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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1958-05-08, Page 9• dun fftr N t • ♦ � Y'';hafot't� 0507 TERRIFIC BRAKE HEAT • AND WEAR FACTORS. are the problems of today's brakes. Imagine pressing your hand against a brake drum at sixty Miles an hour! The heat generated is such that it could make a cheap brake lining completely useless after one fast stopl� Raybestos--brake -linings are specially made to resist - heat and .wear ---for your safety. GET A COMPLETE BRAKE CHECK TAKE CAR TO YOUR y ',. •z �; � � ralrr % "� allrlr YOUR DEALER CANADA!S BEST-KNOWN AND LARGEST -SELLING BRAKE LINING 4�'•+r:k.,11,.,,,;4..40,4:14 �y„,�.+. "�(�g ' 7 Ate. . y ti,p on* "inri C e Fust ,Incense the a backyard is, tiny is no saWid ;excuse for not 'having ° a few .vegetables. It is really .astonishing' how many good Meats can be taken out of a plot no more `chant, a dozen feet or so each v3ay and the (Puality., of course, is the very best. Of course, in these .restricted plenting,5 one should choose those vegetables like beans, carrots; beets, lettuce, spin- ach sand`'' so on, that take up a minimum of space and yield • big returns. Staked tomatoes, cucum- bers and 'perhaps a row or two of corn are also worth considering first because they produce a lot of eating for ,the space occupied and second because these things must be grown right at the door if we are to have them really fresh. Tien feet of beans, carrots or beets will provide at least a dozen meals for the average family, and six tomato or,xw'Wm 'ate 7>Gl1 Plants or cucumber vines will keep, the same family supplied for .aev- er'al weeks.' in these concentrated gax'dens we' fertilize #'reef!, ci4ti-: vate well, and have the rows not more than a fo t apart. By alter- nating rows.of diflerent•slzed weer tables and 'byi�nking several plant- ings the output ofthese small plots is increased still ' more. Give The Kids A Break Children. can easily 'be encourag-; ed to become allies of the gardener instead of enemies. All that is necessary is to give them a little plot •of their own, a few simple tools and some seeds. Their own row of radish or lettuce or a tom- ato plant or two or some flowers will make all the difference in the world. And that newinterest will gradually spread to the rest of the garden too. The important thing however, is for them to have some little corner- or roiv that is their-- .............................................. 1 , -'c o 4...- �rontenac Products 1 1 For gasoline, heating fuels, greases and motor oils, .con- i. •0 tact - • a • nib and NORMAN • Goderich distributors e "No PI'aceLike .Home," Says =Burglar'Bili if you took the advice of Burg- lar Bill, you'd keep all your valu- ables at- "hoirie. Under the mat- tress, • maybe. Or in that old tea- pot which lost its spout. But Bill's advice isn't entirely objective.He ifigures if you leave your valuables at home—even in a "safe" hiding place—he stands_ a better chance of getting his hands on them. " (Much better advice comes from Bruce Armstrong, manager of the Goderich Branch of the Bank of Montreal. "Keep your valuables really safe in a B of M safety de- posit box," says 1VIr. Armstrong. "Your personal strong box, -ex- clusively yours, costs less than two cents a day, ,and pit pays for itself over and over again in peace of - mind alone," lie adds. Hundreds of thousands of Can- adians use B • of M " safety deposit box facilities. Their valuables-- bonds, aluables—bonds, leases, stock certificates, in- surance policies; deeds, birth cer- tificates, passports and other im- portant family papers—are 'safe and sound behind the steel doors of the B of iM vault. Forget what Burglar Bill says, ,Mr. Armstrong says, "Clean out those closets, drawers—and tea- pots. Bring your valuables into the bank initead." ,Advt. 19 Phone tcollect) 190, Goderich. - , 9TF oessioalammetniompasoommtempoesesoseessesommea W. MacDonald EIctric co. Ltd. ELECTRICAL CONTRACTORS INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL - General Electric Appliances Phone 235 or 479 _ 17TF Lookv.'hat Plymouth offers at. the LOWEST PR 1 �S • •• • . • • • OF ALL .LEADING ,CANADIAN CARS • Level -smooth • Torsion-A/RE