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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1962-01-11, Page 3
P1-APIT EEBU1LD The nry. Drennan fam ly, phi - had lr---A Ashfield.,..Townz Betio, home -destroyed iii a.:.pre• Christutas . ire dR ' December 20t11i "are6teiriporari1y residing' - lin a‘ house that.,waa vaeant on Norman O'Connor's., f arm about • three-quarters o f a mile frgnt their fatin.',,, xh bgiie was,so�'ha�ilyt- �ted that it. bas since been torn ---,down and Mr..and Mrs. Dren- .Hart plan to. rebuil A start - the basement .last week.. .-w - 4.P.P;-STATISTICS .'cop person - was .killed -and . .six persons }n, Ired during. the month of peeember, , .in District - No., 6,..aceordi ng a statistics, • • 4 of ri n - f ' o to was- to be made in:,digging out the ' Qntario Provincial *Po ce. Ink the name. area in November, •.lle and . 'persons injnred,w Tbere were `184 accidents= -.in Nevem- her 'Arid 30 .in� Deceinbor,, November., a_ total -of 5,48Q ve• hides was checked and in, De= cembe - Z77 vehlel s, HOLD'' ON TO TOPSOIL, Tho' top orsurface soil en a 'farm .•. r • d o takene a is et - m, ft1tfor. —until ` r meter granted on' un . w o i. a t s waken the farnter 'to a realiz- atiQn -tug : ono, of ' his chief 'assets is disappearin . ; When levelling land or. selling.. fill ge • construction, ' fanners- are advised by the Canada Helier t- ment of Agriculture to remove. -the,_,topsoil• _first and replace ft sLe roti JA._ 1 CGOMBINING • r g HOU> E • CONTENTS . LIABILITY MacEwan. Insurance Agency JA 4-9531; -'�� - - 44 North St.- FIRE t;FIRE - .LIFE - AUTO LIABILITY -- REAL ,ESTATE Is your TV -working properly, or is it just gn„M....A ,•..c '� i1work n S'S•.,„ ay..riKYarra ,.....n. •. It may just take a tube Por minor adjustment to -put. it back::ilt Tip Top shape. The feet that fear of G.odet provide the dollars t6 maintain for rental aCConiinoilation T be- R , •••• ri h's i G . heading industr es lavt; either aorto aced Plans or 'ext tt p pansion or are already- in the proce$s of • expanding.,their • fac- ilities • was ,,cited Monday even- ing; by Mayor E.' C. Fisher as a: r favorable •,,:turning: point in th Town's econom ." -hi y .. s-- dress- . own -Coon, a , ; ell- at.the inaugural•meeting,, Mayor Fisher stated it �� meant thb- eventual establishment of additional pa'yroils-and, at the same time, produced_ "A- strong 'selling point. -to outside.plants." He a ed that he. knew of no bette' attraction to a town` for pros ective industrialists seek- ing locations here than the knowledge that industries now , located at Goderich "pre y; to develop -and -prosper - in . -their present locations" here. ,_ Ile• urged the Industrial Commis- sion that while they should k' f share of the ro- see a,anr �.. h P vir(cial industrial movement, they should."g'i've .preference to and- encourage the 'Mansion of all present Goderich indus- tries,'' both large and small." Mayor Fisher stated that while ''Goderich doe's not, have sight of any new industry con- templating coming here in the immediate future, it had rea- son to boast about the expan- sion plans of local industries In the meantime, however, like. MilainifiVAL:4,f .• ther=mnicipabities: azi, allAn effort would be made to attract new industries. -In order to • Why.. not call us if you are having trouble? will be pleased to accept EVENING . APPOINTMENTS Agent`for 7441r. - FILM DEVELQPING,• ` owners. To ascertain- the need the additional a i 'o se u h dd tx na], r�Ges • sp ght by the. ratepayers thout add, Jog extra ,tax. bur errs on: them, the Tgw-nl „must lei ,for ad :iiitionai' :,,industrial ;assessment, e 'stated.-... •,..