Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1953-11-12, Page 7ick roxilla A letter from the Goderich Trades and Labor Council to Town Council last Friday night recom- mended a by-law requiring the re- moval of lockn-from abandoned ice boxes. .The letter was referred- to the special committee for .consider- ation. EIectric M�torService WINDING & REPAIRING, INDUSTRIAL MOTORS A SPECIALTY L. D. BALSER, Phone 494 Wingham -40-52x 1 'F 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 598 32tf INININNINNINNINNININININININANY SUPERIOR PROPANE GAS for better cooking, water heating and refrigeration Alf. J. Schmidt, representative. Stratford_ Phones 3260. Res. 38732. P.O. Box 98 -28tf CHIROPRACTIC, fERBERT ls. SUCII, D.C.. Doctor of Chiropractic. Office, Hours: Mon.. Thera —9 a.m. to 5 p.m. 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 OMce—Cerner ot South St. and Britannia Road. Phone 341: F. T. Armstrong OPTOMETRIST ii hone 1100 for ,'appointment SQUARE GODERICH NOW LOCATED IN BANK OF COMMERCE BUILDING �OjN THE SQUARE II�LFORD- Get Insured — Stay Insureld-- Rest Assured TELEPHONE 268w Roy N. Bentley Public Accountant 1 Kensington Ave. Phone 2-9152 London, Ont. Cemetery Memorials COLBOBI!g TQWIP o4UItCIL Set Noyember 27 As Nomination Day; Reeve Says Bridge Aid Is Promised Council met, Tuesday, November_ 3, all members present. - Coinmunications from the follow ing were received: Blyth Fish and GagneConservation ssociation protestiA ng the extension of time for the hunting of fox, and re- commending than the County Coun- cil 'and Township Councils consider the abolition of fox bounties. John Berry presented the, minutes of the Huron County Municipal Officers' Association meeting held in Gerrie. A letter from, the office of the Fire Marshall, regarding a training course fpr municipal fire chiefs. Reeve Snyder drew to the atten- tion of the council, the story in the Signal -Star, concerning , his inter- view with the Minister of High- ways, Mr. Doucett, regarding fin- ancial assistance to the township fgr bridge building. Ile stated that the bridges in question, were the two already built, the cost of which had made it impossible far thv township to keep within the de eased road -appropriation. The Reeve Viso informed the council that he, had convinced Mr. Doucett of the necessity of an increase in the approved appropriation and had been promised an additional $5,000 thus meaning an additional extra $2,500 in Provincial subsidy for•1953. An order was issued on the treas- urer in favor of Cree Freeman 7e- ceiving 51,500 on the drainage loan. Nominations for Reeve, Council- lors and two school trustees was set for Friday, November 27, at 1 p.m. and if .an election is neces- sary it will be held Monday, De- cember 7, with the following of- ficials in charge at the different polling booths: Polling sub -division No. 1, Benmiller, Foresters' Hall, mumillmommeir T. PRYDE & SON Clinton, Exeter, Seaforth Write Box 150, or phone 41J, Exeter and we shall be pleased to call. Harold W. Shore ALL LINES OF INSURANCE (including Life) and REAL ESTATE ' Phone 766W 38 Hamilton St. Goderich 36tf BUSINESS IECTGla 1 'CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT A. M. HARPL•A CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 55 South St. Goderieli, Ont. A. L. COLE Optometrist—Optician Eyes Examined, Glasses Fitted Phone 33 Goderich, Ont. D.R,O., Ray Moore; poll. clerk, Mrs. Kenneth Hazlitt; sub -division No. 2 Thomas' Morris' Store; Harry McCreath; poll clerk, Hume Clutton; sub -division No. 3, Carlow Township Hall; D.R.O., Thomas Wilson; poll clerk, Walter Pett - man; sub -division No. 4, Grant Chisholm's house; p.fi.O.,- Andrew Bogie; poll clerk, Ben Chisholm. Accounts presented and ordered paid: Road vouchers, 51,058.41; Cree Freeman, drainage loan, 51,500; William Westlake, helping dig grave, $2; , Nelson McLarty, replanting trees in cemetery, 58.49; Frank AMA weed spraying