Ride • • Safer -stopping • Total -Contact brakes, • • • •` • • • • • • • • Mkt •' • Brandolew • Sure -Grip differential . tl • • t • • • t • • • 0 • •, • • • • • • • • • • • • • Safety -Centre • steering. wheel' ; • • • • •'• .. • . • • • 0 •;,1', • • • p- A • - vi / • • 7.. • • • • • • • • • • Electric windshield wipers • • • V r • • i _Ultram.odem push-button automatic drive • • • • • • • • • • • • Beautiful new Silver -Dart styling Big new Plymouth Savoy 313- eor••Hardtop--- • inch • Thrill -Power V-8 • CHRYSLER CORPORATION OF CANADA, LIMITED • • ,• • New stretch -out • roominess • • • • • • • • • • 0•••••^• Plyniouth Savoy 4 -door Sedan Brand-new • • dual headlights • • CONFIDENTIALLY... if you think this is a lot to get for the lowest price of any leading Canadian car, n„ just wait'll you discover all the rest of Plymouth's extra -value fea- GO.DERICH •j . • • • • • • • • • • Luxurious new fabrics, exciting Colours tures! Come and try a '58 Plymouth. There are 21 models at the lowest prices. So you'll - be able to get just what you want. See how easily you can oven a big '68 Plymouth now! Take a demonstration Torsion -ARE ride today • •-•-. • • • •• . Newly improved • Thrill -Polder Six • •r • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • •.i •••••••••••o .•'.• •• • 1 Huge 35- \3� cubic -foot • luggage • compartment 1f••.11••*•••• • • • • • • L • • • • Highest quality• .,.'. at lowest price! QUALITY 'BUILT to the highest standards of automotive craftsmanship fo'58 P LYlVI. 01) T H AAILLS—N10t0R—SALES— ONTARIO • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • pkte • to .gl $ 1 Vils1Q11 'at At**, ler' afoot common. • herbs ; het 11kewlsn will thrive :ill' poo',s fo11. They should r hoowever., bare rth m. kl/ , .. •C .PTI ^./,_,. 410VtW ,ua1s,-`unless they .are taken . iu for .the winter, are rose. iary, tar on and sweet n}ar: joram a i ,s nd 1 x x xn r,�l >,l y 11� a �G1., are thyme, sage, • chives, the i i'nt (apple, .!.orange, peppermint and spearmint) and • lovdgc- Parsley perennial, but the finest flavor comes from plants that are started every season. Seek the seed over- night to hasten .germination. Tarragon, however, must be started from rootcuttings and so usually are chive plants.. which as well as being ,used to flavor , salads are decorative, disease,fr.,ee and don't need watering. {Mints need a moist spot. Early Care Don't, worry if you haven't got your garden started yet. There is still, lots of time. Indeed there are. several quick growing things -which mill make abundant bloom or- fine meals for the table even if planted late in June. The experts, in- cidentally, always warn the be- ginner to take it easy, to prepare`the• ,soil well, and wait" until the spring weather has really arrived. Of course, one should get nursery stock and some of the hardier sorts of flowers and vegetables planted as soon as. possible, but the main sowings. are best postponed until around this time or even later. Spreading the plantings, too, Over a fairly long period, right up to early July in the warmer parts of 'Canada, is always advisable. In this way the harvest of flowers and vegetables is 'spread out too. Federal government tax reven- ues in the first 11 months of the current fiscal year were $4,551,- 700,000, of which personal income - taxes produced $1,411,600,000. Voice of Temperance Only 1,666 alcoholic cases .in Ontario rasa year were reached by special treatment services. A few others received help in hospitals, private clinics .and penal institu- tions. Ontario has an estimated 76,000 alcoholics_ Four thousand new cases are added each year. These statistics were tabled in the Ontario Legislature recently by the Alcoholism Research Founda- tion. One hopeful trend was pointed out in the report. Employers are awakening to the fact that alco- holism is a very serious problem in industry. In employee groups the Foundation has surveyed, from 3 to 6 per cent have alcohol pro- blems. These employees average 18% days absenteeism per year, about 10 days above the normal rate. The answer to this serious problem? Surely not only more faeilities .for cure( but much more t intensive prevention measures— through education of youth in