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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1952-10-09, Page 9D- oll lie as k- ed ed rt e „ )Id by ler ys. -tu- ra1 re. tat Is- ac- ior by tkv er ed ed 'il- rs. W. B. Ile - he lac tit ae, hn art it - tit t. ale= ity ttr- Ru aer�s 1141 111- :in - ea' tst M. vas; St. his de- and led er. rtsi ted er. TfIlT #rf,3tt)A'l(, OCTOBER 9th,, 19112 OPERATOR 07 DUBLIN - HOTEL I8 FINED $50 A tine of $O uud costs vests int- posed mposed on Mrs. Edith 1, yt•lker, oper- ator of the Iiurott flout. 1>ut,114i, b3' Magistrate D- E, Holmes on Thursday of tart week. She pleaded guilty of keeling itquur for aide.' I•:videuce was AM•rs. 11'talker oper- ated (,tat• hotel ou behalf of :tn ab- sentee ovuec. A lame quantity of vartoua brands of beer and liquor seized by I Ovlucial.pollce In a raid axis orderedtit%truytd. '1'hiruun Chong, Chluese operator of the Star Cafe at :;eaforth plead- ed guilty .t,,keeplug liquor for rule. Ile was tined ;:►U uud cr etts miff II- a.;uor and beer seized was ordered math -ea ted. .1 rlassitled ad in tate Signal -Stu t►ritt;,-s re.sults. here's a wel+eatne meal -filo treat L Bette giu, vil Carton vhIU If you are looking for a way to add something special to the meals you serve at home, try -Coca-Cola as the meal -time bevera&e. Your family will find it a wdlcome treat. rind you'll find it so easy to serve -ice cold right in its own sparkling bottle. Your food store has Coca-Cola -in the six -bottle canton. aclrelieg faders, Tetras Plus deposit 2c par bottle Authorized tsottter"of Coca -Cala under contract with Coca -Cote Ltd. Goderich Bottling . Works Goderieh,.•Ont. Coin." is a rrgistarati trade -mark Phone 489 136X BLYTH AND BRUSSELS , OARS IN £OOIDENT Provincial Constable John Park- inson, of Goderich, luvtistlguted uu apt:ideut 1% utiles south of Bruer bets ou 14th .0eaces v ou of Gray at the latereeation of the Cuuuty ltoald at 11 p.ru. I3at urtluy, when it "car driven by Amble Engel, It..IL. 2, Idrttrsrselts, travelling south on the Cougty Ruud, making. u left hand turn outu the 14th eouetssesion col- lided with a tatr ttriveu by Robert Glqusher, LEyth, trretvelt'ing Lutrtit. "Both 'tarts were pudly wrecked and `3I'rs. Archie 1•}oger is iii Wiugltuw leoSpite! sufferlug chey,t Injuries. The, drivers esea;►ed with tuiuur. tnjurlesr, - GODEICH SKINAI4TAlt NEWS OF AUBURN AUBURN, Qct, 8. -,Mr. end Mrs. Ctwwekt of New Dundee int the week -end with Mr. and Mrel, J. O. Steitz. )Ir•' arid. Mre. Ed Davie* voted Meads ler Tiihst►nburg last week. Sirs., Woes Braduock and Mies itc�wa McOliuchey attended the leaders training eourae, "Cottons May Be Swart." held In Clinton. Tido e+otirree la epgn.ored by the Wouieu'd luetitute. 3i;rs. Bernice Mouek who hits been visiting her daughter. Sirs. Ed Dtvletr, has returned to Loh' don. 414111 F,v a 9 dwaw (0,6 cit The Canadian .Bank of Commerce 116 the Yau'i find him about 20 years of age , fully trained and full of the zest for flying ... keen ... alert ... brimful with a sense of accomplishment and responsibility! He probably won't admit to you he feels a pride in doing his duty -- in being prepared to defend freedom -- but it's obvious he does.. 11 you are 17 and not yet 25, And out today how you can be a PILOT in the. ROYAL CANADIAN AIR FORCE r "1 went air crew because, more than anything else, 1 wonted to fly --- and 1 felt I'd get more flying and experience in the Air Force .. . Jets; , . , yes, they're easier to fly ... Sorry, l can't describe the feeling to you, but there's just nothing like being up there ... 