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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1945-07-19, Page 3Business Director. ,rte. ,it, AL , DUDLEY Er I K41i $ .' ,, inn r,• iia 4r. ,Ifitc. y , • once---Ccaurt 'IlGlodeae1au�e; r Telephone08,4 , , Tritvyll, A. " UT BLAND' Barrister and SeUcitor . , Office -•-North St,, Gederichs. Phone 750 cuiturnitsp ACCO'CJNTAN T ONTEx and 14XO TEITiI, . �,! • . Ohalrtered A,ceountants 1 Albert Street, Stratford Toronto °Mee: 3Q2• Bay $treet .. , Fa9R$OI 111114,U A 00, . • Accountants and .,auditors, -,„:195 Dundas St. London, Ont.' Fairmount 3877. , INSURANCE ` ' . IN,. �lTeHILLOI' MUTUAL 'RB lTi. SURANCB' CO. -Farm and. `160'• lilted town property insured. i Oi leers- -'resident, W.' :R. • Arch = eaforth ice -President, ,'arae bald,S; V MCQregor, Clinton Manager •;' and Lecretary4Treasurer, M. A. Reid, Sea. forth. r' '' Directors -W. R. Archibald; ,Sea-' forth; Frank McGregor, Clinton; Alex. Broadfoot,. Seaforth; .Chris. Lenin- hardt, . Bornholm'; E. J. Trewartbn, Clinton', John L. Malone,.,Seaforth; ®x.- Mchfw"fng, ly + g e- to ander, ,Walton; Geo, Leitch, Clinton. Agents --John , .E. Pepper, Bruce- field ; R. F. McKercher, Dublin; J. F. Prueter, Brodhagen ;• Gebrge A. Watt, Blyth. ', _ � ... Policy holders can make all pay- ments and get their cards receipted. at, the Royal Bank, Clinton, Calvin Cutt's grocery, -Kingston Street; ".Goderieb, 'or J: H. Reict's General Stere, $ayfieldA • MEDICAL DR -F, J.11.., FORSTER, EYE, .EAR; • NOSE, -THROAT Late House Surgeon '' New . York Ophthalmic and Aural Hospital, assist- ant at loo eAield Dye Hospital, and Golden • Square Throat Hospital, London, "England. -' 1 EYES TESTED, GLASSES SUPPLIED 53 • Waterloo .Street S.,•' Stratford: Telephone 26Ef.`4=D': . Next : visit Bedford:' Hotel, Goderich, Wednesdayf'geptembef 26th, .at .2 p.m. till 4.30 p.m... . . a CHIROPRACTO DRUGLESSAND. DRUGLES THERAPIST .Goderich, Phone 341 . Office hours-lO. to 12 a,iil.,• 2 to 5 and 7.O,8 p.m., Tii a , Friday and Saturday. , .. • ., 10 • to 12 a.m. only on Wednesday. Monday and .Thursday at ,Mitchell. Mineral fume baths by appointment only. A. N. ATKINSON a 'stiuth `St -- . ..-,, ad. Registered under Drugless rractitioners, Act for the Province of Ontario. , PUBLIC. NOTICE _ P. S.' CARMAN, Muss Bac:., F.A. 0.0:.; L.T.O.L. ; Mez?iber of Ontario Music Teachers' Association; Organist and Choir Leader, 'St. George's Church. Pupils taken•, Residence, ' .Mr.. J. Craig's, St. George's Crescent. F. T.Arnstrong . oPTIerAN 'and .,OPTOMEFRIS E '. Square ' - ; ` ' Goderich • "See Armstrong and See Better" At Lucknow every Wednesday • . : ' • form 2 to 6. , J. -W. CitAIGIE IN,8- AN CE , ,- - REAL. ESTATE PHONE 24 GODERICH .. .... _-.... .. .a ... -.. .. __- ._. ..__._gyp .,.. A„�R^SN OW ' :WESTLA,KE REUNION . .� •'TIte nhai etl ;n w e1- � tl ke` fad . ilies held their .annual, reunion, ,on 'Saurday, Juno..3Qih,,-, at Stir' hibanJ: t , park, With fifty-two nitubers ,presents The y3ce>president, • Mr,, Edward HQIa iron St, Thomas, was in charge. The :officers for 1940' are: President;, Glad- win Westlake, 'Bayfield;. -Tice -president, salter Talbot, Bayfield; secretary. treasurer,.: 'Mary Snowden,• Zurich. Miss 114iunie 73awkiiis, London; was the 'oldest lady and Mr. R. A. P'enhnle, St, Thorns, the oldest Man., Anna, Marie `. e o was. the youngest child' re- .JC has n pre- sent. sent. .Miss