HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1953-09-10, Page 7r..
•
Jail Term Imposed
On Assault Count
Convicted of assaulting his wife,
Clayton Steels, of Goderlch, was
sentenced to 30 days in jail by
Magistrate D. E. Holmes, Q.C., In
police court last Thursday.
On a second count, of impaired
driving, he was found guilty and
fined $50 and costs or an additional
seven days in jail to run consecu-
tive with the- previous sentence.
The impaired driving charge
arose out of a collision between
an old modhl car driven by Steels
and a newer model driven by Mrs.
Kenneth 1lazlitt, R.R. 4, Goderich,
on July 26, near Saltford.
Steels claimed he did not see
the oncoming Hazlitt cat ,until sec-
onds before the collision. Con-
stab!e D. I. Trumbley, of the coun-
ty detachment, Provincial Police,
who investigated said the accused
staggered considerably and smelled
strongly of alcohol.
Birds, seals and turtles have
saved' the lives of many desert
island castaways. In addition to
eating turtle meat and eggs, ship-
wreck victims have used the shells.
UnilE
RTE
EXTRA MILEAGE
BUSINESS DIRECTOkY
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT
A., ;i. HARPER ......,,......
CHARTERED D AOOOUNTAr1T
65 South St. Goderlch. Ont.
A. L. COLE
Optometrist—Optician
Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted
' Phone 33 Goderlch, Ont.
C. F. CHAPMAN
General Insurance
Fire, Automobile, Casualty
Real Estate
30 Colborne St., Goderich
• Phone 18w
EDWARD W. ELLIOTT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
Correspondence promptly an-
swered. Immediate arrangements
can be made for Sales Date by
calling Phone 466.1, Clinton.
Charge moderate and satisfac-
tion Guaranteed.
HAROLD JACKSON
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
HURON AND. PERTH
Seaforth Phone 11-661 or
Harry Edwards, Goderich
Phone 144
Geo. G. MacEwan
GENERAL INSURANCE
MASONIC TEMPLE
WEST ,STREET
Peter S. M acEwan
General, Life, Real Estate
Phone, 230, Goderich 3.
GUY (VES
& SONS
CEMENT CONTRAC-
TORS
BUILDING BLOCKS and
CHIMNEY BLOCKS
Selkirk all -steel insulated
chimney supplied and in-
stalled.
Chimney built or re --
paired.
Phone Carlow 1612
7-oxtf
WHA T 'N:EXT
What's, in a -word?
' Well, words being used in
police court to tell how a per-
son appears when drunk seem
to be getting more descriptive.
Usual procedure is to say,
that the accused had glassy
eyes thick speech and smelled
Id alcohol.
But last week in court a
witness, under questioning by
Crown Attorney H. Glenn
Hays, Q.C., told the court that
a man accused of drunk driv-
ing seemed to "teeter."
"Teeter?" asked Magistrate
D. E. Holmes, Q.C.
"Perhaps I should have said
stagger," said the witness.
"Teeter is not a bad word,"
commented the magistrate.
Going a step further, another
witness said the accused's legs
seemed to be "springy."
CLINTON FARM ENTRIES
WIN 13 SHEEP CLASS=
Exhibiting top quality animals,
Ephriam Snell . and Sons, of Clin-
ton, captured 13 of 14 titles in
judging of Leicester sheep at the
Canadian National Exhibition in
Toronto last Thursday.
The Snell entries won the champ-
ion and reserve champion ram and
champion and reserve champion
ewe. In addition, they won ram
two shears and over; ram, shearl-
ing; ram lamb; ewe two shears and
over; ewe . shearling; ewe lamb;
pen of one ram, two ewes and
best pen awards.
ORDER MAN TO PAY
EMPLOYEES' WAGES
Pleading guilty to not having
paid wages of six employees, Ken-
neth C. MacDonald, of Goderich
was ordered to pay a total of over
$700 to the employees within 21
-days by Magistrate D. E. Holmes,
Q.C., in police court last Thursday.