- . , . ontinuing, •'Mayor ."Fisher said: The yeary196i1 Was one of -substar<tial--tared -..develo�pment in the area, ` a year that saw large industrial and conimere- ,ial expansion programs imple- mented. It was •. a y e a r also that" . represents an all •time :high for construc- tion ' 'in this v ,i e i n i 't y. The town's expenditures for necessary structural works, local improvements •roads and all associated ok*erations have paced the' expansions. The vol- me-�-oi -work-undertaken--by-•t Public Works •Department has again reached a climax. Again- st the backdrop of increasingly heavier truck traffic that/ places a strain on our,. already, ever - burdened road budgets,, plus the public's demand fon more and better services the Public Works Continittee • objectiye4 can be defined in a summary way as "a continued high level of service to our citizens taking care not to embark on projects beyond our means while always being mindful £ our resources and the necesalry continual progress of our town." %:-Tiny Esher - spok of "a very- boob:Marx"- "b' in `'i i'a'tt& to improve conditions at t'ie' harbor and added that "We must follow through with a continual program _ for positive action on harbor' improve- ments."- He praised the work - 'of 'the Parks Committee during • the st -yea, anal. >said --that a~_eon ti tili`ice of "t'h`is"..°'go 'd'°`4.% could be expected. Two years ago, ' additional rental housing. "accommodation, was .provided in co-operation and in partnership with the two upper levels of government, he sal adding: - With the be- gining of operation : this 'sum- mer sum -mer . of , the new Government •Hospital, plus •.the: previously mentioned upsurge in industrial expansion, we . will no doubt -be. faced with a shortage of rental units. Two very excellent sub- divisions, well planned and cen- trally -located, : Will -provide needed' space for upwards of 75 or 80-' new potential home• lie t `it wise`o a enncil Com- l ITtSi IMPORTANT , .. blit ee to In est g , and.—report ti... ,, _ .. . on the need, keeping 'Ai, mind' that we '•prefer, if an ' agree, Ment is reached, ..only single unit, dwelling's: - While on the stib)cdt` of houks- iug, I• ,bring to your attention the need for Senior Citizens Ap'aarrtm s -1-enw e' Courrcitt'a- give special' consideration to the forming Of a committee 'to explore ° and, ,if _ possible, ex., pedite this much ' discussed housing sche e, which, will 'pro'. vide needed facilities for these citizens, On behalf of the membe*w of the 1961 -'Council, who are back again to help resolve the legislative issues of this ses- sion, Sl extenda hearty welcome e--two-new members,- -Ti you, Mr. Hays, and to jou, Mr. Erskine; , we are proud to have you in our midst. Those wwQ contribute_ nhws s or articles for public- ion in The-, Signal -Star. sh . lil zi - ver 'lose sight of the •I *0 • CE of having -this copy " into the Signal -Star EARLY for typesetting. There are those contrib- ..utors who feel that since The Signal -Star is published on Thursdays,- the , receipt of items should be O.K., by Tuesday or Wednesday of that week. �. : Unfortunately, n o t`h i n g could be, further, from the truth! n a 12 -page paper, there ar f o' g pa es which • go • to Tress;athree different times. he first four pages have to be ready by , Monday . after- noon. Only the last four pages have news set on Wed- nesday afternoon in order to. be ready for the final press run. And copy for this late news section should all be in by 2 o'clock on Wednesday afternooh. - As a rule, there are far. too many news items to be ..osasiVilfeklirsmiteXEW wadable Thes.e.,inglude=tee items of events which occur - FLOYD PERCY WALTERS . Floyd Percy Walters, 67, died Saturday at- Huron County Home, Clinton, The son of the late Percy Walters and his wife, the former Mary Jane Moore, he ._ was a member of the United Church, Benmiller. Surviving is one sister, .Mrs. Le4tei iT .rataieaftti C. Pince/am. officiate at the funeral service' at the Lodge funeral home on Men. day afternoon. :Burial was in Colborne cemetery. MMS. • WILLIAM ' F. RILEY 9 fog° a orn'i%; er E da Watson, died in,, Vic- toria Hospital, London, Wed- nesday of last week. She was ”born in Londesboro, and had liv d t .Goderich and Hensall before. moving to London... ' • Surviving are her -husband, ' one daughter' Sharon, at home; and two. _sisters, 'Mrs.'