lkt.' Hawkins was the fielder of the lucky ticket, The .sports winners were as :follows: Girls, .2 and under, Anna Johnson girls 5 and under;, Joyce' Greer; ,girls . and ,under, Elaine t Grainger ; boys 8 . and under, Donald Masnica ; girls 10 and under, Kathleen 'Talbot; boys 14 and under,,; Donnie • 'Talbot.; young ladies' race, race Penhale, Exeter; young men's r Ice, tie, s Donnie Talbot arid' ' George Westlake -;women's race, 141, Carruthers; "slipper race,, Snowden.. The picnic next year is to be ]field at 'Grand Bend the last Saturday of •June. t About 590 citizens' „committees have been formed all.. across Canada :to 'look after the preblems of returning Service, personnel THERE IS NO OTHER TOBACCO ia4th& Fire, Accident and Motor Car OFFICE -MASONIC TEMPLE WEST STREET PHONE 236` . GODERICH P. ,J.'RYAN Real Esittte' and ' Insurance Office and Residence : , 11 Trafalgar 'Street Phone663. s . FOR SALE -Hous• of all kinds, Choice building lots, business pro- perty anclseveral good farms. • Bayfield _His Huge DuE DATEs .,00 Mueb Suffering in Be gum frontSarcity Crowd'outheTweffthC•��axco,'�'�a���'0�TpOa�I1i����Ilat��n� Also' Scarceh Thlx'ty z,txeamar. in Parade- 'One ar 'Orte Utuxld c'edth ..An» iversa ' of Baylleld. Lode,. • 13AYFIEL15j 4 ..- -- •w S it glorious 12th. of July', at ,Baytield to day. The sun shone on ;tlmest 4,000 members of the Loyal Orange As,: seelation-from I1uron, •Perth u,nd. Bruce counties as ; they walked this ' after- noon to celebrate the' winning ' of the Battle, of theI.3oyne• and the 100th at niver'sary (a the RaylIeld , Bova g Oran 'e ,Lodge No. 244' •», For ,100,. years', Buv= eld has. been a citadel for. Orangemen, and toduv every Orangean from all the 'country a around turned Out with his wife, fam- ily and •friends to stage ,an 'unforget- table demonstration, It was the big- gest' "walk" ever held in. Bayfield, ac- cording to Frank Elliott, .'age .eighty- one, who attended •alis .first Bayfield.` "walk" clinging to his mother's hand seventy-five years ago. Thirty Lodges in,Farade , Watched .by an estimated , 10,000 visitors,, 'the, parade, with. its • biuiners and standards. brilliant in orange and blue, took almost an hour to pass a given ,point on the great. walk from the assembly , point at-` --the - agricultural grounds, to , Clan Gregor Square in the centre of the town: • Thirty. lodges, 'front as .far .away as Listowel, led by. the Lucknow pipe band, Marched to the tune of fife and drum.,' ' ' In the square, they split up into many groups -a2-fife,-,Players, -anad (trent- ..triers, who, hadn't, seenn each. h othe r f r years; ,paired off to s!gir�- out their stirring music. Drums beatlnd pipes shrilled in all corners of the park, some drummers and pipers, dancing as they played. • The huge crowd flowed from group to group, listening first to, this beater, and then to that one.. ' prominent 'Orangemen gathered itt the, speakers' -stand, wig slimly ;.were ,the speeches of •welcom and ti;ibutes to the glory of King William.. "Equal rights to' all: and..special privileges to none,". . was the key noTe' of the speech. - of Svelcoiue by the .chairman of the day, the county master of the Orange lodges of `7;Iuron, IY, Mervyn Hanley, of Clins' ton, - Two 90 -year -bid Veterans For Thomas Appleton, of the Exeter Lodge,it was the sixty-sixth time he had • "walked" on- the glorious •12th; and. for :Thomas