He was also ordered to pay costs
in each of the six charges and in
default of paymeits to serve seven
days.
CHIROPRACTIC
HERBERT s. SUCH, D.O.
Doctor of Chiropractic.
Otiiee Hours:
Mon., Tbura.--9 a.m. to 5 p.in.
Tues.. Fri --9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
Wed. & Sat. 9 to 11.30 a.m.
Vitamin Therapy
)face—Corner of South St. and
Britannia Road. Phone 341.
ANN
F. T. Armstrong
OPTOMETRIST
;shone 1100 for appointment
SQUARE GODERICH
NOW LOCATED
IN BANK
OF
' COMMERCE
BUILDING
ON THE SQUARE
H. M. FORD
Get Insured — Stay. Insured---
Rest Assured
TELEPHONE 268w
D. IUITARD
' Stonework, Brickwork and
Plastering
A good job of plastering has
no substitute
Phone 482, Brock and Victoria
Roy N. Bentley
Public Accountant
1 Kensington Ave.
Phone 2-9152
Condor►; Ont -
Cemetery
Memorials
T. PRYDE & SON '
Clinton, Exeter, Seaforth
Write Box 150, or phone 41J,
-Exeter- -...
and we shall be pleased to
call.
FARMERS!
Now is the time to change to
•
Shell Gasoline and Oil
for your tractor
Phone 98
EDWARD FUELS
Shell Tank Truck Dealer
GODERICH . -120
Hello Homemakers! For break-
fast, , luncheon And dinner serve
fruit in season. Of course you
have your favorite recipes, but
perhaps you would like to prepare
these economical and tasty dishes
—then you will count them among
your favorites, too.
Deep Peach Pte
5 cups sliced peaches
1 cup sugar
2 tbsps. cornstarch
% tsp. salt
2 tbsps. butter
1 cup sifted flour
y} tsp. salt
1/ tsp. grated lemon
6 tbsps. margarine
2 tbsps.. water
1 egg yolk
1 tsp. sugar
tsp. cinnamon
Mix sugar, cornstarch and salt,
and gently stir into peaches until
they are thoroughly mixed. Pour
into greased casserole. Dot with
butter. -Sift flour, tnd add salt and
lemon rind. Cut in margerine
until mixture resembles coarse
crumbs.' Sprinkle water over flour
and mix with fork. Shape into a
ball with hands. Roll out. Cut in
strips and form a lattice crust
over fruit. Press edges to rim of
dish and then brush with egg yolk.
Sprinkle on sugar and cinnamon.
Bake in preheated electric oven of
450 for 10 minutes, then reset to
350 degrees for 25 minutes.
Summer Salad
1 cantaloupe
3 peaches
3' pears
3 bananas
• 3 oranges
1 bunch grapes
Juice 2 lemons
Prepare fruit by peeling them;
remove pips or cores. Halve
peaches, pears and bananas and
roll in lemon juice: Slice oranges
SEE J. PREST FOR THE
BEST IN
ELECTRICAL
SERVICE
JAMES E. PREST
R.R. 5, Goderich
Phone Carlow 207 -30tf ; red to the fire committee for con
I sideration_
. STREET LIGHTS
Town Council passed a recorn-
K�DNEYACI� anddation from the water, light
and harbor comrnitiee at its meet-
! ing last Friday night that the
Public Utilities Commission be re-
' quested to provide. additional street
lighting in front of the wartime
houses on Bayfield road.
and cantaloupe. Arrange fan --
shape' on a bed of shredded endive.
Serve with honey dressing. Mix
1 cup mayonnaise with 1/3 cup
honey, 1 tbsp. lemon juice and 2
tsps. celery seed. Blend well.
GLAZEDPEACH TARTS
Make 18 tart shells. Bake at 425
degrees in electric oven for about
12 minutes. 'When cool place a
spoonful of custard in each; top
each with stewed peach 'half and
brush ,with a little melted apple
jelly.
