The Goderich Signal-Star, 1952-08-28, Page 2FLOE TWO
Otitt- fiPigttal-*tatt
" 'COUNTY'S FoittniosT WEEKIA
Published by Sigual-Star Publishing Ltd.
Subscription Itates—klauada and Great Britaitt, $2.5(ia your: to United
.114vertising Rates ou request. Telephone 71.
Authorized as second-class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa.
Out -of -Town Representative: C.W.N.A., 10S Voter
Street, .Toronto. Phoue Etu 3-0700.
Member of Canadian Weekly Newspapera
'Weekly Circulatiou Over 3,000. _
'GEO. L. ELIAS, Editor and Publisher
ArursT 28th, 1952
mom THE OUTSIDE LOOK-
ING IN
THE GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR
Devoted Service to Education Here
Down Memory's
Lane
the store advert isetnents,
would know Where to shop
she
John Ihelenbaker, Conservative
The election. campaign across the
line is heginning tu liven. up. Little • M•P.. -replying to a' query as to 4is
position with regard to proposal
has been heard so far front Demo -
le outlaw Communists, said: "It
crat candidate Stevenson. but “ett.
is impossible to punish thought or
eral Eisenhower is on the hustings
position as Lill ideas with a gun. The stand
and. 'flaking clear his
I ha ve always taken is t hat there
the- •Republican nontinee for the
is no initnuer tueaus by„ which
White House., Itt an interview at
thought t•an be punished." 'Chis is
'Kansas City the other day he made
"Ile be_ the ouly sensible view. for a free -
dont 1.4 Mg Ulan. The free tountries
lieved (says the report 'vve could
a rile world are not .trying to sup -
point out terrihle _blunders' which
brought on tite •Korean war. Liu:,
re,isting Communist avtion, Coto -
he added, '1 believe we would hate
monist aggression, the attempt on
been in great dauger if we had
the part of Communists to force
not reacted' by meeting the l'ont-
Communism upon weaker peopleS
munist aggression."
:it the point of the gun.
What the "terrible blunders"
were the General did not say.; his
The Federal Department of Agri -
statement 'will be taken as justiO - ,
culture has declared .the foot-and-
ing the action of the Truman Ad -
mouth outbreak in Saskatchewan
ministration in inaugurating the
I)ltiria I I over and has withdrawn
/campaign of resist:thee to the Red
a It restrict ions adopted I() prevent
attempt to conquer South Korea.
the spread of the disease. The
Further, General Eisenhower is
Globe and Nlail headed its editorial
reported as saying: "No one 1 know
refelence to the official :Immune,
01 has presehted any feasible' plan
ao.ot wit- 11 [no doubt fill expression
for attacking 121111111"' in any move
-The Ma ladv Lingers n.l."
Qtld the Korean war
might easily be taken by the c:istiA
attack on Communist China vvould
render ,ts a repudiation (1 the 1.10v-
(•rtinient statement._ As a matter"
difficult ,.war than the 011t' we aro
o* 1:1,1. the epidemic VVI'y
'This might be .takett as au offset I , trim' 'ts '4""1"gi
t() Vic:W's expressed bv General M;0..- 11111 II"' ""t"ri"
is 4 Hie SIWIA/y
1,011 Tio.
riffled state, has hot. t't if t,I1
15 Yftars Ago
The new G acquit to Colder ielt
branch of the C.P.R. •was
The vote was taken on 'the bylaw
for the improvement of the water-
works and 'the reahlt was agaiusi
the proposition hy a majority of 57.
The Inland Printer contained a
number of_ photodraphs of well-
known. lova' views by Sallows and
gathering grapes' front his vines.
Company took possession of their
property that had been in posse:i-
sion of the Rogers Cotupany fu
eight- mouths, the latter company
having closed: down and discol-
25 Years Agu
Mrs. Douglas Brown had a ger-
:Aaiun,' containing 20 blooms and 11
more buds on the way to full bloom
in her garden.
MacKay Hall proved a very ap-
propriate place for holding the
Horticultural Society's flower show
and many persons viewed the inag;-•
nit-1cent two-day showing there.
- Dr. Whitely won 1st and 2nd ,in
the 2.14 class rave at Simeoe fair,
1st with Ramona Grattan •and 2n,1
with September Morn; 3rd in- the
colt race with Angelus Grattan and
3rd in' the 2.18 class with Peggy
Allerton. •
Fire having destroyed the power
plant of the Goderich NIanufactur-
ing Co., -along' with a good deal of
other machinery,' , tractor tvas
hacked up to the various machines
which' were in' running order 'and
connected with a belt.
. 15, Years Ago
A crew of men erected, a wigwag
(Tossing ou No. ti highway on the
outskirts of, town.
