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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1956-08-09, Page 6,..;Gra,, THE GODERICHSIGNAL-STAR TCA Stewardess is "MISS CANADA" Chaperon !iv-ic Ho A ene-rein m the wee g Cultural Fork :lam Four Lade The Dodgers c1 , 'anent champion tory over Satnia eic de+rich ed. ars • Miss Lou George, Trans-Ca.nad:,, Air Lines stewardess, -was selected as official chaperon to ",Miss Canada," Montreal's Dorothee ;Moreau. Mist George, a veteran of nearly 200 trans-Atlantic crossing::, accompanied this pretty red-headed beauty queen to England where Miss Moreau was given �u "screen tilt b? tbt' J. Arthur hank Organization. BAYFIELD BAYFIELD, IELD, Aug. 7.—On Friday afternoon, Trinity Church, Bay- field, Middleton's -and St. John's, Varna, ,held a delightful ,picnic at Jowett's Grove. Gaines and races were enjoyed by all, followed b'y supper. Miss Kay Reid, Windsor, is visit- ing her mother, Mrs. A. W. Redd, 4,1t their cottage. Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Paull, Lis- towel, spent the week -end with Mrs. R. H. F. Qairdner.. Mr. and .Mrs. E. A. Featherston left on Monday to spend a few days at Hamilton. Mr. Robert MacLeod, Byron, spent the week -enol with 'his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. L. H. MacLeod. Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Twentyman and family, Waukegan, Illinois, are spending their holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Paul Cleave. Mr. William McVittie, Byron, is spending a few days in the village. E. W. Oddleifson, London, spent the week -end in the village. Moe T. V. Hart and four child- ren, 'Tort Credit, are visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. Edighoffer. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Robbins, Detroit, are spending a week in the village. GODERICH GUN CLUB Out of 25: Chas. Prouse, 24; Bill Lumby, 24; Earl Doucette, 23; Jack Gilbert, 23; John Graham, 20. Squad two, out of 25: Hedley Prouse, 22; Chas. Brandon, 20; Oliver Prestap, 19; Ashley Gilbert, 18; Ben Goldthorpe, 11. Scores on doubles, out. of 24: Ashley Gilbert, 18; Hedley Prouse, 16; D. Epps, 15; Chas. Brandon, 15; Earl Doucette, 15; Jack Gilbert, 11. SEE YOUR SAVINGS `GROW AT AQP SUPER-RIGIIT QUALITY MEATS Grade A 21/2 to 3 -Ib average, for Frying or Broiling GI lets Removed CHICKENS Extra Lean Burnt Hot Dog Style WIENERS E 1 -Ib coil° pkg 33c Super Right Smoked !Undress SIDE BATON BOLOGNA CANNED GOODS SALE 1 -Ib pkg 59( 1-1b pkg 33c Green Giant f=ancy PEAS Oven Ready Essex ib 43c PORK SAUSAGE ie39< Wheatley Brand Cooked Silver Bass . Fillets 10-ozpkg47c Fresh Caught Lake Erie Silver Bass Fillets lb 47c SPECIAL! 4 15 -oz tins 69c . Deep Brown SPECIAL! LIBBY'S BEANS 415 -oz tins 59c Mitchell's SPECIAL!' APPLE JUICE 2 48 -oz t4 5 c Mowbray SPECIAL! CREAMED CORN 4 20 -oz tins 49c BAKERY SPECIALS Jane Parker BLUEBERRY PIE Jane Parker LEMON PIE Jane Parker SAVE 4o each 5 5 c SAVE 4o each 45c SAVE 10c ORANGE CHIIFFON CAKE each49c Jane Parker Cinnamon SAVE 2e BREAKFAST ROLLS pkg 27c rnEsII FUITS & VEGETABLES" Bradford Marsh No. 1 Grade Pascal, Large, Crisp, Sweet ELERY STALKS ;°R 19c radford March No. d Grade New Crop, Washed, Ready to Cook CARROTS 2;20 -oz cello pkgs. t California No. 1 Grade Girdled Seedless California Fancy Valencia, Size 110 ORANGES d�•4% GRAPES 1e19c Home grown Safari Items now at their Peak. Tomatoes, celery, green onions, green peppers, cucumbers, radishes; And lettuce Arriving fresh daily, DEEP CUT Heinz Cream of TOMATO SOUP Ann Page Homogenized PEANUT - BUTTER RITZ BRUIT COCKTAIL IPu dCWt4 of calve, Until Saturday, . Anot stt l itb,' 1,956. SPECIALS GAVE So 3 10 -oz tins 3 5c. SAVE 4m l&oz jar 29c SAVE 2o 8-o2 pkg 19c GAVE 4o 28--c z tin 39c er Markets tk tato «,Mp WOMEN'S COLUMN • BY MARY GUST MOVING DAY The major drawback to moving from one house to another is that you don't do it often enough. You stay put for years and years. And around you accumulates the great- est collection of stuffs—treasures you simply cannot live without. Packing time finds you surrounded. You