354)00 feet ... in a .world of your own ... in as jet That's -- well -• your baby ..." SEE THE CAREER COUNSELLOR AT THE ADDRESS IN THE COUPON -OR MAii. THE COUPON! biractov of P.rsonnsl Manning, R.C.A.F. HeadquorNrs, Ottawa. M Please mail me, without obligation, full particulars regarding enrolment requirements and openings now available 1,, the R. C A. F. NAME, (Please Print) (Surname) (Christian Name) STREET ADDRESS - CITY PROVINCE •EDUCATION (by...grade and province) AGE CAF- iLW 1.. Mrs. Fred Rum *pent the week- end at Toronto and Oakville. Mr. J. J. Wilson is under the doetor'it care; Hie friends wish, him to speedy recovery. Miss Merariaue, teacher of S.S. Nu. U. -Hallett, Ma au attack o ustunve. 'Aire. Sid l.attsing is 'hut► piy1ing for her. ' Vibattore with Mr- and 31re. l; Davies on Sunday were Mr, antl Mrs. Jilly of 3Ios,lef, 31r. anti Jlr. George l)erlturdt of (.iudsIu11. Mr. and Ilan. Ernest Vatterts, and Mier; L•'isie 1'attere>ou and Alt' uud Mrs. hose l'atterseu has' ltuveti to Goderich,Goderich,31ns. !lin Lut,te of Fort k'ruucis las visitingso Alia, Margaret Jack:ale Mrs. Jutta Seiater utid Mils* Hut tie Murry of a.tatorth are vi:sitiug Mr. uud Mrs. Edgy r tit When, Harvest Ronin Service. -The St. 31ark» AnglicanAnglicanChurch 'held their Harvest Hume Services oilS .uuday The revtur, Rev. W. E. Uratn-woll preached two inupre,tsiv'e ser mous At the morning -service, the Choi with Mrs. 1iorduu 11. Taylor pre aiding at the orgau, rendered -al atrtheua Stud :At the eveutng service the choir rendered an anthem and Messrs. ,Fordyce ('lark and Frau Nesbit sang a- duet. The church ova devarateed with fruit and vegetables tluweri . A gcueroue free will ',tferittg was reteiveti. Bible Society.--"l'!re annum meet lag- . the local brauelt of the Up per Canada Bible Society watts held iu Knox United Church with Rev. C. C. 11'ushgto tnn in charge. A brut, "On the Frontier," was shown, after whic•tc the president, Mrs- C. 3I. $traughan presided for tate busi- ness. The •ec•rt cry -treasurer, Wil - aunt Straaughan, read the treasur- er:, report, showing that $215.24 had been fedi to Toronto. The tol- lowing were elected: honorary presidents, the loeii 1 Clergy; presi dent. Mr- F. 0. 3iellveen ; seeret tory-treasurer. William Straughaau ; coH, etors--.Donuybrrrok, Louise Jef- ferson. Grace Thompson; West- field, Lois Campbell. Janette Snelri ; blast 1Vaaanosh 3rd line, Mrs. i1trL. 1itt _airs. . Frank,._. Nesbit: West Wa Swot h, Mrs_ Harold Webster, • Mrs. Ted Mills: East Gravel, Airs. Frank Raaithby, Mrs. Wallington Good; eon. 8 Colborne, Mrs. 1)on Maines. airs. Ed Davies: eon. 13 IHutlett, Margaret A. Jack- son. Christine Cutininghttm : Base line, Torrance Ta -bb, IL•nry Lies-t- m'an ; Auburn north side. John Youn;;hhrt: east side. William Straugietn. Rev. W. E. Bramwell offered the c°losinsg prayer - County and District Walter *pent* owner ut tui lieu - still Pigtails; will that was bururd recently, bats auuouuc'ed his inten- tion of rsbuiltliug. lie alaw btaneo. Watt the published eatituate ($70,OUl1/ Iuss front the tire .wait f greatly ezttg4erated. i Granville Cleland. truck driver fon at Throttle Haifa,, who wan, drie- a lug the (ruck that (:tubed the hydro Trouble i tieuforth two weeks ago, wetsduct! ;10U nutt tangos by )Itn,'Ust ante Holmes ' at '5eaforth ,ter the charge of siriviug while his ultllitty .v. -as impaired. n Freak ring/stud, Jr.. of Clinton. who ''tj 'wtsm►ter rece1ved his 31..1., degree in arieuce at ,the University of Toruuto, left last week for .kaigland to take a tltste- year course for the degree of Doc- tor of Phitosolshy- Iie went over- seas by plane from llout.real. Mrs. David Kennedy of %1'itite- t Ixurc'h •,Ise-rved tier 90th hsirthdtty, oti ()cttober 1st. Shi enjoys fair health and stilt diel her own housework. Her Int, -bald died nearly fifteen years ago, but eight t of tier ten 'children are Uvfiug. 