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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1954-01-21, Page 4° `Ss ODS ON RACKS--DiSCONTS.O0 $0%, p%,. and 21494, 'IA BOOTS; SHOES and 0.1PPERS QN SHELVES DISCOUNT OF s -s SOME WATERPROOFFOOTWEAR ON SALE .ikOV ARE AS WELCOME TO LOOK AS TO laLlY-4 COME IN. AND LOOK AROUND( DOUBTS ON •HEALTH INSI4R- •- ANCE • (Calgary Herald) • . Yu any event, we are not at all sure that the need for a national -health service is as pressing as MANCE AND INSURE your aext new or late model; ear, truck or farm machinery at lower cost through Harold W. Shore TNSURANCE .AGENCY "All Lines of Inaurance" 38 HAMILTON ST. PHONE 766W Leans also arranged on 1946 and later model cars. 6tf some people suggest About 40% of all Canadians are now covered by- voluntary schemes of one kind - and another: group insurance, Blue Cross and the rest. What is to, stop 'the- other 60% following their example; and if the 60% refuse, why should the .40% be compelled to contribute to a na- 493 WI s ,14.4P • 1110Se SinPS 74. MOTriiien7t ans, ' -0-1111-cf 0 ,Since the wittia,..tdipo were.lip, mobilizers ;. -.. .., ...., •Coincident with, tie expansinn in size. was .an eV5slelit _increase in eXPenience and etAcieneY, achieved largelysihrough an 4rstensive •Pro- 'g-rana of training carried out during the year both at sealand aelaore. ,2 Ships,. currently in coinnai.ssien include an aircraft carrier, tikes crOisers, eight destroyers, one des stroyer escOrt, five. frigateS, four minesweepers,. five eoastal escorts and 16 nuscellandotis craft. The minesweepers are, the first of 14 new construction 'sweepers due to be completed by next summer, Six of these willi,ge to France ,under the Mutual Aid-agrees-dent:7 Ships hit "Reserve Besides those ships in service, th.eNavy has another 58 hi reserve. Twenty of these have been modern ized and most of the remainder are in varying stages of modern- ization. Addiitional ships, includ- ing an aircraft carrier, 14 destroy- er . escorts and. an Arctic patrol vessel are under construction, with the Arctic patelaIrshin_ scheduled! to complete in the spring of 1954. There are also nine naval ships, including three frigates, on loan to other government departments. By the end of 1953, tjaere were 16,887 Officers, men and Wrens on full-time naval duty. This was tional scheme, in addition to the twO-and-a-half times the personnel private scheme to which they .be- strength of the RCN hirDecember,, long, merely to ensure that the 1947 60% who now refuse to take these precautions can be compelledby law to do so? " 'or let there be no doubt: a national health insurance scheme, like unemployment insurance, would be compulsory. Everybody would have ' to belong, It would destroy many of the voluntary or- Canadian destroyer, HMCS Atha- tanizations now in existence, it baskan, has three complete tours . Mere than 3,500 of the Navy's. .Officers and men are veterans of service in the Korean- theatre, where Canada" continties to mainz.` tain three destroyers, despite the truce. This has been a continuous ;commitment almost since the be-• glasnling of hostilities, and one would inflict unnecessary burdens on those who have already provid- ed against sickness, and it would put a premium on improvidence. Now isthe tine to have your grain cleaned for sod. • the cleaning plant operator Can doa better job when he is not rushed, Many plants -.offer discount'..on cleaning la January and February. Seed drill surveys reveal thati one farmer in every four Imes Substandard (rej-Oted) seed. D'on't plant weds. -Mae-registered or certified grades -of the improved high yielding disease free,varieties suitable, to your district. .The seal of the bag is your insurance of quality, germin- ation and variety. r ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF AGRICIOIRE -3' of Korean &days totalling 341,s months, to her credit. Now serving in the Far East are the Huron, Crusader and Iroquois. The Iroquois is due to be relieved at the first of the year by the Cayuga and the Huron Will lye succeeded by the Heide. early in February. Training Cruises Units of the fleet not.comrnitted to Korean operations engaged dur- 'mg the year in a continuous series of training cruises and exercises. Notable among these w,,as NATO "Exercise Mariner," the largest maritime manoeuvres ever con- ducted. But the year's most ambitiOtik single undertaking for the RCN was the provision of a Coronation Squadron of six ships with itiOtel complement of more than 3,000' officers and men. Naval personnel