Culbert, of Dtingannotl, it was the "Seventy=second ` tulle. Mr. Culbert and Mr. • Appleton 'are both - ninety years of age, asid both ale 1'lale -and 'hearty. They were -the two •oldest Orangemen present at the gathering. ..Both shared the prize, be- cause they had ,in all their 'recollection, each missed ,only . -one "walk" on .the - 12t11 and .that on account of illness. Elston' Cardiff, of,Brussels, Con- servative • member .f,orNorth Huston; 'Spoke of the highest traditions -of the Orange Association .and how they "must be applied to the rehabilitation. of the men who are returning daily from over= seas. "It's .a big contract," he said. "A contract that','each and 'every one _b 111 g 1 V band in 11 1 pg, s t l 1_htl_e_.., a to a Successful. eoncriusion." •,, r: Mrs. Nellie'' Ryan, deputy . grand. treasurer of t'hie• • Gr and Lodge of On- tario -West, spoke- of, the part' to be played by the women- of ,the : Ladies' Orange Benevolent Association in furthering the - pr iiiciples of :. the 'order, . with "neither' bigotry•-ner intolerance." A Militant Protestabt ,, Archdeacon .W.. Il.- 'Tcrilshelid, of London, also was one of the outsp.eken advocates of the principles of the- society._ He was born in Bayfleld.'and from earliest childhood the ,tenets of the Loyal Orange Order had been. in- stilled , into him by his father; one of the members of the 1'oeali lodge. He exhorted all Protestants and, Orange- men to-pieserve Protestantism. :`The Roman!,Catholic Church is de- termined., to' make Canada tt Roman Catholic . coutitr'y,'' lie said•: ."They think not in terms of ten or twenty years, but 1004years ahead." . Pleading for a n`t:ilitarit united front to' offset the trend, 'and. to pfeserve Cantda' as a member of the British Empire -and its loyalty to the Crown; he Said: ""There are those in high places who -.would destroy Our connection with the British Empire." - 1, Bayfield Lodge Second` Oldest in . Ontario Loyal Orange Lodge No. 24 at Bay field is the: second; oldOst. in Ontario. - It was organized by the rate. Welling- ton W. Connor. in 1845,` and its first meetings were Ifeld, in the home of -johns- :Shertitt; • a • veteran , _elf-; the Pnpineau rebellion, • The' Bayfield Orange Hall was:built eighty years ago, •and Since, Its construction • has served as a coxnmttnity centre. •- Orange lodges participating in the• celebration Were, as follows: Ltieknow, Atinberley, • Bethel ,(West. Bruce) , Beulah . (Listowel) , 1ililverton, Lis- towel No. 370, Atwood' No. 030, Trow-. bridge, Maple Leaf (West 1ltonkton):, Third Concessign (Derry L.O.L.) , liar-, Aston ' No.' 3000, Lul know No, ' 428, 13lyth No: 903,' Morrie No, 707, Auburn, Newbridge No, 175, 13elgrave Nbr, '402, I3luevale No. 760, , Exeter, W(pdham No) 402, Nile No. .1052, IlenStill No.. 733, • Victoria .7..Q.13.A. No. 387, Given - Wily Teen-Wayy No, 219, 'llardn. Lodge (L.0.1.1. A,), Clinton, Murphy Lodge NO.' 710, Sea. forth No. 703, ;Varna Future. VarnaNo. 