Custard Filling—Beat 2 eggs, iii
cup milk, 2 tbsps. sugar, % 4sp. salt
and i tsp. vanilla. Cook on
medium heat, stirring constantly
until mixture coats a silver spoon.
Set aside to cool.
Appl• Coffee Cake
5- tbsps. lard
6 tbsps. sdgar
1 egg
1 cup milk
1% cups sifted flour
1% tsps. baking powder
1y tsp. salt
% tsp. cinnamon
14 tsp. nutmeg
2 apples, sliced
Cream lard and -sugar, add un-
beaten egg and milk. Mix thor-
oughly. Fold in sifted dry in-
gredients.t Spread evenly in great
ed 8 x 8 inch cake pan. Pld'ce
apple slices on top of batter.
Sprinkle top with 2 tbs s. sugar
and another r,% tsp. cinnamon.
Bake 20 minutes at 400 degrees.
THE QUESTION BOX
Mrs. C. K. asks: What should
we serve with blueberry pancakes?
Answer: Serve broiled sausages
or bacon with -butter for pancakes
at breakfast or serve fruit pan-
cakes with maple or corn syrup as
dessert for supper. -
Mrs. C. D. asks: What causes
home canned pears to turn grey?
Answer: Grey or brown color
of pears and peaches usually is
the result of (1) soaking too long
in hard salty water, or (2) using
the salty or lemon -juice water for
too many peeled pears.
FEWER BUILDING -
PERMITS IN AUGUST
Number of building permits and
their values declined considerably
during August, according to a re-
port made to Town Council last
Friday night by Clerk S. H. Blake..
The clerk told the council meet.;
log that only nine permits had
been issued, at a total value of
$4,510. The permits were refer- I
Roby our Rest. a
Many people never seem tot good
g
e a
night's rest. They turn and toss. blame it
.n 'nerves'. -when it may be their kidneys.
Healthy kidneys filter poisons and excess
acids from the blood. 1f they fail and
impurities stay in the system—disturbed
rest often follows: If you don't rest well
get and use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's
help -the kidneys so that you can rest
better -and feel better. 136
Dodd's Kidney Pills
DRUG STORE COWBOYS
OUT OF DUCT . DERE
Gone are the days of the drug
store cowboys. .
Not that they ever amounted to
much in Goderlch, anyway.
But, according to statistics based
on reports from the 651 census,
there were less than half as many
drug stores with soda fountains in
the. census year as there were in
1941.
And the boys who sit on the
stools to sip' sodas have to go
elsewhere in Goderich—there isn't
a soda foundtain at any of the
drug stores in town.
MAINTENANCE VEHICLES
ONLY HAVE BLUE LIGHT
This year's regulations of the
Ontario Department of Highways,
just issued, restrict display of
flashing blue warning signal lights
to Ontario motor vehicles in use
for winter maintenance of provin
cial and municipal highways and
roads and for tirban street systems
only.
From the first fall of snow' or
formation of glare ice on pave-
ments in the late autumn of this
year, drivers of any automotive
or horse-drawn vehicles are urged
to regard any flashing blue light
they observe as a warning of actual
or potential danger. They will in-
dicate in all cases the presence of
winter maintenance vehicles which
may be moving slowly .or, as is the
case with large Ontario Depart-
ment of Highways' snowplows, are
wider than ordinary vehicles,
either or both. .
Use of flashing blue light was
put to initial use on Ontario De-
partment of Highways' vehicles for
the winter of 1951-52. Having
proved their value as easily recog-
nizable warning signals,., Hon.
George H. Doucett, the Minister,
advised their being restricted for
use on winter maintenance vehicles
in Ontario only, and that recom-
mendation has now been put into
effect.
