Les archives de la ville de Dryden

Dryden Observer, 6 Feb 1920, page 2

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TTY or ERYE® BS ees A SCC RELL SE Fol liga : ; j labor saving appliances. IT 19 1 the highest economy fo save your awn strength by employing these aids. ' We carro ALL MAKES of electrical and mechani- cal devices for household use--Electric Ranges, Stoves, Toasters, Heaters, &c. Also Electric Washing Machines and Wringers. Qur aim is to install those conveniences in every Lome in Dryden. Our prices and terms are arran- : ged with a view to make this possible. ; Comd | in and examine these goods, and see ya her they are necessary in your own home. GRAMOPHONES, any make, on terms to suit - Purchaser. Our stock of Records is the pick of the Victor Catalogue, and gives the widest and best selection in the district. BESO BIRD RDI BIBIBIEIEEEIBITIDIRS e80000¢ i The Busy Store The. Latest | Prices 'Royal Household Flour, per cwt Shes, per ewt.............. ... 0. 0 oe Bran, perewt. L005 Ra a a oe es Oatmeal Feed, per ewt. o...... eva for cows and pigs. Grond Wheat Screenings, per ewt.............. for stock and pigs. : : St Charrles Cream, per RAE HE el Hotel size, pertin......>..... Hotel size, per case Brookfield Eggs, per I doz. carton Brookficld Eggs, loose per doz 2.90 NX DRCICERS ECE Ses Sy see mas esse es ° ] ¢ : . ' e : 4 ® 1 $6.65 3 4 i : $ 4 8 i rE 6 Pure Lard, in 1-lb.cartons, perib.........c...... 3 i 3 Ib. pail, per pail ie ie NLT sib pail, per pail... ......... toi 1 85 v, to lb pailiper pail iil... oo... 3,65 u 20 Ib pail, per pail... .. Sas 6.95 One tin cach, 225 1b Tomatoes, 1 Corn, 1 Peas ... .65 : 1 3 @ : 9 4 § : $ : : § ® : 3 i o 4 e $ [") © [a 0 4 {4 * ¢ £4 9 ® {J iD. W.SOTT, Dryden H © es Ee a 20800409 BLACK & LATIMER Hardware, Furniture and Undertaking : -- - PY +0 We hear much about the igh Ie ost of Living. Sometimes we hear of the High Cost of Labor. Any intelligent person can sce that when goods are charged, entered in a ledger, and accounts render- ed monthly, someone ni ust pay th e book keeper leone mi er, the stationer, tt postmaster and the financier, ? he WHO PAYS THE BILLS? THE CUSTOMER § 7 i When you pay dash for your purchase, the above expenses are el- ~ iminated. Therefore we are able to give you a discount of five per cent on every dollar's worth of shelf hardware, and ten per en on heavy hardware and furniture. : per ont of. 11] to announce the death of Elsie Turner, second daughter of Don't Trust to Luck = The Tea That Never Disappoints When ordering Tea, but insist on getting the reliable B872 Biack, Green or Mixed = Sealed Packets Only. OBITUARY. --. It is with much regret we have Miss Mr and Mrs Thos. Turner of Oxdrift, who died suddenly on the | morning of Saturday, January 3I. Miss Turner seemed to be in good health until Wdenesday last, go- ing about her duties in the usual way until after dinner, when she felt she must rest. was called in on Thursday. A gloom has been cast all over: Oxdrift. Miss Turner was very | highly respected: in Oxdrift and surrounding © districts. She was treasurer of the Up-stream Club, connected with S. S., a regular attender at Sunday School, treas- urer for many years of the Happy Thought Club, director in the Women's Institute, and had been one of the best workers for Red Cross. Rev. J. Cragg of Dryden. con- and sympathetic manner, Mr Tur- ner himself choosing the hymns most appropriate to his daughter's funeral. The Happy Club girls sang "We have lost a Eriend." The interment place at 2.30 p.m. February 2nd, to Oxdrift Cemetery. Many flowers, wreaths, crosses, were sent by her friends, and al- most every settler, in sleighs and cutters, followed behind the cor- tege. Much sympathy is felt for Mr and Mrs Turner and family in their sad bereavement. Miss Turner was thirty years of age. Women's Awakening A STORY In the front lines of the battle- fields of Europe men hurled death and destruction upon each other, causing loss of limb, of life, blind: ness, ruin of heart and lung. And just a few thousand yards behind the lines, the women of all the world, as Red Cross Workers, tended ' friend and the foeman ing them fresh spirit and life, re- building their brains, as a direct- or said the other day. Day upon day dawned and fad- =d into the calendar of night and nthe armies of Europe, men suffered their wounds and their thoughts to take