1035,Sand Bayfield No, 24, • The Prize=winners The .prize list follows': , Bost 'fifer, , _,M, McCort, • 1Donegal; best drotnnier. Minims? Stnitb; 1ltlyfleld; alo(ige coining • the longest • 'distance, Iltu'risfon ; largest' • lodge, Murphy,. of ("Upton ; Beet- dresse(1, •ladies' 1(1(lge,• Lucan ; best- I dressed niet04 lodge, ''Woodhtinr; best-. decorated house, firs. M. C1t'nteiuliairdt. The honor of beirr;g4the oldest Man Orange - an '' Participating s't'10S ; slanted 0,1 Tixolniis Culbert, 1)tttfgann n, ' and T11dznas Appleton, Exeter, ett(�it ;rfethg ' in his ninety -,cast Weill",r, . . , the 11111 game scheduled for the . evening was postponed because of, rt),in. I DONALD B. BLUE EXPERIENCED. AUCTIONEER Licensed for Counties of Huron •arid Bruce RIPLEY, PHONE 49 For information apply to J. N. Kernighan; Division Court, 'Clerk, • Goderich, Ont. : EDWAT?3' 1A'. •LLIOTT LICENSED AUCTIONEER • 'Correspondence promptly .'an- swered. answered, Immediate arrangements can be made fd r Sales Date b calling. Phone 203, Clinton: Charge moderate and satisfac-, tion, Gua'ranteed..- 19tf HAR+O .JACKSON` LICCEN EI► ' AUCTIONEER- ' -411CJRON'AND PERTH For iuiormatiton, etc., write R.R. 4, Seafotrth; or, phone (col- , r_.lect)': Seafoi th, or 867, Goderich. • Now ---In Technicolor . "The Gypsy` Wiideat,".' with MVia1 is Montez and .JonHata : 0 - IHEi)Y LAMARR, Paul Y-ie»rie(1, Sydney Greenstreet and Pete'r Lorre Packed with drama, action and high-powert'tl" romance comes it thrilling iltystery-mtd' enture 1111E CONSPI AT O "- �. Thursay,Iiirldinry and Saturday- 'JACK RUNNY,. Alexis Sainitlt, Alyn .Joslyn and Reginald Gardiner Mills, thrills tuid• skulduggery abound ln"thls greatest of., all Warnerprofilers' riots ,• . he llorn Blows at Midnight" Matinees Wed., Sat. and Holidays at 2:30 r C(iining•-rloatt► Bennett ando Ptlw. 1 Rdbinsnii,, In"The Weiltliitt at the Witldoiv, Co>xpo iis now w valid ..are butter99, to 114,. sugar 4.0 .to• 01, preserves 33. to7 and PA t() P13. Coupons, good, for the purchase of,,, preserves are; valid, for tile' purchase of sugar at the rate of ,one-half 'pound per coupon.' • AlEA,T Ri 'TIONING To definite announcement' has yet been made of the probable date of meat rationing. However, two meatless days- weekly roust be observed in restaurants and all other eating places. Coiui'aerciai slaughtering of livestock has been' placed : under a Penult system and -the , administrato'r of ineat and meat products bas'been given authority to set quotas for the slaughtering of all livestock. At'�the same time house- wives have been asked to time roe Tuesdays and Fridays as meat ess days. »w 'CEILING PRICES OF RASPBERRIES Retail ceiling prices for' the • 1945 raspberry crop are • effective through, out the entire- "'season and there is nd seasonal dropas was the 'lease 'witty strawberries, It is expected that` the crop will be, Somewhat larger this year"tbari. in 1944. Prices in Western. Ontario are 42 cents a quart and 22 cents a', pintint London, Brantford, Galt, Kitchener, St. Thomas, olid Wood- stock and 43 cents' a. quart and 23 cents a pint "in Guelph, 'Stratford ' Windsor, Owen Sound, Chatham and §arnia, OTHERS ARE ASKING am- a - -farmer: and wilnt . to a. slaughter ;' some cattle fo 1 my owu consumption. Do I • haveto get a slaughter -permit? J. A.-No; if you and your family are* _going _to consume:the meat you .do not require 0 permit, Any portion of your ineat not required for •c onsutnp-- ',tion in .,yohr • household can, be sold„ only' to•tuiyone• • ` Who holds a slaughterer's permit in,npiece pot less than a quarter -of a carcass. • 0.s -•A •groper ',With whom I have dealt for some tiiile refused recently to Sell me more than two, ),ars of soap at one time. Soap isnot rationed. Can he legally refuse to give ale all 1 ask for? A.. -Your • grocer may limit his sales .of?