PAGE 8 The United church social, which was to have been held in the basement of the church on Friday evening, is post- poned to some future date owing to illness in the community. in: on Monday evening owing to sick- ness in the village and community. nelchborhood where La Grippe has not called. Should he pass this way again there‘ will be few welcome signs. Mrs. W. Hargrave spent Sunday with Mrs. J. Hopkins in town. Mrs. W. s. Atchison and Mrs. Roy Lawrence visited the ï¬rst of the week with Mr. and Mrs. Farr Lawrence, Eg- Bank of Montreal. is spending his vau- tion with his parents here. Mr. Richard Creelmsn. of George- town. is visiting his sister, Mrs. A. Tuck. this week. ur. Alfred nershey spent Sunday with his brother near Mount Forest. There was no Community Club meet- spending a few days with her Were, the Misses Morrison. rented the Genoa house and are mov- ing in this week. Mr. M. Lynch has quite a gang of day the latter part of the week Mrs. George Binnie and Miss W Mr. Dolnhie Lawrence has been cut- ting wood the past week on the South Line. and is workint his week in this inter James Wilson entertained his neighbors at a progressive euchxe one evening recently. Helpful hints for every family can be lound ln the advertisements. neighborhood. formation a ployment Scr- vice. Appflc at once. Standard rade Schools Dept. (22) TORONTO. ogfrAnlO Darkies’ Corners { Our Own Cm rtfsrmnde m x a Our Own Correspondent) ANNUAL JIGGS SUPPER A BIG FEED FOR A SMALL PRICE ’ .. W. Hutu. Mrs. U. Mc- Thursday, March 17 John McGirr spent a Auspices Laymen’s Association IN A. Y. P. A. ROOMS ’n Cabbage ’n Potatoes ’n Coï¬ee have with by ambulance to the Women's 0011986 I the score down. hospital for treatment. The deceased The winners showed the results of was the youngest ““8â€â€œ 0‘ the late careful training in their machine-like Mr. and Mrs. A (300“ and WW on combination, and the way they made the old homestead in “3““- 1335- their moves count when in round the Here, She grew to young womanhood. nets. They were right in on the play at when She t°°k a 903mm in Toronto all times. , and fought for the puck in and over forty years “3° was happily the corners. behind the net and in fact wedded to Mr. EmburY. For some years all the time. ,5 they ran a grocery store on Dovercourt i Road and were most successful. Some “in le giving credit where due, the, very creditable record of this year’s years ago they sold out and moved to Port Perry, later to Greenbank, where juniors must not be lost sight of. With! the exception of Dean on the defence,‘ Mr. Embury and a partner have run a this , mill and service station. Mrs. Embury ' â€a†5 team W W be built from the ground up. “Hiram" is the only one was a brilliant business woman, a de- . voted wife and a clever housekeeper and or la“ ’ ear 5 championship team on the line-up. and we do not doubt that made many friends .by her generous hospitality and friendly manner. Fun- if one had predicted at the start of the season that the Durham juniors would eral service was held at the Funeral Home of Stonehouse at Son, Toronto, be one of the teams in the finals, both the team and the management would on Tuesday morning. from where the have given them the razzberry. remains were conveyed to the home atl Greenbank, services being held in the The ï¬rst some in Owen Sound Friday night was a disastrous one from a Dur- * United church there. where a large con- course of friends gathered, after which ham standpoint. The 10081 boys seemed interment took place in the nearby I unable to get going until the third per- cemetery. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Cool: left 10d commenced and then they were on Monday morning by train to be faced with a four-goal deficit. During present for the funeral and may re- the first tWO periods they played as if main a few days. or the original Cook in a daze. and the fast, smart passing family only Thomas in Markdale and ' attack 0f the Owen Sound outï¬t had W. J. on the homestead are left. Deep :them helpless. Undoubtedly the close. sympathy is felt for Mr. Embury and consistent back-checking Of the OPPOS- the bereaved brothers and friends. ins forwards had a good deal to do with â€"â€"â€"oâ€"â€"â€" their poor showing. but their attack TRY TO IRON ROADS seemed disorganized and their checking Cast iron roads are to be laid exper- was very weak. In the third period they imentally in many parts of England'came to life and for a greater portion as a result of the success of short trial'of the period had the Owen Sounders sections in London. The iron road,lbottled up inside their own blue