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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-03-10, Page 7'• "' - a • 12114a$DA' MOCH • c 4 tr. , • r• , r 4,1 IMAM, /104CITee—r • C „ Pritar-T, - aniumpar D.O. Doistor of Chiropractic. Office Hours; Mon„ Thurs —9 gem. to 5 an. Irri-9 a.m. to. 5 p.m. 7 p.9i. to 8 pie, Wed. & Sat. 9 to 11.80 a.m. Vitamin Therapy rner of ,glouth St.- and nnia Road. Phone 341. sasessiessesssiaseesseeeeesmasisessemseissee 1, 4; Wrn. M. Fred BARRISTER ,end SOLICITOR 31. HAMILTON ST. PHONE 1570 GODERICH A. L COLE • OptometrIst—.Optician • Eyes Examined, Glasses Pined Phone 33 Goderich, Ont. HAROLD JACKSON LICENSED AUCTIONEER HURON AND PERTH Seaforth Phone 11-661 or Harry Edwards, 431ederieb ' Phone 144 ••••••••••••••,' FRANK REID ME UNDERWRITER Life, annuities, business in- surance. Mutual Life Of Canada - Phone 346 . Church 1St. A. M. HARPE • Chartered Accountant 39 West St. Goderich Phones: Bus. 343 House no 0. F. CHAPMAN General Insurance FireAutomobile, Casualty Real Estate 30 Colborne 'St, Goderioh Phone 18w =WARD 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 satisfae- tion Guaranteed. F. T. Armstrong orrommusT Ebone 1100 for appointment SQUARE GODERICH • • WHEN YOU .0, THINK OF —INSURANCE SEE H. M. FORD Get Insured—Stay Insured Rest Assured Bank of Com. Bldg. TELEPHONE 268W Geo. G Madwan GENERAL INSURANCE- , MASONIC TEMPLE WEST STREET Peter S.. MacEwan General, Life, Real Estate Phone 230, 'Goderich 3. 'osarrii rams* 44TOREIP r0:44.W The •X.00,11,141" CrOe.t4P0 oXMug Water Chapter No., 284, orlor the Eastern Sttar,. was heldsin the. ,asseMbilY hall of the Masonic'Tem- ple on NJ/est street, Goderich; on Wednesday evening, Mach 2, with the 'customary opening, The Worthy 1Vlatrorc,-IVIrs. Mabel Walkoma.presided over 'the• IWO- neas session and reports -of various comMittees Were given. Alter the closing a social time was spent, during whieh the draw for the -blankets was conducted, the paize winners being- Mrs. Lottie Ansa Shirley Benjanun arid Miss Judy Westbrook. /mach was serv- ed to the 60 members present by the committee, under, the conven- ership' of Mrs. J. Robin. DESERTER REMANIMD • TO AWAIT SENTENGE A ' *year-old Canadian Army deserter from Ottawa was rerkatid- ed to jail for one week to await sentence when he appeared before Magistrate D. E. 'Holmes in court here last Thursday and Pleaded guilty to a 'charge of theft. Henri Frederick- was charged with having stolen clothing and cads, loatheavalue ---of $125, the property of Archie Hetherington, Usborne Township. Crown Attorney H. Glenn Hays told the court the accused had been employed at the Hethering- ton farm. He had been appre- hended in Perth, but the money and clothing were not recovered, Frederick had deserted the army, the crown attorney said, and the Provost Corps was seeking his return. God's lake in nartheraaManitoba, southwest of Fort Nelson, has an area of 320 square miles. n 'Copenhagen, capital of Denmark, showed a population of 974,000 in the 1950 census.. •111111111111.116111111•11111.1f /Fr may you - never iearn Only thOse stricken by war, disas- • ter, or other tragedies know at first hand how vitally essential Red Cross services ate to our na- tion. Tliose of us Who, mercifully, have not learned from grim ex- perience may Well to Ell the elliCOSS • Consaroessiya . 5507 $45 494 100 is needed this year StilesiAmbulance (formerly Cranston's) Anywhere -a- Anytime • PHONE 399 77 Montreal St., Goderich Falls o e nto r 4r, • , . (Fre* lin The Days Of The Canada tonsiitenr) - (Continued from lastweek) The letter from "A Euron," fol- lowing Mr. Hyndanan'd, is not ao Peaceable in tone.„ He calls upon the press and people to,be still on their guard: "Let them bear in mind that one-seventis part of Upper Canada hes been most unfortunate- ly left to the tenderMercies of this grasping association . and • sending their money out of the province . . thrusting their into the Legislature, and mag- istraey of the -Country, they employ partieS exceedinglsavvell paid, sur- rounded by hosts of tools and parasiteas men tied by the teeth, who follow their employers as the crow follows the carrion." . Apparently the press at that time did not make use of the editorial blue 9eneil. Everywhere the tone Is the sane. A !paper conteniaiorary with the