-, any goods, to any customer ' if he wishes. IIe would probably adopt this plan to provide air of his eusb)iners with some of his - supplies. Q. -My daughter goes to si•hool in the city. -• Her boarding• house lady asked her for all her .coupons for canning sugar. Must she give them up? IA. -Your daughter is ltot a required. to give ' up her coupons for, canning sugar.-• ,She should come to some amic- able 'willsettlement with her landlady who besupplying- her with meals next winter. .. • 0, -What price can ..tget for horse- : ha if? A. -Ceiling prices. for liorsehair ilry according•, to .the length and grading.' r u a,y., o illlplct-es_sit*lc.es .fir all grades and lengths from the near:- est • office of the Wartime 1'rkas and Trade Board. •_ Q. -Have ration coupons an expiry date? • • A.-H.E: pitY, dates h<it e • beeai-effected- . . ` After 't,h9,• fi rst World War Mis ,E�a:;. 1.. ) 'sky,!Iloilo" to lii,nz 'tar "all the, - ',Ri au: farnil and We its l thin :�ottnearvillc� pf •"t�xvn be ai'l. a .earrespond � , �a yr w titill � of + rw him often' : em'e,� in French- WWith a' youn„ woman • . I. see,. fly. "the, • napsh+ t ,that your in lie1giuitr, • Lauer' this dropedoff,: ,, father' is still ''very well for .la ls •uge,btt a tct �-�:+ pay �h e.aaizwrote ,my father has been. s1meea�, to •the old,address,' with a ratherfaint Now, dear �Evn,: I • .:knish my ' letter, hope that the letter Wight reach her sending you niy''best greetings; ane,,+to former comes 'ondeht, It di in 8111'4': your father also,. My 'husband �iotns' p d' 'N,me in sending you greetings. Let pie of the fact that the, youngwoinan had hope that some ,day you. win' *✓eine to 'since married, and a few da. s .' ago Belgium', and that you will stay with us. Miss Somerville .received a letter in Sincere greetings from your Belgian reply, dated June 27th from foeylaert,: friend; » Madeleine Ghyssexzs; .Brabant, Belgium, R;� Translated from , the French, „tbe letter reads: U M'y Dear Eva, --I was very happy . EXAM/NATIONS . and surprised to receive a lei er+ from Yau ,ndthztpxovestome t�at�o u Goderich. a it.s t ude t S who we xe have• always thought of 'lite and ' successful in the 'recent examinations . g especially during these five years of of . the University of Western Ontario terrible, war. The letter arrived the Y .. , • ' • 2 of it(.olAertiai;©xv; bf Alusic are as follon : 4th Juue.'tifa took six weeks to get here. I begin by telling you it 1IANOFORT'L, SENIOR ' little since 1922. • 1•'°'''was . married in Grade X --Pass,' Barbara Henry, 1925 .aitd we have no children.- I left Grade IX -•-Honors, Catherine -cat.. the Village of Overyssche and my hus- Grade: VIII --Pass, Mary Prfdham. band had a '`bungalow" built at I4oey - JUNIOR, inert 5 kiloni, (miles) -from. Overyssche. Grade II -; First-class honors, and 15 knout. from Brussels. My Eleanor .FLn oder ; honors,. Sandia husband has his office there and goes Salkeld:, . Mere every day by • the railroad. In SENIOI1, SINGING -. - .