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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1958-04-24, Page 9TliY, ABRITE4 2,1th,' 1 D.; s y old Goderich youth who pleaded rinking ,, Drivers guilty to Impaired driving, was sentenced te_1( days in jail. In passing sentence,, the magistrate GetJag •said he -was taking into consider ation 'tire. fact that the Youth had. served seven days in jail last year, Two drivers, who admitted drink -.on a drunk driving conviction. • w e��LI�' t.��Q i:i�� Y� a��.re , .��ho:.ek:e � K lta ;ergh hursday *as -laid after police saw n d 'Liman.nMelean a 19 -year- ing ,a car in oderi h An April 1 2, LOYAL PROTECTIVE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY SPECIALIZING IN INDOME PROTECTION J. A. MacDONALD, representative PHONE SEAFORTH 254 -17z The car was registered in the name of another person... said ,Crown At- torney .Ii. Glenn Hays.– ,George Eiays.-,George. Moore, of Dungannon, was sentenced to seven days. in jail when he pleaded guilty tp drunk driving. Ue was ordecd to pay court costs. or serve seven more ,M:.I,Rhta .- en a ;e. Mr. Moo wasc arged following' an offence in Asttiield Township on March. The " truck he wile driving ha -both doors open and was weaving from one side of the road. to the other, according to a crown witness. A blood test on' the accused showed 2:2 parts alcohol per 1,000. Ronald Osbaideston, 19, of Gode- rieh, was fined, $15 and costs for careless driving. A car driven by the youth was ah collision with a truck near the' railway tracks on the fourth concession of Goderich. Township on the night of March 28. Kenneth Hartwick, of Exeter, also pleaded guilty to careless driv- ing. He was fined $10 and cysts. Iartwick was charged following an offence in Exeter on March 30. Archie Armstrong, 83, of R.R. 3, Bayfield, was 'fined five dollars for failing to have a license plate on his trailer. The charge was laid by Ontario Provincial Police. The next total eclipse of the sun will be October 12, 1958. FIONF Th�gks, Goderich CANCER and District with a check-up and a cheque Oii4iVoW! YOUR DONATIONS TO THE CANCER FUND DRIVE WERE APPRECIATED. CANADIAN CANCER SOCIETv If you were not at home when a canvasser called, you may leave Your ,donation at any of the local branches' of banks up until April 30th. MAJiK HELESIC .,The appointment of Mark Helesie as a representative of Thomas Adams Distillers Limited has been announced by C. D. Wilson, Ontario sales manager of the com- pany. From 1944 until joining Thomas Adams Mr. Helesic served with the Canadian Army in Europe and Korea. ITe will make his headquarters in London. LEON MAJOR WINS AWARD Mr. Leon Major, 25, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Major{ of Gode- rich; has received a-'$2,600 Canada Council award. Mir. Major, at present studying drama in England, was recom- mended for the award while serv- ing as an adjudicator and drama critic for the Ontario Department of Education. He graduated from the University of Toronto in 1955. _� While in Toronto m 1956, -Mr: Major produced the play "Teach +Me How To Cry." He will produce the same play, renamed "Noon Has No Shadow" this summer in Eng- land. (Mr. Major who telephoned his ```other here from London, Eng- land, to tell her about the award also intends to study in Frani:T. Chances -are you'd have to sit down and figure out the answer: Farming today -is a highly coniplex business .. , it's no longer possible tb carry all the facts and figures in your head. That's why the B of M's Farm Account Book is so popular. It offersfarmers a.simple, yet comprehensive, book-keeping system to meet their special needs. By spending a few minutes each day or so, you'll know at a glance the over-all financial position of your farm which operations are paying off —• which are only breaking even —.and which are even losing money. - Why not put the B of M's Farm Account Book • to'work for you? You'll wonder how you ever got along without it — especially when income-tax time rolls 'round'next year. WITH BIU.., SMILIEY Do you have Tension? If you don't, ,your either dead or a com- ,plete"moron. * . *'• That' is, if you listen to all the people playing the latest national game. They play it with all the verve, and with the, same blithe ignorance of the rules, with which they once played Chitd Psychology. If you have a sore back, it's caused by nervous tension. If your feet swell up, ditto. If your eyes hre bad, same deal. It's not really your vision, it's just nervous ten- sion.. Sheer tension makes you smoke one cigarette as fast as you can, so you can light another. * • . * * ��..