The Goderich Signal-Star, 1946-04-25, Page 7qvA Y MILK SEAN
ICE CREAM
East St. Baker
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RADII. IN STOCK
-�" o ECimiamma a ! West se,
-Reg. Bell
JEWELLER
"Gifts That Last"
BULOVA WATCHES
Good Service. on Repairs
Phone 123 .,
East St.
SPECIAL.....
, �c MO" rand #tow PO 9.4 : it MO"
now in stock. Drive in Q.,with
your car and purr out with a
new one. -
y F IT IS FORD :PARTS WE
HAVE THEM
Bradley & Son.
Pho ,, 247_ • • Hamilton St.
Goderigh French
Dry Cleaners
Avoid Delay by having your '
Spring Cleaning done
NOW!
C. R. LOWERY
Phone 122 West -St.
ASSOCIATE " STORE
L. 0, WHETSTONE, Prop.
TIRES and BATTERIES
Hamilton St. Phone 69W
Venus Restaurant
HOME MADE CANDY
as supplies available
.,PHONE 170
This is station E -A -T
Vhe buses: tuns Luted in this dreamy
. reprasent live and
np.to dato .00h that invite your . patronage.
° The service #�'
have to offer is of the %t oak d b g With item not only Fes
satisfaction but netts n helphlg,thein.. serve this coanunity better.
They' ask yon to try them ivhen you bave acted to be satisfied. Yeu
can i ave money by dein your buYins' in Goderich;
These, Stores Are At Your
Guenther
Traansport
EARL R. 'GUENTHER, . Prop.
` 'Daily Service' to and from"
Toronto—Hamilton—London
7.ondon
and intermediate points
Victoria St -Phone 850
INCOME, TAXATION ELSEWHERE,
It may not be much consolation to
the Canadian income taxpayer
it, but he ,is—not by any meant, the
most highly taxed person in the world.
According to figures prepared by Royal
Bank statisticians, a tax of 6.7 per
cent. on the 'first $1,500 of- income in
Canada compared 'with 191 in
Australia, 10.7 in. the United Kingdom,
and 6.3 per cent. in the United States,
while at $50,000 income the rates are
67.5 in Canada, 85.6 in • Australia, 70•
in the United Kingdom, and 60.6 in -
the Undted • States. These figures do
not, cover taxation under other heads
or tales by Provincial and municipal.
governments.
U.S. visitors
'Ontario sliovis our tie" If /1; k
Visitors from the
States bought over
-70,000 angling ,J
licences in just
one season!::These ><tt.
guests help bring
.us 'prosperity .
it's up to each of-
US
fns to do what we
can to make theme
pleasanntC_ t __
•
T'S EVERYBODY'S ,BUSINESS'...
Ontario profits almost as
much from the tourist
business as from the
gold mining industry. It's
up to usto- keep this
business 'growing.
Every tourist dollar is
shared this way,,.. . .
1. Hotels; 2. Stores; •
3. Restaurants` 4. Taxes,
etc -- 5 Amusements;
6. Garaged.
"Let's make them want to come back!"
PLANNING 'A« HOLIDAfl-
Tune in CFRB
' 10.30 p.m,, Thursday,
Fridby andf`$aturaay
intblished in the
Public Interest by
John `Labatt Limited
UNINSURED
ACCIDE'1TS
4P
ARE
COSTLY
\ .411,--roft
PILOT INSURANCE COMPANY
E. Breckenridge Goderich
HARDWARE Fruit Market
PLUMBING & HEATING
Super flame oil burning brooder
Stoves now on displa
Phone 135. Hamilton St.
FRESH . FRUITS AND
VEGETABLES. IN SEASON
Scientific Equipment-- '
Friendly' Service
•
Filsinger's
JEWELRY AND GIFTS
WATCHES. DIAMONDS
GUARANTEED°REPAIRS
-Phone 130 .The: Square
Phone 470 East St. .
IRAN LOUZON
G. Plante
IMPERIAL SERVICE STATION
PACKARD MOTOR SALES
ATLAS TIRES b
Phone 513
Blue Water B'8zoli
&Feiider Shop
Phone 107 Bridge S
'GODERICH
rltford '
General &Ore
TDOS, moiwysi,
Buying moven we b!i17 So! INS
—
Selling"
p�� �lfep �y� for
Selling snore, we, sell less,
�•
Open Evenings
Phono 696' 'altford
We install
Jackson &S�nT
MEN'S AND BOYS' W
'BOOTS—SHOES:—EUBBFBS
Phone 598
WESTFIELD
WESTFIELD, Apr. 23. --Mr,, Russel
Cook of Toronto • spent Easter with
his , parents, Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Cook.
-Miss Mildred Thornton of Kitchener
was an Easter guest at the home of
Mr. • and Mrs. Norman McDowell.