home, church and school. j •k• • OUT 9N A -.L, WITH BUJ,. emit i Y Each year, as I `approach the subject of alother's,Day with -some- thing akin (about 4th cousin) to reverence, I try;, to write some thing gentle and tender about mothers. Each year, it seems to- geta little tougher. Sitting here contemplating the whole complex problem of Mothers, one fact has been borne' in .on me as relentlessly as a beer bottle is borne in an the evening tide. Mothers Are Not What They Used To Be. - • : a;* Anyone who_has ever .pati_ a mdther, if he stops to think for a minute, will realize that I'm right.' And those of you who haven't had that privilege are invited to look around, and I'm sure you, too, will agree. - 4. . . Just compare your mother` end mine with those young rips that are masquerading under'the 'title today. It's enough to make you cry. • Oh, not •for us - We tray our mothers. in the days when "M is for the many" used to leave nary a dry eye in the house. But I feel like weeping when 1 think of what it's going to be like 'for our child- ren, 25 years from now. * * Who is going to write sloppy poems about Mom, or get all misty - eyed about that little ole mother - o -mine, when all they. can remem- ber is a female who always had a cigarette in one corner of her -mouth;+ swore -fluently and tthi've a car like a bat out,. of hell? * * * Who is going to reminisce, glut- tonously,. about the meals his Mom could cook, when all he can con- jure up is ' a picture of his old lady tearing the wrapper off a frozen food dinner, or grumbling as she threw together a ready -mix cake? * 4 Who is going to tell his children, a couple of decades from now, what a dear little Christian lady Gramma was, when all he can recall is Herself hustling off to the bingo, or sitting around complain- ing because the beer wasn't cold enough? How, indeed, will he be able to talk about that white-haired little, old lady in the vine -covered cot - age, handing out smiles and cook- ies • to , the neighbors' children, when he knows full well that she's in Florida, bronzed as a Bantu, in This advt. sponsored by Huron eCounty Temperance Federation. FAST RELIEF FOR 4 ,SORE T go 04141101000000100;)00120000060411i ThE—SU N DAX SPPIEMEN T Watch• Climax -Shower of Stars every Thursday night on TV - check your local program listing for time and channel. { b The Government Deficiency Pay- ment applies only bn Properly Graded Wools. Secure the Utmost by Patroni- zing Your Own Organization. J'ACKS'ON HOMES 'LTD., SEAFORTH is collecting wool for grading and sales on the co-operative plan. SHIPPERS may obtain sacks and twine free of charge from the above or their Licensed Opera- tors. CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL GROWERS LIMITED 217 Bay Street, Toronto. x V% Beds to be made, house to be SJeaxled, cuu nlothing and family's in need of pressing. and cleaning. . No need to worry about the clothing part anyway, if you just call us. We'll attend to this problem, -dependably and economically. ' GODERIT�r DRY CLEANERS WEST ,9r /22 C.R.LOWERY, PROP. IOOOOO000111OOOOsSessiD,000• • More people come to HFC for money help -- , 1A:fir vir fiel ktk t • Over ki million families a year borrow conftdt'titly from IIFC. Reason? PFC, Canada's leading consumer finance company, offers courteous money management advice and -prompt loan service backed by 80 -years of ex- jrience. At HFC you can borrow up tp $1,000, get one -day service and take up to 30 months to repay • HOUSE 01.E FINANCE.• .a. -..a •90-e 2 7& t�f tLIZR�C�i R. K. Fitch, Manager 35A West Street Telephone 1501 GODERICH A or a'`^` v 0111„9 'saint throe tteiV • llipii .a e d well steel t einselve f‘Yr fol the ,°tom u',, . r s It* the Ot j o P10 0,t'the -NW .),(01n, e d ,p Q'wcr,. t ..4enly .acquired, t_ o :1 . g .