line. which was invented about 18 months 2 During this period they had chances for ago by Major Frank Mall, 3 member two or three goals and only the superb of the original Royal Flying Corps, worth of Neath in the nets kept them nnncicfe nf triangular castings laid on Off the Score Sheet- Very sudden was the can that came to Jennie 0001:, wife of Mr. S. E. Em- bury of Greenbank, near Port Perry, on Saturday afternoon, March 12. She had been taken ill with the flu a few days before and on Friday was taken Master Charlie were visitors at McClocknn homestead on the ï¬rst the week. Taking advantage of the snowfall quite a number of East Glenelgers are teaming logs to Armstrong’s mill yards in Markdale. on Sunday. East and west roads are quite bare. but the north and south ones are very Traverston (Our Own Correspondent) Ten days' hold-up on syrup-making owing to the cold and storm. Owingtothemnmotthepaetor, Rev. W. E. Almack, there were no ser- vice in Zion on Sunday. School attendance in No. 5, has been cut fifty per cent, owing to the preva- lence of the flu. In some families, near- 1y every member was laid up with it at TRY TO IRON ROADS Cast iron roads are to be laid exper- imentally in many parts of England as a result of the success of short trial sections in London. The iron road. which was invented about 18 months ago by Major Frank Mail, a member of the original Royal Flying Corps. consists of triangular castings laid on a foundation of cement thinly covered with bituntsn. The surface has projec- tions like a non-skid tire tread, and the cost of the road is the same as for the best wooden paving. a type of road used widely in England. Iron roads are guaranteed for 10 years. which is about twice the period of the stone sets and weather; moreover the suction between tires and surface is eliminated so that there is little splashing in wet weather. Mr. and Mrs. W111 Campbell and Phone 192w r for some days, Mrs. O. D. returned home from Eminent Nothing but best Companies laims promptly t .n care of For es apply in attendance on her ueen Durham The winners showed the results of careful training in their machine-like combination, and the way they made their moves count when in round the nets. They were right in on the play at all times. , and fought for the puck in the corners. behind the net and in fact all the time. chances and only the excellent work of McEachnle in the local nets kept the score down. game. and forced the play for the greater portion of the time, but even at that the visitors had more scoring While giving credit where due. the very creditable record of this year’s juniors must not be lost sight of. With the exception of Dean on the defence, . this year’s team had to be built from the ground up. “Hiram†is the only one of last year's championship team on the line-up. and we do not doubt that it one had predicted at the start of the season that the Durham juniors would be one of the teams in the finals, both the team and the management would have given them the razzberry. The Free Press Trophy, emblematic of the Junior Championship of the Northern Hockey League will rest in Owen Sound. as the property of the Owen Sound Dairy team, during the coming year. They won the champion- ship and cup. by defeating the local junior entry by a five-goal margin in the two games, last Friday and Monday. The score on the round was 7-2, the Owen Sounders winning the first game 5-0 in Owen Sound last Friday. and the locals holding them to a 2-all tie in the local arena on Mon- day oi this week. And on the play there was just about that much difference in the two teams. In the game here Mon- day night the locals had an edge on the My Team from City nae-u Loan Owen Sound Wins For the locals the work of Bolger at centre with his nice checking. Elmer Tucker on the wing and Dean on the defense was a feature. Tucker was a constant menace on the attack and had no difficulty in keeping pace with the fastest of the Owen Sound forwards. Dean‘s rushes lacked the steam which usually characterizes them but he was dobg-tired with his fifth consecutive night of hockey. He was a hard man to stop. however, every time Mt away and he dealt out the body checks without fear or favor. The second game, which was played on local ice on Monday evening was considerably different. The locals started out to show the visitors the kind of hockey that carried them into the ï¬nals and a real battle ensued. Judging from the play of the visitors, one would have judged the score stood even, rather than 5-0 in their favor, and they matched the locals with Just as vigorous an attack. Right