begin to sort out those precious things. Suddenly a -great 'fight dawn. You find you can do without some of thein. You haven't room in the new house for all this. The junk pile begins to Sternly you repress .the feeling that half of the junk might Sternly you repress the feeling that half of the junk .Haight come in handy later on. It Haight, but you haven't used it for the past five years, so it is nut essential. So far so good! But you start at the pantry shelves. Reposing there is the set of china which great-aunt Mary Anne left you in her will. It's. frail stuff, too delicate for daily use. And there's the collection of cut glass, once fashion- able and still brilliant in the sunlight. These are nones- sentials—but do you trei, to find a sale for them? You do not! You wrap each piece tenderly in sheets of newspaper, and tuck them into metal tubs labeled "Handle With Care." Then, the books. Nobody around the house ever throws away a book—not even the pocket editions. So the shelves overflow, with everything from Elsie Dinsmore to Kon-Tiki. Ancient school books stand cheek by jowl with an encyclo- pedia and the Waverley novels. Nobody has openedthem since before the war, but in they go. Five cartons of books to be heaved around by ' the movers? Packing goes on like that for days. You begin to wonder if there isn't a trace of squirrel in your makeup—only a squirrel and a woman would hoard things at that rate. And as you tie the last rope around the last bulging box, knowing that you still have the job. of unpacking and stowing away the stuff, you line up a few good resolutions, chief of which is: "I resolve never to hoard again!" I Y ENTOitt COME UP WITH MANY . GADGETS Many a man has thought up some time -saving gadget but has failed to' tell other people about his idea and get the article patent- ed and into 'production. The Can- adian Inventive and Scientific As- s on tot is- a clear- ing house for inventors seeking to develop new products in Canada. Here are some of t,be promising gadgets invented by persons and awaiting industries to accept their ideas and get them into produc- tion: Aluminum stprm and screen that come in complete unit. Hinged at the centre, the window and screen are easily removable for cleaning. Invented by a Hamilton man. Brick and Stone Facing Machine that can be hooked behind a truck and which can process 7000 bricks an hour. The result makes a house look as thopgh it were built of stone instead of brick, yet it is v ' !heap: The .anadh ne_ is -avail- able for rental with exclusive :epee -141e uTe'tt$r--Iinven'-ed'. by a builder at Sarnia, Ontario, it is already operating there. A cheap, light, rotary plastic brush, whose bristles rotate rapid- ly under water pressure.- For washing cars. Invented by a New Canadian in Montreal. A simple device for raising grain flattened by hail, snow or rain. Invented by a 'Calgary man. A simple sucker device for at- taching extra electric light outlet~; to g wall. Invented by a Mon- trealer. A safe that immediately rings an alarm if its dial is touched by hand (the key must be used first). Invented by a Toronto locksmith. A deodorant device for garbage cans (fits under the lid). A steel "curly -cue" at the end of a rope that makes it unnecessary to 'tie the rope when tieing up a boat er towing a ca -r. Invented in Toronto: Asalt-shaker with a little pro- peller inside. If the salt cakes, press a button and propeller whirls. A German invention with Canadian manufacturing rights available. Hush-aphone. When you pick up the phone, no need to worry about a loud TV or radio set. They are automatically turned down. In- vented by a Toronto man. 4- GI 0 �.._ lnn fi SMOKING, Rods installed in furnace ex- haust stacks, incinerators and other air polluters promise to end the smog problem. Largely composed of alumina, the oxide of aluminum, the rods not only ignite waste gases but release heat that goes hack to work in the plant. In everyday items like aircraft, furniture and frying pans, and in many an unseen job as well, aluminum makes living more pleasant for all of us. In fact, Canadians have become the world's fourth largest per capita users of this modern metal. Our aluntiounn, industry not only supplies this horne market, hut is the largest exporter of alu- minutt1 for the Free World, too. ALUMINUM COMPANY OF CANADA, 1.7'13. 