. John Sin- clair, Kippen, and 'Mrs. -Tom Butler, , R..R. 4, Komoka. -The funeral service was held •at the Anglican Church of the Redeemer, 'London, on Saturday afternoon, with the Bonthron funeral - homes Hensall, in charge of arrangements. Burial. was ' in Forest Lawn Memorial Gardens, London: ,_N.._ Hethr.BautySaIon HARRY . COLCLOUGH, Proprietor. 108 LIGHTHOUSE -1T. GODERICH Hair Styling TE:C;,EPHONE• New Creations Beauty Aicis JA 4-7461 Latest Equipment '15 GAMES: - $1.00. The prize for each . regular game will be $12.00, .4 SHARE -THE -WEALTH Jackpot Combined. 'JACKPOT' OF'. $85.00 IN 57 CALLS. - Sponsored by Canadian , tegion, Branch 109; No person under 16 admitted to ..Legion Hall Thurs., -Fri., Sat. --Jan. 11, 12, 13' — Twin Bill.. • Stewart Granger and Maya Harareet, In "Secret Partner" - plus a second feature "High School Caesar." Mon., Tues., Wed.--Jan..15, 16, 17—in Technicolor. Anthony Perkins, Gary Cooper and Marjorie Main :You'II••°Ieave the theatre happier for having seen it. FROM HERE TO THERE . . . Richard, Boone and Luang Patten Cc -starred in an Arizona adventure with Apache Indian "THUNDER- OF DRUMS". _lit Technicolor. Also•- PFt8ST 'ROUND -UP"; featuring the Little Rascals. ining--"Ring of Fire" . -�- Adult Entertainment, \ with • ' Joyce::Taybi•. • :TO OR FROM GODERICH VIA WALDEN BROS•• TRANSPORT, Winghapa „BUD” WORTHY George Sanderson, P,', died at the Alexandra Marine and General Hospital, on, Sunday. Born in Clinton, he lived1•for-the peat 45 yeas in Goderich, be- lg, employed"`by' the Canadian Pacific Railway. 'He was a .member of Knox Presbyterian Church and the Royal Canadian Legion,, Branch 109. Mr. San- derson had been ill for a > long time. Surviving are his wife, the former Adeline. Nivins; one son, CPO William- Sanderson; RCN, Halifax; two daughters, Mrs. Ronald • (Carol) Stevens, Hali- fax;; Mrs:. William (Mary Lou) Seeley,,Bufhlo, N.Y.; one sister, Mrs. J. Rands, . Clinton; and_ seven grandchildren, Rev. .G. L; ,;Royal 'conducted the funeral service on .Wednes- day afternoon at the . Lodge funeral , home. Interment was in emhe Veterans'' plot, Maitland The -.Senior Citizens • met Wednesday night of last -week at MacKay Hall. , After a short business meeting, the„ president, Art Kaitting, introduced Mayor E. C. Fisher who spoke on the part the Senior -Citizens- should play in the, civic affairs of the town and made the oldsters feel they can be useful after' all. Mrs. D. Schwanz wen the Prize for ladies and Mr. George Mumby _.for gents. Mrs. Ruth Orr won the door prize. After lune_h the Meeting was adjourned. The next meeting will be on Janisary 17th. At the meeting on February 7th, the executive -will give their report on resolutions dealt with at the Provincial conven- tion held at Oshawa last Sep- tember RE URNING TO AREA A former resident of ' Gode- rich, Richard Harland, now on the staff of. Cornwall Collegiate and. Vocational School, is to be shop director of the vocational school to be, 'built, at Clinton .red even ' on Wednesday or -` 'Thursday of'e_.ypreeeding' week,. These items could 1144 as easily have been handed in on.•_Thursday or .Friday of the 'wee'k ° preceding publicly tion week. And it is these items The Signal -Star -would like to have early --on Thurs- day or Friday in prder that theymight be set on the lino, type' and ready €or° use in the press run of the first four pages ,which must be ready by on ay aiternooh. .Press secretaries of Yaripus organizations are urgently re- quested to have_ their news copy into ,the Signal -Star of- fice earlier than has been their custom. It should. be in the day following when the event happened or ;certainly no later than the -'second day after the event happened. - Rural news correspondents are also asked to make sure their copy arrives NO LATER THAN Tuesday noon of the week of publication.. Such co-operation kan , be of such great help 'n the pub - co -operation? Thank you! : Maths Teacher Is Honored Charles H. Ric aids, 53, head of'the mathematics department of East . rk Collegiate, has been , ho i " by the 20,000 member Association of Profes- sional Engineers of Ontario. On January- 27 there-- will-. be