During' a 'sharp electrical storm,
a barn •ou the O. E. Fleming pro-
perty on the Borth bank of tlw
Maitland Inver tituss struck by
lightning and burned to its founda-
Poi, took at Gordon Wong's restattr-.
ant, a graduate of Central Military
Academy, Nanking, was in eharge
-of a detachtneut of 1,000 men on
the Shanghai front.
-Wilfred Smith, -htitployee of the
Graf butcher shop, received a sevae
head wound when he was struck
by" the blade of .a windmill he was
repairing on the. farut of Mot
Chisholm, Colborne Township. lie
rolled down the barn roof and shot
over the. eaves hut his 30 -foot fall
to the ground wa • broken by. it
THERE WAS METHOD
IN HIS "MADNESS"
The local teacher w hoed
briskly along the street. Hailed
by another citizen, the teacher
kept right on walking and re-
fused to be engaged in a
friendly cha Some time Iat_er
the teaeher returned with au
explanation , for his dumb,
founded fellow citizen. He wets
walking non-stop from his resi-
dence to Goderivh's neW Col-
legiate to find out exactly how
many minutes it took. The
leacher wanted to know the
elapsed time before school
opens next Tuesday.
Brings Teacher Outstanding Honor
Miss Isabel E. Sharman, B.A., of
tioderielt, was one of seven out-
standing women teachers Ou-
tario who were honored at the an-
nual meeting. of the Federation of
Women Teachers Association of (In-
t:trio at the Roy:11 York -Hotel, Tor-
onto ou Wednesday, August 20,
when she Was preSented
hOiloitilry membership in ILO
those women 'Who: butte served Gte
eause of Canadian education with
honor and. agility' and who have
brought prestige to bear on the
tebehing profession by their good
It is a fitting honor for Miss
Sharman who has been a prominent
educationist in Goderieh for more
than half a century. '
Native of Goderieh
;NlIss 'Shannon wt,t1g horn in (lode -
rich on April 12, 1803, a daughter
of the late Mr. and .Mrs. William
;Amman. She attended— riddle
and High and Model Schools here,
later graduating from the Normal
School at Stratford. In order- to
achieve a , long -desired ambition,
1.11iss Sharman worked extra-mural-
ly to obtain her Bachelor of Arts
degree and was successful in ob-
taining it from Queen's University
iti 1927. taking first -glass honors
English. Two years later she
received her High School teacher's
certificate from the College of Edn-
ea t ion. While supplying at the
Collegiate during a visit of an in-
speet or she won high pro ise foe
her work.
Miss Sharman began her le:lett-
No. 3, Colborne Township, before
attending Normal School. Aftiot
graduation front the latter, she be•
;ran teaehing in Goderich Central
years. They recall that not only
were they taught the "three Ws."
hut remember with gratitude that
besides being an extollent
arian she always had an eye ott
and deportment. Ou her retire-
ment, E. C. Beacom, then Inspector
of, Public Schools, deelared; 'tShe
is the hest teacher I have ever
not 1,001 ra-kint.; -31ty part the
electimi cantimigh. It does seem 0)
indicate that General Eiseulo(w 0.1
nOt 4.11:ikitig, an issue of Korean
„affairs, orld this is all to the. good,
for it would weaken the 1 nit i•d
Na t ions posit ion in the East and
throughimt the world it' the thiti,1
'States should appear to he reall,v
either to abandon Korea or to 'rush
into another great war.
On the, Democratic side titt‘re
appear., gto lie AOLIW
tweeu the Presidential candidate
and Presidents Truman. Nit: Steven-
son a pparently doesn't ca re to be
identified with the, present admin-
istration and to have to counter
.the cha Tges of corruption levelled
.against the inkira 1 ion by its
opponents. Ilis attitude cannot be
pleasing To Mr. Traman. who w',1,
With a series or platform addresses
1948 campaign but who so far has
stayed at h(n1.14`.
publisher of The Chicago Tribune
and prominent Republica n, ha's
shoved in. his )nr, declaring that
he is not sat 'stied with either'
candidate and wants a new party
to espouse what he eitnsiders the
trne principles. of Republicanism.
As the Colonel is vehement lin his
advocaey of aloofness from vvorld
affairs. and there is a large body
of isolat tor -lists to Witieli he can
appeal, his desertion of the Eisen-
: bower eanditlacy may have .sonte
influence on the vote in November.
These Set;til, to an 4)1rAerver front
outside, to be the main features
up to this point in what iS be-
ginning to look like -a history -mak-
. Ing 'campaign. There are tWo
months still to go before the voters
have their say, and there no doubt
are interesting and epoehal develop-
ments yet to come.