else took- part in the Coronation 'procession, marching with the -tri-service Can- adian Coronation coetingent. and lining the street in the vicinity of Canada House. , It was an aetiVe_Year fornaval aviatiOn. Every opportunity was taken to carry out flying 'training -The' expansion of trahtig and ,from mites Magnificent. ir other operations at 'HMCS Shear- water, sthe RCN' Air Station at Dartmouth, N,S., resulted in the transfer of the '30th Support Air Group, with Its two squadrons of aircraft and- ground personnel, to Summerside, P.E.I. -Canada's first naval reserve air squadren was formed in 1953 at Toronto, and before the end of the year, there were two more, one at Kingston and the other at,Victoria. A forecast of things to come was contained in the announcement that arrangements were being made to purchase U.Ssmenufactur- ed Banshee all-weather_jet fighters. for the RCN. seParate Command • The importance ,Of the Royal Canadian Navy (Reserve) in Cali- ada's naval stru•ettire was empha- sized with the establishment at' Hamilton., of a separate command to administer the reserve. Re- serve' training Was carried' out in 22 naval divisions across' Canada. From a naval aspect, the year produced, numerous highlights. One was the cemmissioning ins -- February of HMCS Algonquin; former destroyer converted into an anti-submarine destroyer wort. ... .. . . s , . ,IIer intereOhg aitus.. 0 6met. Were tij Inotte,MIted 4. „ i .at0 selss-411-e'lltatOnians TO to aa Lalraolass-Theees-Wersesib .:' rAt,ssOf' 16 f#P..Ags 4.0....Pe ..XeMait, sa#0....res ;6,4*Opped to. inea Pregel*C14`'' Fp- cipre4rieras._,, , In Octobes, the' Apt navel' tOrs pedo4te-be inanufacturest*CiOoda? Waal accePted_ for the RCN by -Vices "Achuiral Rssirsidifisigisy, Chief ef the Naval Staff,' at a Ceritinnny at: • One of the Haniilitnis.' l*nts ' of Qattastian - WeStinghouao IsiMited. The current., defence progranrite eludes torpedo c ontrastsa , Worth $40,000,000. . •-: , The navy's ahore. facilities were :naprOVedsand-expanded-Vad" 1953 saw, the completinns of large, Mod--; ern alien's accollamodation ble'eks at HMS l\Ladens the itelVBarraela at , Esquimat, B.C., and at FMCS Shearwater, the eaVal,air station. -;,. (WICK tANADIAN QUIZ' 1. Which province had the greatest, percentage gain in population from 1941 to 1951? ' 2. Which is our fastest -running wild animal? 3. In 1939, 658,114 Canadians were employed in (manufacturing., What is today's totara • 4. The eities-Of--Frederietott,-N.B,-- . Regina, Sask.; and Victoria, B.C., have what. in commen?• , • 5. Fedeisal government .taaF. r venue was $45. per capita..nas...... 1952 wes it $76, 192, $284? ANSWERS: 5. $284'per cepi/a in 1952. 3. Ahnost exaetik4Wice the 1939 total. 1. British (Selumbia, a gain of 42 per cent. 4. Facb is capital of its prov,ince. 2.' The pronghorn antelope. - - (Material sttpplied by the editors Qeick Canadian Facts, the hand book of facts about Canada.) 14.1P i'vs01414 VPPOe skortg00411,vrinirb,.ouov 0:.0040.0**‘"40), r, t o the farmer'S „calloused howl, It. a .,4n4 -+Pen upon as land Matf400d-ln,,poor i no .134en.0.10 • Itunting-fs-to-berlotindr-and---fop. " this reasOn, he hoIia tbekeY o treVAASing', gor;Arting in.his frOn1S er-sportarnensirsaonhave not he heen'tbe subieet (if*m,any a lengtbY ia just what fer a nlinlber -qr Years, but the Ple-a-san,tneSs: Jle 41glesift.16r- „en4.4un disePei011 in sportsme-Omeetlogs--siaenel0-11aave sanYa of rougb the us ,4",riner is e-jovingMan. t ir •;--0 stop in Oct -force -a --- pang rtY to retire . • MoreWean than insult—for that pass really 1S.—j snbiect would dssasipear agenda if only the individual Yortsrnafl would do some/011.4g about it. - ' - • . The sooner -the -sportsman gets out of the "nodding acquaintanee" 'e get. He kn9ws his pl kts and soon "No Euntine §igns'4 or:on the be:Turdsbeer-estamlijaillerlyrrsliir uesoli'.1,cieesnedoitt: court i "talked down ' by ,oself-styled, category 4 and places himself on an "big shots" from the nitY,Who ha all -year-round friendship basis with .very Jitte knowledge ofhis pro.. the farmer, the 'sooner he wilr-en., leafs an care nothing about them., joy better hunting. The farmer is 1/01114110rallY meet friendly overs the keeper of the key •.to good tures More than' halfway. But hunting. In fact, he holds the key .he'll stand just SO much high. to any hunting at al/. True,. all hutting and then .' the wild game belongs, . to the crown, key is. turned in the lock of hunf- but the control of most of its' ing Privileges and Mr. Discourteous habitat is vested in the owner or