pre- sented to him' the mathematics and science teacher award ' of the Association in recognition of his contribution to the engin- eering -profession. ,He ,taught public school in Toronto for about 12 years, and then -vent to Toronto's Lawr- ence Park Collegiate, . in 1942 as a maths teacher. . Since that time he has taught successively at Malvern, 'Harbord and ' East York :collegiates. • Mr. Richards notes that girls are, not',, shying away - from maths and "physics today as they did previously. He feels the best way to teach -. maths, and [Science is by "a minimum of talk. and. explanation by the teacher and a. maximum of practical problem -8, by the stud- ents." Reproduced from `;O -Canada!" with permission of the arta •SPECIAL SERVICE . siuccessipn duties, (nfariira' In. Victoria Street United ne-hl; ,,, ,T „ Qe aebec fn f Church of Canada.,.,Suitday.,. atrsfz vides rtes,oandarise emaxnaing; eight rovincea ' provide the- row, 11. a.m. there will be held the maining one-.ttuarter..' inaugural service of The United. Church Women of the. Congre- gation. This will , be followed Oi•eNsssss 11 by the dedication of the exr ecutive. All are welcome to •witness this historic advance ini mister's theme will be "Vision the Future." - Of federal ' government • rev- enue from taxes on • personal and cgrporation• incomes, 'and . for Huron County. a. He came- to Goderich in 1948 to work for Dominion Road Machinery Company Lim- ited. Frere Gdderich, he went to an industrial firm at St. Marys and then to. the Corn- wall Collegiate. He. was .the first of some 20 additional teachers who are to be engaged at the new -school at Clinton. Canada has the, largest fresh- water area of any country in the world, nearly 300,000 square miles or about 7.5 per cent of the country's total area. a i a 1. -NW `fii rr.= " .311111/m1 `T-91111"'1- 1 r]a s • 141, r %'M _ 1111'- '`1. t11 r aG .90'- ' .w r I e ' a a- ‘ ai s u -i..11111104e awe. rr_ e■ a, x 1' ■ s- J r at Plante- and=-Worthj _Esso Service Station Victoria- and Nelson Sts:, Goderikh . D A • R . "_-- •MODERN ..VANS : P REASONABLE RATES Free E.timates and All Insured to.•Your. Specifications. Dial JA. 4-8612 ors© after • 6 p-m.r. JA 4-8100 FREE Then save by buying 'your° Radio and TV Tubes at. GODERICH NEWS STAND The Square' at. Colborne' St. tf he :woman. to whom housea'.., keeping , is not a tiresOfne task but a ,matter of aezi- able ._ .managementLuaes.._out _ reliable �clea'ning service. She knows evenings find her gowns fresh and lovely= ready for ' her .social enrages' ,- ments1 ' GODERICH Irani Sandy Welland •63' Britannia Road West Goderich, Ontario PHONE JA 4-9143 „ (After 6 p.m.); Pleading guilty to a charge of drunk driving ' in Goderich Township on December 28, ,Wil- liar A - Ryan, R:R.'5, Seaforth,- was, last Thursday in Magis- trate's court here, sentenced to seven days in 'jail. = ' Magistrate H. `Glenn Hays ordered the motor vehicle seiz- ed for three, months and' sus- pended Ryan's driver's license for ten months. Robert Carl Mitchell, of Goderich, was remanded out of custody for one 'week when. he pleaded not guilty.' to a charge of stealing ash trays and radio parts from Harry Garland at • Goderich on December 3-• Ralph- Clifford Knox, �34'M Horton street, London, pleaded guilty to- careless driving, driv- ing while uncler.-suspensiter . rod"-" g The offences took. place in Goderich Township o .. January 1. He was- .sentenr :too Jden_ days- while ° tinder suspension; " $25 and costs or five days in jail for careless __driving,_ _-and _ $20 -and- costs or three days in jail for speeding. The latter sentence - will run consecutively with the first charge. - DRY CLEA�1'I WEST: STS JA 48452 C.. R. LOWERY, Prop. •.MHR The month of November, 1961, produced 3514 victims. 127,.of these died instantly. Apparently '-there is--no-sure -,preventative meas available and,anyone may become a victim. ' T•o;-defra the cost and to make sure you have an in. come w en it •stri es con ac : INSURANCE • SO CHURCH -ST GODERICH • " •MOVAC • MOtor.'Vehicle ACcident " jhi�•: «1r