�•.;., If you belch after meals, it's be; cause you're tense. If you drink too much, it's tension that's driving you to it. If you yell at your kids, it's because you're too tense. And if they yell back at you, it's because they're so tense because you yelled at them. • * * * If -"you suddenly start sneezing, as I did recently, it's not hay fever. It's an allergy set up by tension. Only trouble is; the Tension Ex- perts can't tell you what you're allergic to: I noticed that every time I got to work, and every time I got' home, I sneezed like mad. This could only mean 1 was aller- gic to my job and my family. * * * As_ 1 am net. quite at the point yet where I will give up both with- out a struggle, I refuse to get on this tension kick with the rest of the amateur nerve specialisfs. Per- sonally, 1 think this tension busi- ness is a little ovOrdone. Certainly, we live in a rather troubled, excit- ed and fast-moving society, but a little tension never hurt anybody. * * * Oh, I don't mean the ordinary, fretting, twerpy little tensions. Like wondering what your wife is going to say when you've been out long past the allotted our, and have had more than the allotted number. Or the slight tightening of tendons in your neck as you drive in heavy., traffic --With-your kids fighting and screaming in the back seat. That's the kind of stuff that could drive a fellow to sneez- ing, wildly, or belching between courses. * *, $. What I mean is the grand, rare, tension that is like a purgative, a cathartic, that drives . out' all thought and feeling and leaves you laxed. Tha s the sort of thing it of s a bef i loosener-upper than a half bottle of whiskey • followed by a brace of sleeping pills. * * * We've all had experiences like this. Even remembering some of mine makes me nice and floppy and relaxed. Like the night the town cop turned the flashlight on a bunch of us when we were prun- ing a few cobs of corn out pf a felloW's garden, so the rest would have a ' better chance to grow, Twelve seconds later .d was three fences, four 'back yards, and a block away,. hiding under our front ver- andah. Tension loaned me wings, on that occasion. By the next morning, I was as relaxed as you please. s, * 'Speaking. of wings recalls an- other example of tension's bene- fits. enefits. It was one day in..France, in 1944, and I was trying to land an aircraft from the right wing bf whick tangling°---ga-lly-°:.ttryiFt ", caught -u p, fused, 1000 -pound bomb. Tense? 1 thought I'd die! * * It was roughly similar to driving - a car down the highway at 80 miles an hour, with no wheels on the left-hand' side—mostly a matter. of will -power. But good old tension pulled me through. I made it. And o when I climbed out of that thing, I was so relaxed, it took two men to hold me up. * * * And so it goes. Pay no attention to the Nervous Tension• artists, with their new toy. Put it to work for you. Tension is like rare wine, if used on the right occasions, in the right quantities. * * *. Take last Sunday afternoon, for example, when I took Kim and Hugh perch fishing. Did I get a headache when they spilled one bottle of pop and one box of pop- corn all over the back seat? Well, a little, one. 'Did I get an acid stomach when Hugh slammed -the car door on the tip of my spinning rod? Maybe just a trifle. * * * But 1 didn't let it throw me. 1 put tension to work. The fourth time I took our three lines out of the water, inextricably interwoven, I ,just let the tension roar through me, took my knife, calmly cut the three lines, threw the worm can in The river, the kids in the car, and felt great, relaxed and happy, all the way• home. The W4�.►�.. , of Ino, '1 esbytelra ian Church held their April, meet,. �GM'Gi w�..yyyy 'FL y }�k T+he.. president, Mrs.' G. Schaefer, opened the meeting with prayer, and presided for the business ses- sion;. Thirty-six hospital calls' and 19 home calls were reported, and a .thank -you 'letter was read from Mrs. J. E. Whiteley, one of the oldest members, who has been a shut -‘in' a l winter. Members were asked to bring the contents of their blessing boxes to the May meeting. It was an- nounced that !Mrs. J. Bosveld and Mrs. S. Blake, were the delegates to the Synodical meeting to be held in Leamington. Mrs. R. Wilson presided for the devotional period, when' prayer was offered by IMiss Gracey. The Scrip- ture lesson and meditation was read by !Miss (Matheson. Five minutes of current events provided interesting items on the work of*the Bible Society in Can- ada and overseas. A lovely solo was sung by 'Mrs. J. Bisset with