from the opening bell both teams jumped into high gear and the fans were treated to as thrilling a game as has been seen on local ice in a long time. Durham scored first about midway through the first period when Lauder carried the puck in close and shot, bringing Neath to his knees to save. Lauder batted at the rebound and Neath sprawled on the ice and again saved but before he could move Dean flashed in from the opposite wing and lifted the rubber into the net. Shortly after this Dean again beat Neath, this time on a wing shot, which accordingto the writer’s eyesight hit the twine about two or three inches inside the post. However the red light failed to go on and when appealed to by the referee the goal umpire claimed it hit the post, and the goal was not allowed. It was a tough break for the locals and did not help their play any. Incidentally the goal umpire was replaced at the end of the period. ber,mdtenm1nutes latermmer'ruck- erputthelocflsoneupWona www.mmmotwmgnwh cleanly.'mepeuodended2-l for Dur- Tie 2-2â€"1111: Game tn Owen Sound s-oâ€"Wmm Better Tam. Jlmior N. H. L Tulle THE DURHAM CHRONICLE- smdtromclooemuterdxteenmm- utes had passed. Thiswuthemost strenuous period of all, but tho the handed out, Black getting both of them. Twelve penalties marked the first two periods, seven in the first and live in the second. or these Din-hem cot seven and Owen Sound nve. Johnny Jones of Guelph handled the bell to the evident satisfaction of 311. Owen Soundâ€"Goal, Neath; defense, Bleich, Small;‘*loentre, Lamson; wings, Fumess, Shears; alternates, Marne, Clarridge, McKay, Best. , McEachnle in the local nets turned in a ï¬rst-class job of net-minding. Once or. twice it seemed to ram packs all around him, but he kept them all out. The two that were put past him would have beaten most goalies. 'While a five-goal lead proved unsur- mountable the kids certainly went out ï¬ghtin'g. They started out with the in- tention of whittling the lead down and when the ï¬nal gong rang they were still battling away with the same idea. Lauder. E. Tucker; alternates, N. Tuck- Lamson, Claxrldge and Fumess, and Neath in the nets seemed outstanding for the visitors, but they all worked hard and turned in a good game. Commenting on the game the Owen Sound Sun-Times says in part: “Durham have a pretty smart ag- gregation and they played much better hockey last night than they did in the ï¬rst game. On their own rink they are a tough team for any- one to beat. Dean, the red-headed detenseman, was the best player on the Durham line-up. His thrilling end-to-end dashes always carried a threat and he was dangerous ev- ery minute. He fully earned that goal he did get. Clarridge, the alternate centre man for the visitors, had a run of hard luck. In the second period he and Lauder met in centre ice and went down with Lauder falling on tap of him. Clar- ridge fell on his left arm and was knocked out for a minute or so. In the third period he got in another mix-up and got a cut over his eye. He almost refused to leave the ice to have (Our Own Correspondent) On Thursday of last week the Green Bros.. cf Ayton, took a truck load of live stock to Kitchener, but had quite a lot of snow shovellmg to do before reaching Highway No. 6. thrown out of their busy. caused by some accident to the wheel, but for- tunately none or the occupants were it dressed. but was relieved. However, he retired for repairs and then came back to score one of the smartest goals of the evening. Mr. Wm. Hawkins also found too much .snow on the Base line to get through. Some time ago Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Fan-ill and little son Vincent, were Mm Wm. Kauffman had the mis- fortune to scald her foot last week. We hope she will soon recover. Last week. when going to Alsfeldt church to attend service. Mr. and Mrs. Adam F‘eick had a very unpleasant ex- perience, when Mr. C. Weppler’s dog frightened their horse. The animal be- came unmanageable and upset the bus- gy, breaking the tap and other parts, and leaving Mr. and Mrs. Feick with a number of ugly bruises. and was. Louis LleboldandmasJus- unamotoredtoauelphaweekazoto swathemnenlotthelrmme MULWa-nenyhodledwddenlyot www.mhumm. Colds and sore throats are quite prev- alent in this vicinity. Nearly every fam- ily has had a touch of it. Mrs. Julius Dreir fort he past week has been quite ill and under Dr. Eas- ton’s care, together with other members of the family. Mr. and Mrs. Howard Cruspin and family have had their turn with the flu but we are pleased to know they are recovering nicely. Bornâ€"on the 2nd concession of Nor- manby, on Thursday, March 