Furthermore the use of lights
on motor vehicles that automatic-
ally produce intermittent flashes
Men, Wornen! Old at
40, 50, 60! Get Pep
Feel Years Younger, Full of Vim
WELCOME, NEW .auitimuseRo
Coining back from holidays
last week, the Signal -Star -was
short of time in which to get
the paper out and was further
impeded btheepower
g
off for some time. Seal
hundred new subscriptions
and also renewals had to be
added to our mailing list as
a result of the "Good -Will"
contest. There was not time
to set these' names and add
them to the mailing list in
the regular way. Hence, the
names of the new subscribers
were written on the papers.
Some difficulty was experienc-
ed by some of the new sub-
scribers who said ,the papers,.
were not available at the Post
Office for them. A check later
revealed that practically all of
the papers. w rre there but in
some strange manner were not
handed out when subscribers
asked fort them. The names
have all been printed on the
mailing lint now and it is,
hoped no more difficulty will
be met. Any new subscriber
who Is told his or her paper
is not at the Post Office is
asked to notify the Signal -
Star immediately in oder that
the matter might be checked,
immediately. Those who have
renewed their subscriptions
are asked to look at their
labels NOW—not later -Land if
they are not correct phone 71
without delay to ask for re-
quired correction.
CLINTON MAN FINED
FOR IMPAIRED DRIVING
Recommending that the accused
and alcohol should get a "perman-
ent divorce," Magistrate D. E.
Holmes, Q.C., convicted a Clinton
man of drivinlg while his ability
was impaired and fined him $75
and costs or 14 days. The charge
was reduced from one of drunk
driving.
The accused, Alvin Fowler, was
also fined $25 and costs or seven
days for driving without an oper-
ator's license.
Crown evidence in the case had
been heard previously and in de-
fence only one witness was called.
of red light is prohibited, unless
those flashes of light are visible
from the -rear, only, of the motor
vehicle producing them.
Don't blame exhausted, worn-out, rum -down
feeling on your age. Thousands arn:i ed at
what a little pepping up with_ Ostret Tonic
Tablets will do. Contain tonic, heniic stimu-
lant often needed after 40-- by bodies weak,
old because lacking iron. A 7$ -year-old dog
tor .write.: "I took it myself. Results fine.
Introductory or "get -acquainted" size only
600. Stilt, feeling old. Start to feel peppy and ,
younger, today. At all druggists
LIST HURON COUNTY
ENTRIES FOR FAIR
These are the entries from
Huron County in the various live-
stock classes in the Western Fair
to be held in London from Septem-
ber 14 to 19:
Dairy cattle, William Boyd, Wal-
ton; Thomas Hayden & Son, Gorrie;
Huron County Holstein Breeders'
Association, Goderich; G. R. Mc -
Kiel, Clinton; Peter Simpson, Sea -
forth; Walter Woods, Wingham.
Heavy horses, William I. Dale,
Clinton; T. J. McMichael, Auburn.
Sheep, Ephraim Snell & - Sons,
Clinton; P. E. Dearing & Son,
Exeter.
Canada manufactured 104,000
automobile radio sets in 1952, with
a factory value of $11,413,203.
Cairtpl.�e: antis Awe
�, so vac♦
Hobbs Maine sail
Displace Safety G1ws1
installed *middy. area
noanicaUy. Drive it
. taow.
$eevers Auto
Supply
Goderich Phone 216
The Chairman d the CBC is ap-
pointed to a ten-year term of office.
—Quick Canadian Facts.
t
FIRST AID RENDERED TO
SICK RADIOS
B. R. MUNDAY
Also Portable Fool -Proof
Sound Service
Certified Radio Technician
Call at Widder St.,- Goderich
or Phone '596
32tf
"Immediate
•
service"
IN YOUR LOCA sit
Mit
Estate Planning
'1 and Wiwi
Investment
Management and
Advisory Service
4% Guaranteed
Investments
2% on savings
deposits may be
mailed
Real Estate Services
For prompt attention call
RAYE 13. PATERSON
Trust Officer
Hensall, Ontario, Phone 51
or
any office of
GUARANTY
TRUST
COMPANY OF CANADA
TORONTO • SIONIIMAL
OTTAWA • WINDSOR
PRAGARA VALLS • SUD$VRY
SAULT SIR. KAIIR
illtilob
CALGARY • VA$$COt1VRR
WESTERN FAIR PRESIDENT
I. B. Whale, president of West-
ern Fair, London, preatcts the best
Western Fair in history, Sept. 14
to 19.