31rs. harry Ticbbor a of (;oderieh is one of three daughters. @ k Loses Right Leg as Result of Accident Roy aierar41an •, R.R. 5, Brussels. had his right le; autput:tted at the %'tinghatn hospital •A the result of :tn rt,tldcnt on his farm home in' Grey 'Township lash week. when he wtas (•rushed between a traaitor and :a plow. This week neighbors landed together to do the hull plowing for the unfortunate man. %1'ire-)~ and In 4t. Path's Aug -limn Church. C1'ittton. .in September '21", Rev. R. M. 11. Bailee! otnflated at the wed - din;; eeremou;v uniting Nutley Jane. a daughter. of Mr. and lies;. Freder- 1ck Ford, and Glen Hubert Mee. _ son at Mrs. Wise and the late Harbert LeRoy Wise..ali of Clinton. After -a wt. -titling trip through Nor- thern Ontario, the couple vva11 make their home in Clinton. Goderich Township Native Dies at 96 Years The death of Henry Combs,. Brus- scr'tetrasix yest az- removed the oldest resident ,of the ctlktge and one of the oldest men L n the county. Mr. Combs was born in G derielt 'Powri'tship. the sots Of pioneer Ilarcnts who settled first in Stanley Toss-trsbip. Later he lived at Myth and for rotate • years in Tfanitntea. returning east in 1919. His wife predeceased him and tu,rviving'tire four s:On,s. all in1, llanitotat. and a daughter. Westa• I of Brussels. I Ffunters Have Varied Experiences 11"iltita'rn �inrri•oit ` ►-ty ar-(.141 Lon(' on man. narrowly eseaaped i death on Satarrt}ay when he .re- eeiveil the frill blast a' a shotgun i in bis right thigh and ieit He and KINTAIL K I•NTA I I., Oet. -'1 The death or. i•tirred of Airs. Annie ieai►cl Mac- kenzie on 1Vednesday. 4)' beI er 1, at the home of her daughters, Misses Anna and Charlotte Mac•- kenzie, Tock>nto. She was the former Annie Isabella ('bantt►ers. wife of the late 3turdoeh 0. Mac- kenzie. Kintail. ' l'rs. Mackenzie was l ort at Lzs•halsh on lf:ay S, 1867, to Elizabeth MacAree awl Hugh t'hambers. 'She attended Hlgh Sehoal in Kitica+rdine and taught school in Laurier and Dale nybrc>rok. She married Murd'c►eh 0. Mackenzie in 1896.,' and lived' at Kintail till 1950, whets 'she iniad,, her home: svith her 'daughter in Toronto- She was :a lifelong mem- ber of .lshtiel(1 Presbyterian Church, and :t (•barter member and u life member of the Women` Missionary Society,., of which sit.. was .;)resident _fur . sever:t 1 s e:t rs. Surviving her ;ire tine d:11tgl1tte1•-. :Misses Anna and t'harlotte of 'I'„r- MOTORIS' N'T RISK LOSI DRIVER'S Over 17,000 licences were suspended` in 1951 Think SAFETY - Drve SAFELY ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF HIGHWAYS GEO. H. DOUCETT • MINISTER a carnivanion ' were hunting birds in the Whitechurch district, when his comrade's gun was accidentally discharged. He was taken to Wesdnri.ninter Iiospitul. London, where he is employed as an order- I.v. Different wab; the experience of a hunter near Walkerton. Ile uwv a flock of blas* ducks swim- ming on the Teeswttter River and bleated away at them. Then he found he had slaughtered Igoe tR� ducks beton. to a n - bot. He settled with the owner. -Agent a intervie+wing man fur life iusuranl'e t : "Df) you drive"" "No." "L)o pat By?" -Sorry, our (•a►m[nany no longer insures J►edestriau " - onto, Mrs.... L': Rhodes ([aizabet'a t of Toronto; Mrs. Eatrl Howes Milian) of. Kintail ; Jlrs: Philip l • (,our f Lois t of Bata -via, N.Y.: and .; one son Hugh of Kintail: seven; grandchildren and one great -grand- ; child. One daughter,' Isabel. pre- deceased her in 1928. and one grandson in it►;7. The funeral ser- vire :tt her ,late residence on IIigte vv'ay 21. was eunducteti by Re!