'EDITORIAL NOTES
School Senior 11 in January,
1882 and front tliere taught in :ill
classes including entrance. After
a number of yen rs as Assistant
Principal. she was appointed Prin-
cipal. retiring in 1935.
mu. this did not end her te:II II-
/ eer. fot several year,,
she tilt(ired students after her ye -
181118(1 positions of prwianenee
tribute much of their suceess to the
foundittion laid in their educati011
• to Nliss Sharman. This is em-
11)Intsized in- the fact that they have
111 tone -Iv -Wit rongi i-- he
Art and 'Music
Miss Sharman has., in .11er pos-
session certicates awarded in Art
from the Ontorio School of Art..
She- hAs been both a student and
teacher of Music, and. organized
many flue concerts both 111 rho
selio01 and thurch. She is a gifted
speaker with a keen sense of humor.
It was after giving an address be-
fore a Federation Meeting that :1
Windsor prinelpal reuaarked: "She
is a star in. her profession,"
She has been a lifelong member
of North Street United Church,
taught in the Sunday Sehool.for
years. and held executive °Dices
in Young People's Societies, is a
pital Auxiliary and past president
of the Loeal. Council of Women
With Mrs. (Rev.) George Ross, -
Miss S'harman organized the tirst
Parent-Teacher Association in On-
tario,' two years hefore the Home
and School movement was organ-
ized. She is a life menther [lie
She is a past president or the
Puron Teachers' Federation and a
past president of the Public School
Seetion of the Ontario Teacher,'
Aiss Sharman was aeeorded die
honor of laying the cornerstone of
Goderieh's new Publie Schott.
Never forgetful of children's wel-
fare, she then expressed the with
"that' •-the boys, and girls attentPng
altis and other schools should have
a cornerstone of truth'. si) imbedded
in their hearts that tm untoward
force should ever he able to loosen
Sky Harbor
Air Services
Offers Special Rates to C.N.E.
ROUND TRIP, TO TORONTO ISLAND AIRPORT;
1/2 MILE FRO* C.N.E. GROUNDS, TAKES , ONLY
-.TWO HOURS- TRIPS LEAVE GODERICH AT 71b-.24.
AND 10 p.m. AND TORONTO AT 5 A.M. APTD 8 A.M.
OVERNIGHT TRIPS MAY BE ARRANGED.
Rates $15.00 per person for
Round Trip
Gar -Wood Heating Units
Sold aiid Installed
MacDonald Electric
Phone 235
Britannia .Ad.
-23tf
Want wood for the .fireplace
or coal that will clink ?
-MOW PACES will find them— -
Quick as a wink !
awl ill HI, Illt.:1111 ill:, 11;1111:111 lir,- I
market
descrlhed this (-wintry's attitude 0.
held rtptitatimt one ,d* Ifritalit's
best:Informed and sanest journa
hut cittn.r it is slipping or
,vielded to. an impulse to *Ise ,1
consitirr.itde girt, to Britain :ma
r:2:e orders vvith British 10:1 1111
plans ‘411i(:ii .1h nuiiiiier Of' cases
have been. defentviihy. rtril
this he difficulty of doing lousiness
with the old Country by reason of
the monetary exchange sit 11:14 ion
11101 it IA realized that _with all the_
goo(1-‘‘ ill in the world Ctilliola Can -
Wit (10 42;r0;tt deal more than she
is doing to help put Britain On her
feet: It might also be pointed out
that while the Itritish Goverithient
nal to reproach Canatia *hit looking
beyond the Corinuatowealth. 1:eople
who live in glass houses should
not throw stones. 111)%vever. too
mutelt stress uotst 1161 be laid uttott
a casual critieNui, and in the CletU.-
naortwealth vonference soon 1.0 la,
held it is to be 1101541 that Cattatlian
tgyarticipation will be so helpful :is
School- days throw thetr shadow
over the, juvenile prospect. Never
ntind, boys and or,irls; there will
still be Saturdays for fteedoni. 1 16'011E1{1' .1. 11,111'7,11EN
(foderielt. -Robert .1, MeMelien died
Alertintirt -Marine and General
Hospital on Friday. August '22, in
his 71st year. Ile was associa091
with the Imperial Company 11 101
'W:14 dist rict superintendent tint il
10, retirement ;Ihout ten v ears ago,
Born in latcati. 114' V% ;IS
of till, 1,1 I I. John MeMeheit and
Mar.% McInnes and V1-11., ;11 iiieroher
Club ;Ind of kilo\ Presbyterian
- OBITUARY
CROWN •
FIPOIT JABS,
FLIRT fi
RE/11,13ER /EllINGS
REDiPATIC SUGAR
MEDIUM
DOZEN
SIZE'
$1.59
270
90
5 LB
PKG 480
BOTTLE
— SPECIAL TEATIMES —
290
690
290
590
DUPLEX CREAM IIISEWIS
yllY11!,EFE HONEY
IlEAltliT BUTTER
Burma
16 OZ.
CELLO
4 LB.
TIN
16' OZ.