Mrs. G. F :11111 as accompanist. The guest speaker was Miss M. ,Davies; who gave an interesting addres3 o> a bellinninirOf deac- oae.ssaw:o �h a vow States et Inked the StIMak, Por and all who took ,part in the program :and a tocia1 haif ,hot was enjoyed. r MRS. NELSON AO The death occurred at the r si deuce of her daughter at ,tendon on Apt;ilt 116; of -Mis. °Nelson;, Arm- strong, 285: Ingerso l avenue, Wood- stock, formerly of Auburn and Goderich, in her 78th year. Porni- erly Caroline Youngiilutt, she was a daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. Warner Yoongbltitt: Born in Iiul lett Township, she had resided the Auburn, district- and Goderich until going to Woodstock 30 years ago and had been residing with her daughter, .Mrs. Orval (Miller, at London' the past three months. - Her husband predeceased her in 1925. Surviving. are two sons, Ernest, of Minorite, and Clarence, of Woodstock, and two daughters,. WO.' fur" "•(Verna) of l'oodatoe, a�n.,d rs delene,� �a a 'here. 3are as Anne �k . of Catharine<.' utch, of Curl arl Margaret A.rtinir and s,, i Bea, est 't '.ofAuburnP anito a. There are ljevalul *l ` childr 1, ,end; sem . Src t.gr w children - The funeral at the' D. Mac) !Smear fun•etrat home Woodstockc, on Satur mo..'. g. at .1a1. a.m, Tnterinent, made in Maitland cemetery,. Code.. rich. Rev. Norman Lange: oI Bethany Lutheran ,church, Wood- stock, officiates • ZONE MEETING Election of officers and directors will take place when the id -Wei ern Ontario Development Associ- ation hold# its Zone I meeting at - the Town Hall, Clinton, on Friday, April 25, at 8 p.m. 'Mere will also be a discussion of zone and muni- cipal unicipal matters. WHAT DOCTORS SAY ABOUT. Asthma and Emotions A "Canadian grown Corn especially developed for Canadian clihiatic conditions. See Your Local Dealer For the • Right Variety For Your Farm Q. Are diseases sucfl as asthma ever due to 'emotional upsets? A. In most cases of asthma and other allergic conditions, some•,type of sensitivity or al- lergy can be found. How- ever, the healthy body funct- ions as• a unit with each or- gan working as smoothly as a well-oiled machine. ' Put sand in the machine or load a person with emotional gra- vel -and things soon -get out of kilter: –This- does- not mean that asthma sufferers need treatment for mental troubles in order to get well but out- look or attitude can be an im- portaat fat for in many dis- eases. • Material in MEDICAL MIR- ROR is based on the published findings of, various doctors. Reader's • uestio s are wel once an • w • e answered ano- nymously in this column whenever possible. Letters can not be answered individ- ually. Mail ► should be ad- deessed to • Dealer`: GERALD WALTER, R.R. 1, GODERICH HARRY W HARRY ALTER, R.R. 4 GGODEItIOH WARWICK 'SEED COMPANY Blenheim, Kent County, Ontario The Oldest Seed' Corn Company in Canada 17-18 1 RO \\µ. COMPLETE LAWN FOOD WON'T BURN when used in recom.. mended amounts. ONE FEEDING lasts all seaso PROVIDES ALI. THE NUTRIENTS needed from soil to nourish fine grass. SCIENCE EDITORS, P.O. BOX 174 Windsor, Ontario PUBLISHED AS A PUBLIC SERVICE BY ECONOMICAL .* . many lawns need as little as 1 l b. per 100 sq. ft. AyAILABLE AT CORNER WEST'ST. AND SQUARE PHONE 345 R{,/,.•.....Ito xdurit1 r0Ryna~f .�n�weo ;hi$>.. ? Simply ask at your nearest . ,����.,", ff`,�f'ytlr���'ii►'fltlr8'Ri :., :.:. � ; GODlRICH BRANCH: BRUCE ARMSTRONG, Manager. ----wo-�„,�as:�u,..wr .: wahruwwa:w•�as:. .-�4s�:����^�:.��'.':aa:.�a,�mn7�vrxx., WORKING WITH CANADIANS IN A TO,�4" RISE, VV t'CI `S-µRTlRrAC..-".NEW.5 - Mr. H. Preston Strang, of Tor- onto, in renewing his subscription to the Signal -Star, writes: "'KIWI a ray the Signah9tar arrives) one of the better days of the week for me. Your rural nes keeps on being very interestingbut what has ap- pened to the folk from•Westfield? a 1IIlJ V �t l rMti l such as Wigl�tmans, Taylors and •oDowells. Congratulations on the success of the Pee Wee hockey tournament," -MIR& DAIRY FARMERS OF CANADA 409 Huron Street, Toronto Free! Marie Fraser's new Milk recipes. Write today V Yui' can invest $100 or more for 1 to 5. years in a safe and guaranteed British Mortgage certificate. Don't delay — interest begins the day you make the investment. , For full information about these wise and safe investments, fill out the coupon below and send it to us. British Mortga re - and Triist r " Founded In 1X77 To British Mortgage & Trust,, $teat f ord astt-ge?I'trritelifoa t n a rnt vrnrr cafe And CCMventent 42% guaranteed investment certificates. 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