LAC. Ray Vincent, of London, spent,
a few days `with his' parents, Mr. and
Mrs. 'R. Vincent.
Misses Jean Campbell and Maureen
Knox -off Kitchener spent the week -end
with Mr. and Mrs. W. "A. Campbell.:+.
Messrs. Ronald Taylor and Donald
Campbell have gone to Toronto, where
they expect to secure work.
Rev. and Mrs. H. C. Wilson, Ruth
and John, of Brussels, visited on Fri-
day with Mr..and Mrs. Earl Wightman.
Mrs.
Frank
Campbell
i
s
a patient atient
in the Coder'chh s atil. w ere
she
underwent an operation on Saturday.
She is improving as' well as can be
expected. '
Mr. Kenneth Campbell of. Toronto
spent the week -end with his parents,
Mr. and Mrs. W. A. campbell.•f;
Mr. and Mrs, Reg. Jennhig, of De-
troit, were Faster guests at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walden.
Guests over the week -end at the
home of Mr. aid Mrs. J. L. McDowell
were Mrs. Gordon Smith and Barbara,
f Toronto, Mr. and Mrs. John Gear
nd babe, of Kitchener.
Mr. and Mrs: John Freeman and
Kathleen, of Brantford, visited on
aturday with 1'4r. and Mrs. Howard
a'mpbell.
Miss,Thel:ma Snell of Goderich spent
he week -end with her friend, ' Miss
largaret Wigh.tman.
r. an-Fey.'Abel, of St. Thomas,
pent the week -end at -the home' of
r, and Mrs. W. A. Ca tepbell.
Mx: and- Mrs. Fred Rick of London
ere guests on Friday at the home of
fIr. and Mrs. Alva McDowell.
We are -pleased to be able to report
0
a
C
t
w
1
A
MSW
with Minard's{ the great rubbing lini-
ment, sworn foe of muscular and joint
soreness, stiffness and ,pain. Use it
, generously. , •It'sgreaaelees
ao
unpleasant odor, quickly se it
for dandruff and-'iskin disoidersk
Get a bottle at your druggist's
today. keep it handy en your
bathroom shelf. .12311,.
AR
1NIMENT:
• Accidents happen in a flash. If you are not Wt.,
shred, rephynaent may cost you your home, year
savings or mouths of income. Let us explain Pilot
Automobile insurance to you. It costa so little.
We write Pilot!nearbnce to cover selected risks
in Automobile, Fire, Personal Property neater, •
13prglaary, Plate Glass, Public Liability and other
general insurance.
J. W. Craig'1---0oo. a. MacEwan,
'Goderich
G. C. Treleaven , AAgeney; Duegannon
'Gordon Jewell, ILK. No. 6, iloterieh
that Mr. Sam Morton who , recen ..
underwent an operation .in the London
hospital, is doing nicely.
• Misses Audrey and Edna Walsh, of
Hensall, were week -end gdests at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. A. E: Walsh.
Mr.' --tad Mrs, Frank Harbourn and
children, of Hensall, visited on Sunday
with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Walden.
PORTER'S HILL .
PORTER'S HILL, Apr. 17.—Mr. and
Mrs. -Ivan Lockhart, who- hay's -Veen
visiting his parents for the past month,
are spending this 'week at Toronto, St.
Catharines and other points. 'They
expect to return to Alberta soon.
A good-sized congregation was out
on Supday, when Rev. F. T. Stotes-
bury'• delivered a •• splendid sermon.
After. the_,Service-Mr. Wilmer Harrison,superintendent of the Sunday school,
took charge of a, meeting regarding
the opening of the school. A; special
offering for Supplies is asked for Sun-
day, April 28th. It is hoped. to ' havethe school open, May 5th. or sooner.
W.A. Meeting.—The April meeting of
the W.A. was held 'at the home of the
president, Mrs. Leslie Cox, Fifteen
ladies were present and a quilt was
partly quilted Mrs: A. Harris read
the J Scripture lesson, followed by
prayer. —A discussion took place as. to,
a bazaar .and when to have Lt. • Mrs.
J. Torrance and Eleanor Cox were ap-
pointed ib make inquiries as to rent of
hall, etc. The May meeting will be
held at the home of Mrs. Jas. Lock-
hart.
Gifts for Army ' Men.—On Friday
evening‘Ivan .and Mrs. Lockhart were
presented with a lovely --wool blanket
fr'in he Porter's Hill Red Cross unit.
The gift was a complete surprise and
both were delighted with it, 'especially
as .Ivan has never lived.in this part
of the' country. During his three and
a -half years in the arahy, Porter's Hilt
Do
has sent him ses and gifts, for which
words cannot express 'his thanks. Each
of the five beys,frein here who served
overseas recived a blanket.
