen, years. n : them: Tom's own troubles are never tilreyeathreerolsran4^ feeble'a'amndofjtoeuni:nef or t is a hazardous undertaking 5;4; so real to him that he forgets others. -- ,','L- '. He asks for those about him, lives -0-7- • • for little bits o: news about his home; ., . , „and' never fans to send .thin' mea- , l. 754 929 LBS. INCREASE FOR hagee4eack, "Don't worry 'about me. 2 2 ' The.zplople here sure do treat you Boy& and Girls' Live Stock Clubs. The Boys' and Girls' Live Stock Clubs are doing much to develop the breeding of superior cattle, hogs, etc. About fifty of :these Clubs are in existence,. ' • Other activities* of a useful and elevating character are engaged in by, boys on Ontario farms, all of which suggest a keen, practical and intelligent acquaintance with a.gricol- • tare, its literature, and its practice. In agriculture, the boy bas thin-vex:1. Tbos. McGillicuddy Statistics and •"SALADA4-' - , Awonderful work is being donS by Thpis figure, which Teprese.nts the The National Sanitarium Association. ytilaanra.deathonA- tate from tuberculosis in tremen.dous progress inpublic favor Ontario has been reduced by more nhaleerdsduringi-ittlast twenty le Vitii.C:b uSalada.'" has made during 1922 can be attributed only to its invarin efforti' still moguerineectiikyteo. make its ably high quality and teapot sadden- . Contributions may be sent to Hon: W. A.- Charlton, 223 College Street, eon. ' Toronto. • eeene ' NORTHERN ONTARIO ST ILLNEEDS .YOUR HLP.