-. J. R' Macdonald. assisted by J)' J. 8, Itittsh -s of Toronto Bible ('.,r- +, lege. -with interuient in Kintail i cemetery. The pallbearers wire Messrs. .John McKay. .John Rr:sal- ley. John Cathcart, Colin Mac- Gregor. Iain :Macdonald :arid 1 aIn'r '1`igert. ilea ge'ntu' (d1.1u, itiuu :tini„.. quiet Mita' 'r a -on her many friends sotto imitate her itassint;. iNECalvert SPORTS COLUMN 4 Eiseez This agent is not going to eU.end his neck by stating any one Canadian athlete was the - hest,' or. most durable. But if any one ran inform us of an' athlete who combined great- ness of perfor Aare and durability to a greater degree than skater Norval it aptie, we'd like to hear about him. [fowl*. Mt'renz at)d 1 were seated in 1[adiw,n Square Gard. -u, the morning of the (ticy it opened. (.:ttiwu1ients were playing there that night. Out ou the less .surface, a slim figure vwva:t pirouetting dizzily, or whirling tir(.ttnd the -circuit at blinding soave. Ffowi. Morena scars proud of his ov(-n ttlitzing speed, and he -Wien: as great eotiTpetitor. S(► 1 :asked hien : "'Would you "tike 'to race him outs. around',.' Howie shook his hexad. grimiest, said: "No. lie's terO fast for . me." The skater out 011 tie- ice was the amazing Norval Ital►tie. one of the trimly great skitters, ranking with the late Charlie a;ormrrn, (l:antula has ever .went to the asset' jonsts on ice. It was a November morning in 1925 that we watched taptie spinalug around, getting ready for his fancy skating show be- tween periods that night with Gladys Iamb, now his wife. 27 yeartl before he had set a professional mile record of 2 minutes and 8 seconds. He's still skating, coaching others in .the Art of figure -skating at the North Carolina State College Coliseum in Raleigh... N.('.. even ,though he has lost all the its of his rights foot. a t(liu►ada bus t►roiratrty" uevet• ;rrr'liittvt an athlete .tit Snell (tiirct•t►ility. ItaJ►tie was born at !lethally. e)nt.. March 15.- 157'.1, of St-eteli parents. The family movtti to Bntil►lrate Minn.. when he was yettng- .started skating at 10, won titles at 15. JI(• won stpproxintatt y 5.t 5) rrtc•es the ((tarter-r-entury he was its (Natty,What from 2..'l) ,vititala to 5 mites. tat 1h9s ftp heat the f 1110115 .14)1111 S. Jell 115011, the next year he i►nt-rskated .Johnny Nihsson. mail then nt-goaded its the hest skater of his clay. Hr• won the acrid sJ►F ed title at Montreal on Feb. 4, 19)5 frtun Nilsson, Harley Davidson and Sinttirud. He holds- ten world professional speed records, his straight• away nriie in -,,2.08 on Lake Minnetonka 'being perhaps the most amazing. He ruled the speed skating world. unbeatable, for 16 years. When he ran out of opponents, he skated an stilts, skated backwards, did fancy skating, actually intritdneed what are -today known as "ire shows" in 1911. Anti skating still :at 73. Can you britt that for durability? 'four comments and suggesfions for this column wilt be welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c i o Calvert House, 431 Yonge St., Toronto. { Calvett DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHf StWROs- ONTARIO w "My son has chosen banking" When a bank manager retired last year, he wrote his General Manager to tell why he was proud his son also had chosen a banking career: "I shall always recall my banking days, with pleasure and I cannot think o) any other occupation that giues one a greater opportunity to met people and, form lasting fr. iendships, I have been privileged to serve' the hank in three provinces ... That my son has chosen banking is also a great satisfaction to m..1 He is most anxious to make good on his othn account." Any young man on the lookout for an interesting and worthwhile career - for opportunities to grow and get ahead --should take a look. at bane: i ng. Have a talk with the bank manager in your neighborhood branch. It may well prove an important turning point irl your life. 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