British Col- enist says of a rival editor, "He is a smart Wigs -chap, about the size of a stunted mosquito. with the amiability of a porcupine and the politeness of the great white bear. He has the whole wisdom, of the country under Ills tongue, which is placed on a Pivot in the middle and talks at both ends." So far there ,was no public de- fence of the Company, of which Dunlop was a member and which. he • must have Heard roundly abused in his own house and all along his country side. He pre- • pared a document for publication, a copy of - which we here give; but far some unknown reason it never saw the priater's office, and the intended public vindication lies a tattered, discolored relic in pale blue paper and browned ink* *Since, writing the ahove it tran- spires that the, document did see printers' ink, and provoked :much comment and debate in the House and out of it. A number of valu- able papers found -since this chap- ter was in type throw a good deal of light on Huron complexities and Dr. Dunlop's ability to -Main- tain his ,own side of an argument, however much his point of view might change, from time to time. In 1845, Conamissiaper Widder, in a "memorandum Thr the •informs Ronald G. -McCann PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT Phones: 561-455 Office: Royal Bank Building • Res: Rattenbury St. CLINTON ONTARIO • • toot* me fox) mow 111.1.0"1/1F0 REP4Ms 12 PROMPTLY AT NEED CASH t6 ea' airor 'pay , imesat where it's "yes" to 4 ort • the clown puyotOttiOiL a il�pu3.. of 5. No bankable security re- • repair or fEruititti &Alt 'Payitient Oittired. Matierfiroffiei and 0, 0.. • • • • on an dutO • or for 46Y Methods- -aasUre • worthy purposes? Get that cath proMptly at ••41.6ans.$50.10..$1100Lon,fil ter. '01:41040' *entice. Phone, write, or v#m-in tOtlay. • Alit* 1LLJ• r r LIKES 10 SAY Y(5' FINANCE CO.. tsysviim - ' 2nd Floor tOn Phone: '*<1;..13)1'4iltitoSaturday . Conley,1:444.6r141. Open, DallY 9 to 5 11g#00!#0!1?:Y9 .r. (Mitt inns residents fit nil onalifitHng *yin risme- • • -.VR•hnho eke& le SHIFT THRU THE ? NC, You cagiqof a • // • IF you hei ALL»1 These days most people work widern pressure, worry more, sleep less.'Irhis--- strain on body and brain makes physical fitness easier to lose—harder to regain. Today's tense living, lowered resistance', overwork, worry—any of these may affect normal kidney action.- When kidneys get out of order, excess acids andwastes. remain ihn the system. Then biickache, diiturhed rest, that "fired -out" heavy - headed feeling often follow. That's the time to take Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's stimulate the kidneys ..to normal action. Ten you feel better—sleep better—work, better. Ask for Dodd's Kidney Pills at any drug counter. • 53 ation of the Legislative • Coupe* of Canada, in reference to the Can: ads -Company's position with Ow Municipal Obadtrict Council a the Haron District; to - which is ap- pended the defence 04 the Canada Company .by Dr. Dunlop, says: "Dr. Dunlop made an attack upon the Company in his speech at the Assembly last month, which was ealtulated to create a strong prejudice against-. the , Company and the more mischievous and un- fair; because he was the only per- son present who knew -that his charges were unfounded." A note to the memorandum says:' "Whip memorandum and Dr. Dunlop's de- fence ofsthe Canada Cotmpany had not, unfortunately, reached Mon- treal when the debates on Dr. Dunlop's bill took place • in the Legislative Council, otherwise it is believed that the sentiments ex- pressed by some honorable mem- bers would have been very differ- ent from what they are reported to have been." "The Canada Company" "Moralists and casuists in all ages have held that man is an un- -charitable and vindictive animal - This is true to a certain 'extent, but not by any means to the extent that these gentlemen would :have us suppose. When neither re- spect, nor fear, nor envy have a sway in his mind, man is as for- giving an animal as .could well be • desired. The knave is forgiven his crimes when they. have safe-, , ly conducted him to the gallows— (forgiven byall, from the tender- hearted girl who weeps the un- timely fate of a 'proper young man,' to the stern judge- who- sea: Sons the unpalatable condemnation of his perishable and worthless body with an