finds himself looking for ' other tenant of the land. The farmer can lock the door to all hunting on his land, or he can, as he ,us.. ually .does, •be exceedingly gener- ous with his hosratalxty. There is an easy approach to the of courtesy all of us have been use of the farmer's magic key. taught-any:way. hunting grounds. • The' matter of making friends with the farmer is an easy and pleasant. undertaking. A11 you have to do' is to practice the code Constables cliAnts WEITE and HALSTEAD, .of Hamilton, Ont., were moved to tears by a real -sob story. And they weren't< -the only ones. The entire police 'forcburst into tears when a tear gas bomb was recently let off by mistake in the garage at Cep:Carel Police Station. -The -bomb was let off by ,a mechanic who • mistook it for a signal flare: ..At the -time oflhe 1951 census than half a million trucks and ! Canadian automobiles. WAXMAN Salta AND AUTO 'WRECKERS PHONE 214 ALBERT T. NOW OPEN FOR BUSINESS 9 a.ra. to 5 p.m. 'BUYING SCRAP IRON, BRASS, COPPER and RAGS. ROR SALE; Good.,,,Used Auto Parts, --Piping and Iron. ' Under new management of-lVlogie Bros. 501116 Mimes spell magic. Hollywood is one. CiPital of the motion picture Industry , . city of make-believe . . Hollywood is always news. Ar,id the rePorteti who tells news of .the Capital best . . and most always first --is Louella Patrons. couella Parsonakeeps Seeders of The,Toronto;Dally Stir informed abotit what's happening in -Hollywood 'and what's going -ft hapen . . . new Ochres in the making . . new tiara "on .the way up." Louella, Partbns, "Star Of Hollywood. Columnists"' hes an ultimate atquairitariee With every -studio the ear and confidence of produceiVittectors and actors.' Louella really -takes"YOU behind the screen. Her report from 'Hollywood appears, in The, Toronto Dally.SrerY from • ,Prder The Star deliverel, to yOur,hOrea. „Carilair'300 a "aft- Rah* mart's' mons* LO • 6 *throbs • 6050 Yaiali .1200. t moans S. ts.2,5-- 0 TO THE VOICE or' TEMPER - *NCE An editorial in a recent issue of -the United' Church Observer, - although tOct tong_to_ vete in fia is well wiirth givin here in part. Twenty years ago crime in Ontario , was at a 'Wry, low "figure. Ac-, coirding to Government sta- tisties for 1933 the ratio of pop- ulation per 1000 committed for trial was 6.41 and sentenced to prbbn 4,14. . In 1934 there was an iniprovement, 6.91 com- ,5.82 convitted. In this year the Goverfitent announc- ed a Phial for 'open sale of beer..' Note the crime record from noir on. T.n 1936 the ratio was 6.52 and 4.43. By 1939...the figqes were 9.31 and 7.45. The second World Warsawa slight' ,lev- eling off to 6,89 and '5.01 in 1945. But _after the, war 'up went the figure's raiii4ty, 1946 -they were 7.17-ind By .1951, dpuble figures Were iiadvdi 'WU-and 8.86, 'Alms, according- to --Goverttt,nt's own fi,gures) criMe wh1�lwas stallo,,ivngrade4nt- 111.- 'Ott COISP-11,•‘ The instant yOzcl'14ee these 1954 Buicks, you'll know that some - think sen,afional hasIappened in putomobile..f3tyling. Here is4astirmore thakinthe usual model changeover. Here , is vastly more than could be done just by 'warming over %what Buick had betire, Here is 'something accomplished by going far beyoncLartful face-lifting. , ,Here is thatrarity of rarities—a completely' new line of automobiles. l' .. • ' . But Buick 'didn't sfop with the bolder, fresher, swifter -lined. beauty you see in raised -and lengthened fender sweep—in the huge and back -swept expahse of windshield—in the lowered roof, line -Lin the hbst of extra glamOr feature i of exieriormoogrmity. 1 They p$ all horsePoWers to thezhiehesi itt Buick histry'.- - They engineered a 'new y8 tot the lowpriced SPECIAL, so that no the entire Buickjine has iluick's fiiinous V8 etito. —and in the process, came Jap with new Power.Eea Pi ons 'that boost.gasoline,mijeage‘ in,every engine. 4 Great t!res ' They '' brought to market ,a- sparkling ,rieweomet - with , a , .fa.mous„name.,...tht„Tiack.,,C,E1`..T.T1111T--A.c..41. with phenomeiral,. horsepoyerfor,its weight, and price—a car:with more pure , ,, thrill. -Ter dollar than any Ihiick ever built. • ' 'i " • . Aii they did all this withotit change of. the price structure which, for years; has made ttiick the most popular.car'•at its ' price in the workt.,,,, ..,..,.._ -..?..i.wi,-. . We inviteyou to ozone in and inspect,these'great,..beauties,- , 'these great perforiners, these great buys. Then li;ou'll,, see why previewers are already saying, "Ituick's the Iteatitifuituyl" . INVEN,BETTER AUTOMOBILES ARE AUILIt----lifitci • ..,