1A1 CAN) A Toronto woman should do well with a new type bobby put with a curl of hair a't'tached. Just put your hair in pin curls and not a bobby -pin shows. TO AVOID COMPLICATIONS, POS. BOARD SEEKS TO BUY OLD GCI Ll Town n Council okays the deal, Goderich Public School. Board will buy the old collegiate buiding for one dollar. The building, which will accommodate Sive publie school classeg this fall, is owned by the town at present. A change is desirable for elile- ieaacy's sake, Doff A'kterhatjt, chair -- man ef the board, told Council at' its August meeting. The Present set-up has resulted in numerous co nplicationss, particularly as re- gards insurance, he said. 11 Council will sell the building to. the board for one dollar,. the board will agree to return it for the same nominal fee when the school is no longer required, said Mr. 'Aberhart. Since four rnentbers of Council were absent from the meeting, no immediate decision was made on the board's request. The members present were Mayor JOE. liuckins, Reeve J. H. Graham, Councillors James Donnelly, C. M . Robertson and P. Walkom. Mayor Huckins, however, indic- ated that the proposal seemed logical tohim. Mr..Aberhart said it had been agreed originally that the old col- legiate building was to be turned over to the Goderich Public School Board for management. The .board was to be responsible for all ex- penses, .except major repairs. Difficulties When the board tried to have an agreement drawn up to that effect, certain dif'ficultie's were rotitght to light. "In case of a loss, it could run into all kinds of complication'," said Mr. Aberhart, "with the town owning it and the board atu'nning S. H. Blake, town clerk and treas- urer, wdndered who vv'auld be liable ,under the existing set-up, in event of injury to any individual as a result of, say,, a boiler ex plosion at the school. DON'T FORGET THE -BUFFET SUPPER AT THE SUNSET THIS SUNDAY NIGHT FROM 6.00 - 7.30. BRING YOUR FAMILY AND FRIENbS AND ENJOY THE FILMS AFTERWARDS. Sunset Hotel Goderich, Ontario No one appeared to know the exams answer to this, but Mayor`. Iiuckins said, "I would think our own comprehensive ,policy would cover any liability of that nature." To all appearances, the old col- legiate building will be used- to accommodate public school classes for several years'to come, said Mr. A'berhart. The building in' fair - T I SPAY, AltIOuST O1h, A3 ly gid she's, e, he added. The bpm gas 'tare w itseeed 'folk recently considde$0,000r'ed do blibut ngl this d Mount. o ---o .0 THE HELPING HANDS Mrs. L Jewell tea the Scrip- ture, Mrs. F. Lynch the readings, while prayer was offered by Mrs. E. Baechler. Two food .parcels were forwarded to England, and one given locally. Fifty-one shut- ins were visited; also btniq;tts of flowers given. Mrs. Baechler was presented with the monthly gift. LADIES! l THIS IS IT! The final cut on summer dresses. We have grouped the balance of our stock in these groups for quick selling. Group 1 $ 5 Reg. to $10.00 ,roups-7.48 Reg. to $15.0o. Group 3 s984 Reg. to $18.95 $5.00 $7.48 " $9.84 Boy 2 or 3 at these prices. Geo. W. Schaefer& Sons Phone ' 56 FOOD great' with ice-cold Coca-Cola Chicken Beef Burgers. (1 pound ground beef 1 Vs cup chopped onion 1 tbisp. prepared mustard 1 1014 -Oz. can condensed chicken gumbo soup 1 tblsp. catsup Brown meat and onion. Add other ingredients, salt and pepper to taste. Simmer over low heat about 30 minutes. Spoon into 6-6 toasted, 'buttered bunt; garnish. Serve at once with ice-cold Coke! Coca-Cola'pato sparkle into al? your . . summer meals. its delicious taste makes food more fun. Bring home the Coke today! -... and Coke -to but you at your sparkling best! SERVE, "Ccho- a 0 raoldarod ,rodo•oGQ. tl Goderich Bottling Works 55 Kingston St. Phono 489 'Atifitothefd Gaff? t to vtat4ea e'eMinmi wlhh ecce. solerhs