emphatic prayer for the future welfare of his precious and immortal soul; from the khid- hearted - prosecutor whom a sense of duty compelled to bring him to justice, to the mawkish, ,maudlin parson who records .his exemplary penitence and the pleasant frame of mind he exhibitedabetween the sentenee and execution, for the edification, as the indictment hath it, 'of all persons • in like case offending,' and who proves to the satisfaction of all whose hearts are not hardened by, common sense that the prophet Balaam was a much greater ass than that on which he rode when he prayed that he 'might -die the death of the righteous and his latter end be like unto his,' seeing that had he lived in these enlightened times he must have known -that he might .have rioted in sin and self-indulg- ence until within twentystour hours of his death, and then, by the help of an evangelical parson; have died a death of confidence and assur- ance in salvation more firm and sure than the majority •of the righteous ever are favored withal. "But human forgiveness; like all sublunary things„, hath a limit; and whatever remission may be bestowed on crimes and follies, the : world knows none for that greatest of sins in its decalogue, 'Success. If Prosperity conies by good . for- tune it produces simply envy, and the arrow that wounds carries its salve along with it, "We -may remark that there is special -providence whichavatches over and ,protects the interests 04 fools, ;and we humbly thank God that we are not one of the corpor- ation who enjoy such an enviable privilege; but where prosperity arises from conduct and judgment, gall is added tosbitterness, for the very fact infers a superiority in the offending party; which, as it lowers us in our own ,estimation, inflicts the deadliest wound on our own self love, whit& is, of all 'parts 04 our moral organization, the most sensitive and easily irritated. (Continued next week) .11111111IMINIM11111•1111.1.1111011 CEMETERY MEMORIALS T. PRYDE & SON 4 EXETER LOCAL REPRESENTATIVE— GODERICH ALEX SMITH 146 ELGIN AVE. • PHONE 158 as near as your telephone 4, 4.4 A COMPLETE TRUST SERVICE IN WESTERN ONTARIO Call RAYE PATERSON, Trust Officer Hensel!, Ontario, Phone 51 For 4, *Estate Planning Wills • Real Estate Services; • Investment Management and Advisory Service I - Er 33/4% Guaranteed Investments • 21/2% on savings—deposits may be mailed Or Contact Any. Office Ol GUARANTY TRUST, 'COMPANY OF CANADA .Taronto-,i. Montreal • Ottawa., Windsor --Niagara Valls * Sudbury Sault Ste. Marie • Calgary .4 Vancouver .• "ra 'aka Official first day of Spring is March 21st. The breezy picture above will remind you of Spring days to come—soon—we hope! 8 fen. • SPIL Buildinglood Citizenship on the Farm! -Better citizens for Canada is and the 10 provincial -departments the prime objective of 4-H club work and with 9,000 community - minded eitizeps giving voluntary assistance and increased parent In- terest during the past year, the annual report presented atthe twenty-dourth annual convention of the Canadian Council on 4-41.1.Clubs in Toronto on Tuesday indieates considerable progress toward this goal. Since the council was formed in 1931, membership in 4-11 Clubs in Canada's .10 provinces has, more than trebled until nowsaitsstanda at close to 70,000. Rural boys and girla up to the age of 21 who are able to undertake a definite pro- jeet of Urn- own either on the farm or in theAfarnri home can become a menilber and while the 4 -II motto, "Learn to do by Doing" has not changed, more emphasisIs being placed on training for citi- zenship. • By purchasing and raising their own 'livestock, by buying certified seed and raising an acre of grain or garden produce, by accepting responsibility at home and by member -parent 'partnerships these 'Young people are acquiring tech- nical skills and knowledge that will equip them to be of greater service to agriculture. But more than, that, because of the greater emphasis on tother -things and the variety of trained leaders, most of them voluntary, these rural youth are developing the special talents and abilities that will make them •leadeas in all walks of life in Canada. Al- though the council is only enter- ing its twenty-fifth year, former 4-11 club members can already be found as successful business and professional