__ 1940, when -War -started, the inhabit-' Grade IX.,-•IIon,ors, Irene Millie. ants of Overyssc:he and of Hoe ;;laext, JUNIOR had to evacuate in view of, the battles •Grade III -First-class lionors,.Enima between the English and .the "Bocci s."' Robertson ; honors, Rose Marie' Hart - We -Were ,'artWe"were on the. roads 'of Belgium and man.. • France for a inoilth. After the clipitu Grade IJ -First-class honors, equal, lation VIP returned to our home. For- Frances Brereton, Mary Lqu 4latbie- 1 uin&tely it had, not been bombed. In son.; honors, Gloria Palmer, equal, -., the: month- of , Septeinbc.r, ,1$14,',. when Lola Jervis, Bertha W'a'lden. the Germans left the : hadtheirnumb • z y mt tions fired off and all the panes of glass, 1)on't try ,to get the best of the in tire windows were shattered as well* other fellow. Try to bring out the as the roof. displaced. My husband . best; -... had a .ecus il-cylii) died_ in_ a bombing .. at Brussels. Apart. front that all our family fire fine and everyone has ' itis `home: , , • ,. . '" The past 'Winter' We.,had to` sleep; in the cellar on account of She ,V, -1's -ft • was' ,most tefi•ible, for they passed every night over the house. It wasn't, a war. like. `14-'l8, much more horrible (5n account of the bombings., ,. The . years, of war ' were very 'hard by reason of the insufficiency' of food. The daily ration 'vas 22i grams (about ',/2, lb. ). of veryincl bread,. 10 to 15 gr: ( less thall i/i :oz.) ofmeat or none act. all, and 25 to 30 gr. (about 1 oz.) o bu`t'ter or margarine. So we have 'all grown very thin. We received only about 100 kilograms (about 250 ,lbs.) • of coal er mouth, so we suffered Very rsy%> - f , much from the cold. It is' only since,t�'' our liberation (Sept. 4, 1944) that o11r Nu? f•' y .,, situation` has been eased. At present it is much better, thanks to the genes- ; i oris aid of= the Allies. Here, this past, 1 winter, we ' have had many English I and French 'Canadians who have •in " s I deed clone their duty, especially . ill � Y, 1 Y I Holland. ' - 4 l - It was high time that the 'war came Ito an end, for we are destitute for, clothing and footwear. As we have no children we have had no milk fol`' 5 ;'�. R��• years,. nor ally. • cocoa. (Insertion--• �, ��a .;; ► (^(ieoal try the Belgians and Dutch is as , , • ; ,: to tea 1 English.) J the g' fish. n I ho aYou_' •� ;. e'+ c t nt t , e c ay l r S e• h s •,� r._. • •.r a right 11t and'that' you Will .> r, to write inefrom time to t.init that wi111 always'Lgive me pleasure.. lVheli l yon ha V e • uc•casion to See your cousin . ?Arthur (Insertion -He was biileted 1'Wit3, these f.11t after World War tie.• Don't lose a ile .. those : int pickles this " season, be use ofspoil- age' by inferior `begat,. For sure results insist ori Canada Vinegar the' choice of leading idle 1 ' nianufacturern and ex- perienced home -canners. ,,"" A favourite for over 80 years. , Write for 'FRF, Pick- ling ling Recipe Booklet to Canada ' Vinegars ted, 112 Duke Street; Toronto. It has been made known that the ninth .Victory loanwall, be lanziched willnext October, and that not Then'be another for a year. ere for only .butter :cot -gyms.' .Coupons. 00'• • to .115 inclusive expire August :31, he nns1;�ere1 if submitted to the• In-- •` • ( formation Branch, Wartime -Prices a and .Questions,. on any regulations of the !.Trade Bos1•t'1, I!'ederal Building, 1Jon- -Wartime, Prices and Trade Board will !don, Ontario. Kellogg's cereals have an importan.' plane .iu Canida's -kitchens-now, more than ever. Appetizing an ti n.e for breakfast, lunch, between Meal snacks. Add -flavour to..' - leftover dishes, too! , BOYS! GIRLS! TheYre' free 8 Coloured Cards In every package,-Sgvo'emi Trade 'ea THE BOYS OVERSEAS STILL NEED MAGAZINES Keeps¢nding them