possession of them, while in the homes of their wives and sweethearts, as in the Homes of Aemrica, men and wo- men cried aloud for relief. Then came still another day, when the United States called up her sons and sent them out to die. The day when an Irish American, wearing a tiny silken flag upon his 'breast, carried into a Euro- pean battle a new force, a new cheer, as Pat Malloy in the big feature "The Heart of Humanity" goes "over the top." And the suffering, the heart- ache of the women of the world, was increased a thousand fold. The women themselves did not realize the process of change within them; they felt only' a great fear and a glorious renunci- tion Back of all this feeling this fearing, the motherheart of all womenkind was slowly assert- ing itself, forcing them to leave their children, their mothers, their sisters and their small brothers, that they might minister to the sterner sex that fought for an ex- alted cause. Upon the fields of death was reaped a new harvest by the Red Cross, a harvest for those yet to be, for out of the suffering and the sacrifice of the /soldiers and the women wat-workers, arose a co- operation of spirit, ideas, thought, action, that was undreamed. While the men fought, the wo- emn of all the world, flocking to France, and Belgium, tended the homeless and the starving, the or- phans and the indigent, as Doro- thy Phillips, playing the lead in Allen Holubar's big production, wasted section of France and the little kingdom of pain." For those who wish to understand this new spirit, the expression of the motherheart of all oan , the biggest concepution of it yet ducted the services at the home, and cemetery in a very impressive! took ™ alike, regenerating the fallen, giv-| cares for the orphans of the de- expressed may be seen in the masterly film in which Dmorothy Phillips plays the lead. The heart of huamnity will come to the Strand" Theatre on Monday and Tuesday, 16th and 17th February. REBEKAH INSTALLATION. On Wednesday evening, 14th' inst., D.D.P. Sister E. Whittaker . De Dingwall of Kenora installed the following | t officers for the current term in oe local Lodge :-- N.G.--Sister V. Reid V.G.--Sister L. Larsson R.S.-- Sister F. Wilkenson E.S--Sister S. Pronger Treas.-- Sister C. Hutchison Warden--Sister M Pinkerton Conductor.-- Sister E.u Wice. Chap.--Sister M. Clempson. R.S.N.G.--Sister J. Scott L.S.N.G.--Sister A. Withrow R.S.V.G--Sister: M. Morden - L.S.V.G.--Sister G. Clark 1.G.--Sister F. Taylor i O.G.-- Sister B. Holderson { Pianist.--Sister E. Barclay Degree: Capt--DBro. D. Ken- nedy Thought | OXDRIFT SCHOOL REPORT. Names in order of merit. Those marked + were absent for one or more examinations. Figures show percentage Senior IV. Emma Latimer--76 Lena Adams--74 Jack Adams--63 Luella Crosier--353 Junior IV. John Dunlop--60 Senior III. Mildred McGonegal--y70 p "Myrtle Crosier--063 ; Myrtle Browning§--65 Winnifred Pateman$--51 Senior II. Charles Latimer Ellis Elliot Gwendolyn Lewis Clifford Lewis Ernest Neelyt+ - ~ Susan Spalding Junior II. . Wandie Weeks = 'Carrie Weeks Thornton Browning Millie Herring Senior Primer. ; Alfred Pollard - Beatrice Spalding} Junior Primer, Walter Herring Allen Skene A. V. FRE]D, Teacher. EAGLE RIVER SCHOOL REPORT. Names in order of merit. Figures "indicate percentage. = Senior IV. Madge Pittman--76 Marjorie' Aldum--j51 Junior IV. Nora Gardiner--6r Peter Freak--49 Donald Gardiner--39 Senior III. Percy Philpotts--65 Lena Karn--64 Kenneth Turner--63 Helga Jacobson--u40 Junior IIL. Stig Malmborg--s53 - Ally Malmborg--41 Senior 11. Rosie Gardiner--76 Bernard Freak--74 Iver Nelson--68 Tunior TH. =7 : Alfred Berglund--64 Frances Pittman--59 8 Elsie Schultz--s56 Rudolf Schultz--s50 Fred Wright--40 Senior Primary. Ingleborg Nashlund .Gunvard Berglnd Adolf Jacobson Lily Jacobson Junior Primary. Leonard Nelson Bessie Gardiner Felix Freak Carl Hampe John Schultz Ethel Dare A Class. Set Bachman Bertie Backman Wilfrid Moore IFES = GR RRRRRRRARRRS Under the Auspices ol The Dryden Orchestral Society BALL | Will be given in the Pulp Mill 131 Februar Prizes will be given for the 3 4 | vers Special Music wil furnished | WONDERFUL DISPLAY OF Gorgeous Effects in Refreshments" wil Served |Dancing to commence at 9.30 p.m. Tickets $100 each Only a limited number wil he sold rene nn. Vi : BEST COSTUMES Lighting

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