men and women and leaders in their 'communities. • The annual report Also indicates the 'Canadian Council On 4-11 Clubs is in a healthy situation financially. Revenue -comes from the Canada Brewers Bearing Gifts The subtlety of the serpent is shown in :the way the breivers train their public relations men. In one brochure issued for their guidance there are no fewer than 134. special d and events listed. On these • occasions the smooth brewery agents, polished off by courses of training in public re- lations, very pleasing in person- ality, will play their unobtrusive part. A few,words here, some co- operative there. Perhaps a little financial! • assistance; • possibly a little entertainment. The pres- tige and standing of the Trade is thus definitely and eaggy enhanced, for there are found few to pro- test. In fact many respeetable but unsuspecting people actually applaud these brewers' agents nearing gifts. Thli advertisement ,aponsored • by Huron -County TemPerence Federetion, .• 'of agriculture (approximately one- half of its annual income from governments), from 32 business Companies and 12 national farm organizations. ' A. large portion of the council's budget (approximately one-quarter) goes to finance National 4-H Club Week held in Toronto at the time of the Royal Agricultural Winter Fair. In 1954 there were 116 young people competing in nation- al judging contests and the many other „,Faried activities that pack Largest known natural bridge, the Rainbow bridge in 'Utah is 278 feet wide at a height Of 300 'feet over a stream, •ScA)re TOP PrYde. foram...On1 told, • the entail/legislature on Weil.` nesday of last weekthat the pre. sent- syStem 04 grantitig old age pensions...at 65 on a means test basis was putting "a premium on idleness and penalizes -industry and thrift." He Said single people receiving old age assistance between 65 and 7() should be allowed incomes 04 $840 and married persons 0;440 a year. "We have a very high standard of living in this *provinee and to say that a single person must not have a total income of more than $60 a mopth to qualify for old age assistance or disabled persons al- lowance is not realistic," he said. of have no hesitation in suggest- ing that the permissible total in- come under both acts should -be increased to $840 for a single person and $1,440 for married, The -originaS habitants of Quebec , were feudal tenants with holdings averaging from 100 to 400 acres. i '• 5! d�ing soine in. ,0 , , quite # le' .. . yr* . do ' c .for •akum.4'4"43toar rirdlienielts':stit 4 '4# dustily. land thrift," bo, said.:relay ofd reit"isitbyvatiwir 4,04tbece4,eey - ,without being 'PeziallzOd; tt.43;B:!:!41!:!!!!!!!;::::: lost The strength to do so." lSpeth dPrieltalitee',„,44411111:40' at measures were the joint re-, i .ibility of both Provincial and Fed- eral ,governments "and' in the tor, terests ofuniformity we have to raotio• artiosnglowrmithubttheed iadteasotittawdaer.. gw. h• :44 • ,.i.Last of the "Fathers of Confedott atonP•to dieWas Sir Charles Tep per, who died- in England in at age 94. Take no more chances with unidentified fuels FINISH THE WINTER WITH lue coal' THE COLOR GUARANTEES THE QUALITY • Don't take a chance -with fuel or weather! Replenish your bin NOW with 'blue coal'. Come snow, cold or a bitter temperatures, you'll be all set with a fuel •you KNOW will give you better heat, more economy, more. satisfaction, more value for every cent spent! , Order now! Get acquainted with a ,fuel that takes every risk out of coal buying --`blue coAl' is colored BLUE—your, identification, your protection, your guarantee of the world's finest anthracite. .FOR LOW COST AUTOMATIC HEATING Cut down basement trips ... sae fuel, money, time, trouble . . . with the 'blue coalTemPMaster. "Electric Eye" thermostat regulates dampers from liv- ing room ... gives you simple, inexpen? sive, automatic heating day and night. • Order blue coal' now THE EDWARD COAL CO. PHONE 98 "THE HEAT FOLKS" VO GODERICH NOTICE TO MOTOR VEHICLE. OWNERS AND DRIVERS Tuesday, March 15th, 1955, is the last day upon which 1954 motor vehicle and trailer registration plates may be used. It is also the date of expiration of all 1954 chauffeurs' and operators' licences. Secure yoUrs at mice • • • ONTARIO DEPARTMENT OF IlIGH AYS Hon, Jas. N. Allan, Minister. 4