in cemetery. $4.55; Charles Rivett, top soil for cemetery, $6; J. W. Shear= down, two fox bounties, $4; Doug- las Young, one fox bounty, 52; Charles McCabe. one fox bounty, 52; Sam Mahon, one fox bounty, 52; Emerson Drug Store, 53120; Municipal World, supplies, 51.12; Signal -Star, account, $105; Cou.pty of Huron, maintenance- of indigent patient, 59; Jonathan Fisher, wood for relief, $22; Wilfred Fisher, re- lief account, $28.91;- Fred Bowra, salary, $100; William Sallows, part salary, $100; George McBride, story age for cement, 55. Council adjourned to meet Tues- day, December 1, at 1 p.m. 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 Safes Date by calling Phone 466J, Clinton. Charge moderate and satisfac- tion Guaranteed. HAROLD JACKSON LICENSED AUCTIONEER HURON AND PERTH Seaforth Phone 11461 or - Harry Edwards, Goderich Phone 144 BOGIE—JOHNSTON Rev. R. G. MacMillan officiated at Knox Presbyterian Church chapel on Friday, October 30, at the wedding of Phyllis Margaret Johnston, daughter of J. M. John- ston and the late Mrs. Johnston, of Goderich Township, and William K. Bogie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold A. Bogie, of Goderich. The couple was attended by Mr. and Mrs. Peter MacEwan. Following a motor trip to North- ern Ontario and the United States, the couple will reside in Goderich. COOK—SCHWANZ Rev. H. A. Dickinson officiated Saturday morning in North Street United Church parsonage at the wedding of Clara Jean Schwanz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Dan Schwanz, of Goderich, and Harry Orby Cook, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lock Cook, R.R. 3, Goderich. The bride wore a greyish blue tailored suit with white nylon blouse, navy and pink hat, navy accessories and a corsage of red roses. Mr. and Mrs. - James Robertson, of Goderich, attended the- couple. The matron of honor wore a gabar- dine suit of-1+'rench red with beige accessories and a corsage of pink roses. A reception was held at the home of the bride. After a short wedding trip, the bride and groom will reside at R.R. 3, Goderich. roe Ail OCCASIONS 99 BRUCE ST. PHONE.105 41tf. ' D. GUITARD Stonework, Brickwork and Plastering • A good job of plastering has no substitute Phone 482; Brock and Victoria Ray Robinson FLOORS LAID — SANDED FINISHED R.R. 1 PORT ALBERT Phone Carlow 2105 366-8x&tf NEED TO REFCACEI AUTO GLASS Geo. G. MacEwan GENERAL INSURANCE MASONIC TEMPLE WEST STREET Peter S. M acEwan General, Life,. Real Estate Phone 230, Goderich 3. AsimainnionL Complete Settee Glass replace- ment Service—Quick—Economical ---Drive in todify—Curved or Flat Saftee Glass. Beevers Auto Supply Goderich Phone 295 With New York all but out of fresh milk, farmer JOHN DU FOSSE, of Oxford, N.J., dumps milk on his farm after over- stocked creameries were unable to accept it because of the three -state strike of milk drivers and plant workers. The wages - hours deadlock cost dairymen an estimated $250,000 a day. REMAND PAIR TO JAIL TO AWAIT SENTENCE A . 20 -year-old Harristotl youth, Roy A. Stephens, pleaded guilty to three charges ot uttering forged 'documents and one of cashing a forged cheque when he appeared before Magistrate D. E. Holmes, Q.C., in court last week and was remanded to jail for a week for sentence. Mrs: Leola Johnston, also of Har- riston, who had previously pleaded guilty to charges involving the same bad cheques, was also reman- ded to jail for another week to await sentence. Crown Attorney H. Glenn Hays, Q.C., told the court that there were charges pending against Stephens in Guelph. He has already been sentenced to three months in Strat- ford. THEFT ATTEMPT COUNT DISMISSED IN COURT Two Goderich youths charged with attempted theft ' heard the charge, dismissed by .lOgistrate D: E. Holmes, Q.C. in police court here .last. Thursday. The .two, Charles Robinson and Gerald Crawford, were charged jointly with attempting to steal a quantity of