RONTGEN WONDERED
On November 8, -1895,. Wilhelm Kon-
rad von Rontgen was working , late in
the. evening my his laboratory' with a
°Crookes 'tube-_ a 'piece of appdratus
invented by Sir William ,Crookes,
F.R ..
This is a glass vacuum bulb with a
positive anti ire-gative pole ' wired into
it ; and if you pass a high tension cur-
rent through it you ,get 11 yellow phos-
phorescence at the ,cathode, that is,
t'-he«•negative pole. •
Lots of people had experimented
with the cathode ray ;• but Rontgen,
driven by "some fortunate impulse, did
something more. He enclosed his
,Crookes tube in a black opaque card-
board illy and quite casually switnhed
on the current.
- Of coursj, that cut off the, luminous
cathode ray, lout by a pure• accident
a sheet of cardboard covered 'with a
solution of barium plating -cyanide lay
close to the tube, and in the dark
laboratory, ; with all the light cut 'off,
this became suddenly luminous.
,"That's odd," Ilont•,gen• thought, "be-
cause the cathode rays are completely
cut off by the cardboard • box. . What
can be causing the phoyphoresgenee?
The' box is. light -tight. It can't be
the eathodH rays, it must be some
inyisihle ray
Thus throngh.an accident was made
a discovery. which has been of in-
estimable value to the world in the
relief Of pain Wand suffering; tie dis-
covery of what we noty call
Janaes Harpole in Sunday. Graphic.
Reen • ' though' it's still. hard to get
enough meat and butter, says UncleMai t', just think how Inuelt harder it
-would halve' been to learn Japanese.
i ---Tire Wall Street Journal. -
The skyscrapers, bridges and impos-
ing factory buildings might never 'have
been built if it had not been for the
hot temper of a French gardener, one
M. Monier. When irritated, hi always
used to crash flower pots on the ground. time me he found this way of cooling
his temper rather expensive. So' he
,decided to -make his,, own -Sower pots,
Wok pleees-Z of ,wire netting- from a
strawberry lied and put cement on the
inner and outer sides. Af' his next
outburst --of fury; -he found--he--could--net
break his new home-made pots. He
had 'invented ferro-cement.
.Monier later showed these unbreak-
B
By , your generous patronage
NOW ,,you make for next Fat
Western -Ontario's finest iistrllsic
centre.
WEST ST.
-NO-NOM'w
'hl�Te pots as a curiosity to a friend
his, a builder, M. Hennebique, who in-
troduced the' invention' into the build-
ing trade and became a -rich man with-
in a short time. Monier died a pauper.
—"IP.4." in Leader.
-- BESSEM1 R SLEW
In the years 1850 12°1.856 an _inventor
called Henry Bessemer carried - out
some ' experiments to ,..try to remove
spur e om molten iron by
ofhe add a substance known as spiegel,,
eisen to the Nahid,iron. This was sue-
cessful, the «blowholes. were -removed,
and Bessemer found 'he.„.had made an•
aniazing discovery -into the bargain.
For spiegeleisen contains about l' per
cent. carbon, and . this with the iaron
formed the alloy of iron and carbon
called' steel. Bessemer had accident-
ally found a way of making steel' in
huge quant1tie"sg--at ".a•' 1M cq t: --Mel:
boturne Argus.
•
•
blowing, air through It. But the molten Sherman said that war was hell,
iron, though purified' in this t way, but it is to be regretted that he never -
turned out to' be full of blowholes, so gave his frank opinion of peace.- -
a man called Mushet suggested that Peterborough Examiner. '
•
•
Fr
•
The Canadian Bahk of"
Commerce has ,- for )nary
' years assisted in the develop-
ment of logging, lumbering
and the -pulp and paper in=
'dustry across the tiominion.
Its branches, whether in old
established communities or
in the new town sites; serve
the many banking require-
ments of companies and
individuals associated with
these industries.
.r{:;,•}i•:.+.••,Y.l.,�,:•.,c��,y,f..$�.!;:,.,^,,�,•.gr..•rnvt :::.vrr.• •.::: n•.y.•nv:+
z:.
M �Ne-/IyT'1.90
��M n
BANKINO IN ACTION is manifested in the crash
of falling trees; in the rush of logs, as the
lumberjacks break the jam and speed the
timber on its way; in the scream o_ -
bu:y iynills convert it into plank6, beams and
scantlings. g Logging and lumbering provide
work and wages for thousands—in the woods,
the mills, the construction industry. - The
stream of wealth thus'flowing acrosW Canada is
an example of Banking in Action.
,71eA
THE CA11iADIgIN ANK OF COMMERCR
honnnIcci RANCH, W. A. ahv,vo,,,ro.
Vt