#101 1,1gss with which we npProa h''Mother's Day. They it 'probably � a\rc ,to take the. old hellion out and play her 1$' holes of golf, unless she slows down a lot in the meantime. However, there's a bright side to everything, as the new husband said when he- found out his 'Wife could Play, cribbage Mother may not bethe homebody she usedto. be. She may be handier . with' a swizzle stick 'than a darning needle. She may be more at ease on the end of a surfboard than rocking a cradle. But she's no pushover. In the old days, if .father carne home drunk, about all she could do was wring her hands. Today's mother is much. more lrkely to wring his neck. * Fifty years ago, Mather was a household s,lavey. She was nurse, governess and-teactrer7ali unpaid, for her children, and a foot-trrarm- er for her husband. Todayy she dbn't take nothin' offa nobody. :s * :P She can run more Machinery than the average stationary engin- eer. -She can whip up a meal for. twelve in . the time it took H,E{li mother ' to go out and pick the vegetables in the ,garden.. She can raise• a healthier, 'brighter child, wit • sot x � .rt -x „µ�yapilbr . ►,!!'iFbFp A the ;t ' it leee i r. too get.14:14r.; Q,eang, `whey Fal 1 to is >watltbl�err. hecoeta0r ° 4efp,:'phystc II, lnaecialty O.L0 'a+n asicholo0!c"aliy , withto an C. s1tt ifarence, fromtier likei 4 you an shplivdA lid, wen. it comes ;,Ira. t11 v+! n, a chid is a .cl or a -.hu aind has .hast h s, ;dol slig'h't. ' .ba fh `,rhe i#h lt�it4 an tenderness and courage, e4as ; a' mothers have always' beet). In'. ,�938;'the Val le o1 f ly lex : - •. "facto ed goods import d Into' rk-° ado was $4,397,06t1,t10G or' '$27$.40 per capita; comparative hgulres fou:' the United Kingdom were $4500i- 01)0,900-&-$48.80 .$2.,500,-000,00tV0T $46.80 per capita, for , the United States $4,378;000;000` -or-$26.00 per • capita. TV ANTENNAS -4 -SOLD. $ SERVICED • REMOVED , �► INSTA.LLED Les Chapman TV Phone 154 38 East St. 2Btf Your new TELEPHONE BOOK has many new and changed numbers fl Save time and trouble! Avoid wrong.numbers! • Lok them up! • Jot them clown! • Dial carefully! Be sure to bring - your Blue Book of Telephone -Num- bers up to date! If ,you'd like new _..' booklets—regular or pocket size -- give us a call at tlie Telephone Busi- ness Office, or drop .. in for them. They're free. THE DELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF -CANADA There's also if wealth of information in the introductory pages of your'Teleohone Book v tw To The Patrons Of The Colborne Muni-AOfi�lephonesystem In order to have funds 'available to replace the present heavy pole line from Carlow south for 114 miles with cable, and split the more crowded circuits, application has been made . _to the Ontario Telephone Authority for authority to make the following charges for telephone service effective as at June 1, 1953. • EXCHANC:E RATES' Individual Line Two -Party Line Multi -Party Line (on circuits having Multi -Party Line ,(on circuits having 4' Business Residence Business Residence 3 to 10 telephones) 11 or more telephones G $3.0Q per month 2.75 per month 2.75 per month 2.50 per month ?.25 per month ' 2.10' per month Renter's . rate to be .25 cents per month extra. - .25c per' month discount if paid within 30 days of date of - account, on each of the above rates. The above rates for individual and two-partyy, line service will apply only within the Base Rate Area which is defined as that area within' 14 mile of the a cchange. If individual or two-party line service is required beyond the above limits, there will be an additional charge for extra mileage of 45c per month for each 14 mile, or fraction thereof, for individual line and 25c a month for each Y mile, or fraction thereof, for each party on a two-party line. SUPPLEMENTARY CHARGES Extension telephone on same premises Extension bell, small ... Extension biell, large - Service Connection Charge (instrument not in place) Service Connection Charge .(instrument in place)' • Moving telephone on same • premises Any representations to be, made respect to' this application should be May 12th, 1950, and addressed to Telephone Authority, 7Queen's Park Ontario. $1.25 per , .30 per .60 per 2.50 month month month 2.00 2.00 to, the Authority with submitted on or before the Chairman, Ontario Crescent. East, Toronto, If 'you desire' eny further ittf'cIt'rilation in•' 1`ofe/ence to the eecLf c+feesJnit::_thaJaiap iene.'raa a yeu-}�, - jy e- ;'-: un • ere gned either personally, by ,telephone or by letter. April 26th, 1958. ,r R. d. MOortEr. Secret rut. Colborne: Murtiarial lepbe ,� trw Gothrichj Onto R R. No, 4, Luo -18.19 1,