JAR
1 LB.
PRINT
MONARCH MARGARINE PICG. * 320
FRESH FLAVOUR 1 LB.
3 PKGS. 250
RASPBERRYORSTRAWBERRY
POPPED WHEAT CEREAL
NEWPORT FLEETS 2'2
SNOWFLAKE AMMOMA
LAw...".
CHALLENGER FANCY
According to the calendar 1111111
will soon be upon us and it will
toe (rnestion whether the old felt
bat will do for another, season.
The two Goderith hand., did gond
work at Toronto .(11 Saturday in
keeping Goderich "(in the map.'
It IA soinetitnes quite permissible
to blow your own horn.
After all,,perhap4 the lie'st hearth litirch. His wife. formerly Stidu.
rears a ,74)
W01114 have to he adapted to pre. of North Bay ;, one brother,
James NIcNIehen of Winnipeg. and
Bent -day valuations, for sixperno
a sister, Miss NI. F. NIeNlehen of
* day Wo111(1 nOtv be near start- ttshawri. Another son. .101111.
ttiOnr but the idea is there: live I killed in netion in World War 11
econonileally and work for it. The funeral serviee %vas held at
day afternoon, conducted by the
A woman entered the office of Rev. R. (;, mseN1111an of K n
The Creemore Star recently and l'res1)-terian Church. Burial took
.sked for a copy ,,or the week's place In St. :fames cemetery, Loran.
Louie stating that she had Just The pallbearers were: Frank and
Clarence Stanley of Toronto; liar -
years :Igo ; -Live siNpettre a day.
2nd earn it." Of conrso, 111.11 do lighter ( Ma rga ret t Mrs. „, eiv
RED SOCKEYE SALMON
113iiiiiAD DRESSING
Get a jet streamed Studebaker
and cut your driving costs!
330
PKGS 1944
TIN 390
1.15Allr 390
HEINZ INFANT HEINZ — TOMATO
FOODS .3 sit 270 KETCHUP Bottle
130z. 0130
HEINZ •••-• CREAMY TOMATO
Heinz Vegetarian OVEN BAKED
Tin HO
i 100 COFFEE Jur 930
BREAD. 140301., V'
A MEAL FOR FOUR— SOUTHERN SEAS
NATIONAL SWEET MIXED
NEW CANADIAN
MILD CHEESE Lb 370 PitilLES 2.1P,
240Z. 330
RASPBERRY JAM JAR
STUrVED °LINES rAgz 25(
SUNNY SPAIN — B1131(EN
FANCY CIU'ALITY
GIECEN COUNT FEES
TANGERINE JUICE 2 2"ligr:25
HORSEy SWEETENED
ETTICII LIVING MAGAZINE 1°1r 50
SEPTEMBER ISSUE
15 OZ.
TIN
Illustratati: Dalai* Cimmaiou 2 -door sedan.
Mina mi. -Iowa tire. sad 'kraus* whoa' diem oatioaal at sacra malt.
1 52 STU
taken a eettage for the summer,
When the etlitOr remarked that the
local netk's would not be of mueh in-
. i'est to 'her. the woman replied that
was, not the news she wanted but
old and Roy Stanley of !mean
Nt. W. Craigle of North Bay and
James MeMehen Of Ottawa. .
Membera of Goderich Lions and
'Menesetung Canoe (labs were
TENDER, GOI.ItEN
CORN on COB doz. 29c
‘1,1FORNIA, Sire 283
SUNKIST ORANGES doz. 29c'
NO. I FREESTONE ARRIVING FRKSII
PEACHES
DANA
PRESERVE NOW
CHAMPION 6 0,
Spend less for gas—less for -
upkeep—with a Studebaker!
Get more for your money
all the way—with a Studebaker!
Check delivered prices and
you'll drive home a Studeliaker!
AS models offer Studebaker Automatic Drive or Overdrive
—and glare -reducing tinted glass—at extra cost.
I ALL VALUES EFFECTIVE 1141
GODERICH
Until Poring Tits* Sat., Aug. SS
OUR GUARANTEE
)01 merchandise sold at "Your
Dominion Store" ts uncondition-
ally guaranteed to give you
100% satisfaction. •
DOMINION STORES LIMITED
Victoria St. and Elgin Avenue
BANNISTER MOTORS
Phone 717
BUILT IN CANADA • • • BY CANADIAN` C.RAFT,S AE
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