gasoline from the farm of Gordon .Pollock, near Nile in Colborne Township. Evidence in the case had been heard a week RECRUITING ROYAL CANADIAN MOUNTED POLICE A limited number of re- cruits will be engaged in this - Force during the next three months. To be eligible for engage- ment an applicant must meet ,the basic qualifications re- quired some of which are set out below: .....Must be single. ....Height --5 feet 8 inches. .....Chest Measurement --a "mean" average of 35 inches. ,Age -18 to 30 years (preference is given to those between 19 and 25.) ....Education—at least coma, - plete Grade VIII but preferably Grade X. For further information inquire at the nearest R.C.M. Police office. previously and the magistrate had reserved his decision. Passing judgment, the magis- trate said that he could not feel e In: Far Nortli' A very interesting and instruc- tive -address was listened to by the Chu "W:M.S.at their dies pf L Street United Thant- offering meeting held in the Sun- day School room of the- church on Tuesday afternoon of last week given by Mrs. A. L. .Fleming, as guest speaker. Mrs. Fleming, who has the un usual distinction of being the first white, woman who has travelled. from), one of the Arctic mission fields, which extends all across Northern Canada to the other, spoke on the life and work of her- self and the late Bishop Fleming in the far north. There are, she said, only two religious denomin- ations represented in the Arctic, the Protestant and Catholic. The speaker described the country from the barrens where only moss would grow and the natives had to depend on hunting and fishing, to the more fertile lands of the Hudson Bay district. In describing the different tribes she said there are those who are purely pagan and no missionary has dared to go among them. The term of the missionary on the field is five years during which time he must cover a distance of two thousand miles every winter, by dog team, to keep in touch with his missions, while his wife must carry on his work at the home church. AMAZING NEW #UTO .4.‘ ICE VIMANI.FRS Makes delicious icy alralm .No .sok, No k.,r hb .Mese POR mum TIME cony IT'ii ARSOWTELY" FRU wMr mE MU ICHAS' 011 A NW- COOK—SC HWANZ i- i,,pke,z. RafziqeiUi The Arctic, the speaker said, ; is the greatest place, for gossip, which is carried on over the radio "ham" stations, which are quite numerous there. The speaker de- plored the fact that none of our young men going out in the mis- sion field will not volunteer for work in the Arctic, thus necessitat- ing the bringing in of missionaries from the Old Country for the far North. She closed her address by reading a poem. Mrs. 11. A. Dickinson moved a vote of thanks to Mrs. Fleming, who had been introduced by Miss Grace Strang. In the absence of the president, Mrs. Howard Robertson, the chair was occupied by Mrs. A. R. Scott, who presided throughout the meet- ing. Mrs. G. W. Paterson read the that the evidence against the two Scripturelessonand prayer was was so strong that- there offered byMrs. F. W. Currie. A accused was no reasonable doubt in his reading was given by Mrs, D. W. Worthy. At the close of the ad- dress a social half hour during which light refreshments were served was enjoyed by all. mind. YOU TELL US—WE'LL WRITE (St. Marys Argus -Journal) One of the best editorial writers of the more than 600 rural week- lies across Canada is Jim Green- blat, editor of the Swift Current (Sask.) Sun. In a recent- issue Jim handed out the following brutally frank and timely advice to crack- pots, chronic _grouchers, self-ap- pointed uplifte's, anonymous weak- lings andothers who have an axe to grind or -have a pet -theory to pass on to an innocent or' ignor- ant public -by sending their brain- storm to the editor to publish it just as it is written. Here is the Sun's comment, which more, mod- est editors might hesitate to pub- lish. APPRECIATION Town Council received a letter last Friday