the 200 -inch Hate telescope ,at
Palomar observatory, in California,
will photograph stars down to the
22nd magnitude. Probably it would -..,-
be possible to see a star as faint
as the 20th magnitude by looking
through that instrument.
Canada is the . w°brld's leading
trading nation on a per capita
basis.—Quick Canadian Facts.
OBITUARY
MRS. E. D. OSBORNE
One of the most prominent citi-
zens of Arnprior, Ontario, Mrs. E.
D. ,Dsborne, died at her Elgin
street home August 26, following
a lengthy, illness. Mrs. Osborne
was 86 years of age and the mother
of Mrs. J. A. Graham of 'Goderich:
Born in Horton in 1867, the
daughter of the late William New
and his wife, Eliza Humphries, she
was educated in district schools.
Following graduation she taught
school in Beachburg for some time.
She married E. D. Osborne, who
survives, in 1892. The couple cele-
brated their diamond wedding an-
niversary on September 6, 1952.
Throughout her lifetime, Mrs.
Osborne had been active in hurch
organizations in the Methodist and
later United churches. The couple
moved to Arnprior from Kinburn
in 1905 and they resided at Arn-
prior since that time. '
Surviving besides her husband,
are one son, H. N. Osborne; Arn-
prior, and three daughters, Mona
Osborne, Ottawa; Mrs. J. A. Gra-
ham, Goderich; Mrs. G. A. Boyce,
Arnprior. Six grandchildren and
four great-grandchildren also sur-
'vive. ,.
The funeral was hid from the
_Boyce funeral home. Daniel street.
Arnprior, on Friday, August 28.
Interment was in the Arnprior
cemetery.
1)
You're hooking at a very discouraged hill!
Ever since that ribbon of paving outlincci it, it has been a
challenge to motor cars.
For miles and miles it winds ii p the side of a mountain; and it
has sharp curves, and steep grades that aspriug out of the curves
so a driver can't get a start.
Half -way up, there's a watering Price, --put there so drivers
can stop and refill their radiators.
Yes --it has been quite a hill. But not any more!
The driver of the car in the picture above took off at the i►ase
and sailed right up to the top—and never gave it a thought.
Yon sec lie's driving a 1953 Cadillac—with its great high
compression 210 -horsepower engine—and its vastly improved
Hydra -Matic Drive.
7 1
We heard recently of two men who drove from Florida to
Windsor, Ontario—in a •1953 Cadillac.
The driver of the car had made this trip lief
.oreas they
left Knoxville he said to his passenger: "Hatt, are H! gating to
find a hill between here and Lesington!"
CAD -4531
After an hour or so, the passenger said: "Where is the hill?"
. And the driver said: "Just wait!"
So they waited—and presently dies"' saw a sign which read
"Lexington."
Tltc driver was dumfounded.
"-1 can't understand it!" he said. "There used to be a hill
there—a big one! 1 know from experience."
>/ >' 1
'atitrally, this great car gives. you more than the ability, to
master hills.
When you ‘float along wits► a tremendous reserve like this, you
Irasc the smoothest, quietest, easiest ride it's possible to Imagine.
--it gives von confidence, too—and helps you to relax—for you
know you have "the power for any emergency that may arise.
It makes the whole car a symphoipy in motion. in fact, the ride
is so smooth and soothing that, not infrequently, passengers
sleep as they ride.
Conte in
an experien?e von ound try ghct fr nntpto foreg�pe car is waiting:—and it's
e
A Goeol Motors Vol.
•
KINGSTON AND VICTORIA STS,,
'1.J 14lf