10th, to Mr. and Mrs. Robt. Kirby. a 3011. Con- gratulations. We extend our sympathy to Mrs. Claude Withrow in the illness of her father, Mr. Peter Match, of Yeovll. We honehemaysoonberestoredtohls usual health again. Theviaitorscottheonlygouaoored The Tucker boys, Elmer and Norm. ( I thin} it’s Norm.) were the pick of the forwards. Elmer’s goal in the second period was a beauti- ful effort and climaxed an evening of brilliant play. Norm. was just as good but he had no luck with his shots." Calderwood ; defense, Seiors Eliminate Erin In N. ll. L Playofls Walkman-944nm Nightâ€"Soon 7-4 a: la The loculseniorspnttheakhunder theErtnN.KL.teamhstTh\mdny night when they detetted them 4-: tn the second game and took the round by 7-4. hmdthe upperhnnd.me¢emebeume a little rough in the am! period but only one penuty was handed out by Referee Barney Bcheerer. that some to R. )1ch for e, tripping onence. Erin went on the atttck in the ï¬rst period determined to wipe out the his With the exception of the ï¬rst per- iod when Erin cut into their three-coal lead a little and threttened to make the frame they scored the ï¬rst goal when G. Horton went through done and beet McEnchnte with a test shot. There we no more scoring but Mc- Eachnie put up a. smart bread of god- keeptng to stoo the Erin forwards from Durham stopped the fooling in the second period when they got that goal back a few minutes after the session Bush after one of his spectacular solo rushes. Horton got it back again but McIlnith and C. McGirr tipped in a pair of smart ones and Durham was back in the lead by 3-2 when the per- rush. There was a lot of slashing and trapping but only one penalty was given. This win puts the seniors into the ï¬nal play-offs where they will meet either Milverton or Harriston. With five teams. Harriston, Palmerston. W‘larton, Milverton and Durham. in the playoffs, one team had to get a bye. and the locals were the lucky ones. Since then Milverton has defeated W'iarton and Harriston has disposed of Palmerston and the winner of the ser- ies between these two teams will meet the locals in the finals next week. In the third period each scored once. 8.. McGirr getting the ï¬rst one on Buschleh’s pass and wheat! banning the lone marker for Erin on a lone Erinâ€"Goal, J. Bush; defense, Mc- Leod and Joe Saunders; centre, Gear; wings, Horton and J. Saunders; alter- nates. W. Bush, J. Horton and Abbotts. Durhamâ€"Goal. McEachnie; defense, Dean and Wilson: centre. R. McGU' wings, C. McGirr and Buschlen; am! mates. McIlraith. Rowe and Murdock. Refereeâ€"Barney Shearer. First Old Maidâ€"“Well you know. marriage is a lottery, and I truly be- lieve it." Second Old Maidâ€"“So do I! But where do you suppose I could get a ticket?" THOROUGH IN A3 PLEASANT TO TAKE CONTAIN NO NARCOTlcs AND PROMPY TO ACT W0 JUNIOR-PLAYERS ' - HANG UP RECORDS leaflet-(0.5LJ‘II-M auwmumflm fol-M Inthesponmgedlmncolumnota recent issue of them and W thorouowtnccommenuonthem ofChateereottbe’WJm- Demo! the Duh-m 1mm: “cm Steele of the W. and the onlymemberotthe junior chumpionsborn outdde of Toronto. mm: on the subject it might else be mentioned thet Item. the 10- cal junior net minder use hung up a ave-me record, playing in the sane gemes last week as Dem. MnkeTflpuGIeldeCllbâ€" Tmh0.ll.A.llnhr Hail. SENIOR Last Saturday the Durham Senior hockey team made a trip to Toronto :5 guests of the Hockey Club. heaving Durhnm Saturdny morning they jour- neyed to the Queen City by car and took in the Marlboro-Rem O. H. A. junior ï¬nal in the Maple Leaf Gar- dens and also the Toronto Maple Leaf- Boston Bruins professional game at night. ‘ Quality merchandise, mt prices and good advertising nuke a growing busi- onlyphyerwhohuwonthmmn' tor ORA. meals. two at which wereonchmphnmms. “but yurhemwlthflhnn huswhentheymnendflxettfle. 'meyeubetmhemnho'nh thenllswhentheymmnm- uptoWestmm.mduthene- suit on ORA. runner-up medal. pioyers. Deon of Durham. also de- oervesomedoi.Hepioyedonme every night int week but My. and we presume he went toting thot night. On Monday he played for Din-hem juniors in â€novel. the team arriving home Tueodoy morn- ing at 6.15 after mum; ti‘lemoelvee out of the snow drifts. Tuesday of- ternoon he went to Erin with the Durhun seniors. and then on Wed- tn the return came with uncut. Thursday he took his place with seniors against Erin 1n the second shovels in the back of the car and then hit a snow drift on high. If the our lands between the fences the payers will dig it out. If it doesn’t some other cur will pick 'em came and ‘on Friday he ms ‘t Owen Sound with the juniors. up." “fly. m 17. Iâ€! TRIP TO TORONN