night from W. A. Coul- thurst, secretary of the Goderich Separate School Board expressing appreciation of the courtesy and consideration received from As- sessor William Sturdy in compiling a list of Separate School supporters for the board. Canada produces 4,200,000,000 adding machine and cash register rolls each year. During 1952 underground coal mine workers averaged 237 days of work. Every once in a while we get Anything a contributed piece of news along. A classified. with a notation by the free-lance reporter to: "Please print as writ- ten," or wording to that effect. And it never Jails to raise the hackles on the back of our neck. Sometimes we even get bawled out over the telephone by these re- porters for "tampering" with their brain-childs before we send them to the linotype. We admit that- we do tamper with them but have no apology to make to the writers for taking that privilege. What they don't realize is that newspapers copy must have a , stylized form and that- --all--"personalities"--must- --be I - left out. Writing it is far differ- ent than sitting ^down and penning a letter to Aunt Maud.-- When you do that, it's okay to insert "we,'' "everybody enjoyed themselves,'' and such descriptive phrases as "a lovely lunch," "speedy recovery," etc., but they have no place in newspaper reporting. Reporting must be objective, not personalized opinion. And_ that's why we reserve the right to use the editorial pencil. If you had a toothache, you wouldn't take it to a butcher; nor would you think of going -to a doctor for a knock in your motor. Our business is just as specialized, and yet it's the -one business that most people seem to know better than the folks who are eating from it. Don't get sore when 'the piece you send in comes out in print hardly recognizable with the orig- inal copy. Just remember we have doctored it up in more prese{1t- able form. • After all, that's . what we're here for. to sell? Anything! ad brings results. a ONLY Deepfreeze Refriger- ator 'has the Genuine Deepfreeze Freezer Com- partment! • Stores more than 50 lbs. of, frozen food, and actually keeps ice cream bird. Separate freezer shelf for ice cube trays and dessert tray. Full. width Frozen Storage Drawer. FREEZERS ONLY Deepfreeze Refriger- ator has "The Door that Stores More!" • SOTTLSTOR holds tall quart beverage and milk bottles! • EGGSTOR keeps eggs handy, protects them from breakage 1 MADE BY THE MAKERS - OF GENUINE DEEPFREEZE HOME SMALL DOWN PAYMENT — EASY TERMS WILF. REINHART ELLel RIC and 79 HAMILTON ST. GODERICH TELEVISION 133 -DOWNIE ST. STRATFORD Canada's prairie provinces are part of a plain that reaches from the Gulf of Mexico to the Arctic Ocean.—Quick Canadian Facts. The first explorer to travel through the North-West Passage was Raold Amundsen, of Norway, in 1906.—QQulck Canadian Facts. • G. M. ROSS Representative` Spree /889 • NERDGlf F/CE'M'ATERLOO.ONTARIO ERB ROSS Says: What about, you! When are you going to let up — and what with? You'll want" to retire from the grind some day — let's talk over a retirement plan which will replace your income when you receive your last pay, cheque. Goderich - Ontario G-IIIFir RIFEWITH THIS WASHER ONE INCLUDES HOMESPUN ALL WOOL BLANKET ONE HOMESTEAD DOUBLE SHEET- AND TWO PILLOW CASES TWO • BATH TOWELS TWO CALDWELL GUEST TOWELS AND TWO FACE CLOTHS Matched Solid rows in o varl.tr of cot.ws. Automatic Washer FREE 10 -PIECE GIFT - $ NUS ENSEMBLE, AS ABOVE, WORTH At US Ates AtUs F. 30.00 TRADE-IN ALLOWANCE sio FOR OLD WASHER, UP TO NO DOWN PAYMENT --EASY TERMS Features you cannot get on any other Automatic Washer. WATER SAVING — The Beatty uses less than HALF as muck hot water as any other automatic. REQUIRES NO INSTALLA- TION — Hydroflex Damp Dry squeezes the water out — no spinning, no vibration, no bolting needed. WASHES CLEANER. Uses Beatty Agitator method which will wash cleaner than any, other, anywhere. SKELTON Hamilton St. Photle Sew". .