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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1964-10-08, Page 15• — „ AMBERLEY • AMBERLEY.ee-Mr. and Mrs-. .Archie Courtney atterideel an- niversary services 'fit icincardine United Church and were guests of ,Mr. and Mrs. William Camp- bell, Huron Teexace street. Miss Linda Reid and Miss Gail Boyd spent a weekend re- cently at their homes. Th6r, are both teaching at Holmes- ville. Eugene Blue of St, Clair Shores, Michigan, visited for a ek with his parents, Mr. and s. John Blue. Mr. „end Mns. "Arthur CoUrt- ney visited with relatives in London for a few days. Joan Ferguson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester Ferguson, who had surgery at Victoria Hospital, London, is steadily im- proving and hopes to be home shortly. Mr. and mrs. William Court- ney' of Amber'ey attended the 25th wedding anniversary for Mr. and Mrs. David Murray of the sixth concession of, Huron. A pleasant evening was spent i4, 0 Always -there — with ready cash... For Bill Consolidation or anyzoOd reason. $5092 10 $5,000.9R. INIAGARA AFINANCE COMPANY LIMITED 240 Branches from Coast to Coat • 11F44-51 • 29 KINGSTON STREET PHONE 524-8357 .0 „. and lovely ,gifts were received by the couple. Murray Walden, who is a pat- ient in Victoria Hospital, 'Lon- don, following an accident in which his 'hand was bactly mang- led during corn, cutting oper- ations, says that although his hand is very painful it is heal- ing, and two fingers are out of the cast. Came To The Fair The' Ripley Fair was well at- tended with fowler residentS"'re- turning home for the Weekend to enjoy one of the "Biggest Little Fairs” and to visit with friends and relatives. Mrs. Margaret Creech of Pine River and Mr, Allan Murray of 'Kin- cardirie won the prizes for being the oldest lady and gentleman oh the groUnd.§". Harvest ,Home St. Luke's Anglican Church at Pine River was decorated with baskets of autumn flowers, fruits and Vegetables for the annual. harvest thanksgiving service. Rev. S. R. LeeKon Te-efor of the"-*CTIureh -.rook for his text "Every manaccording as he purposeth in his heart so lel him give not grudgingly or of necessity for God loveth a cheerful .giver." A trio com- posed of David, Rodney , and Jim Emmerton took part and an anthem by the „choir was ac- eempanied by tie ormist,,Mrs. John Ernmerton. •When Sir James Clark Ross'. discovered the North Magnetic Pole in.1.831 it was located on Bothia Peninsula; it, is constant- ly moving and now is about 100 miles west,. on Prince of Wales Lsland. . . • .4a Remember last year's heating billr • 'ST • 401.1 444,11.404A1...4444,11444447,141114151.1 Nati Natural Gas will make you smile again. T;oes thevery.thought'of last year's home heatinrbill bring tears to your eyes? Take heart aild lOok at the low-cost advantages of - natural gas heating. A mere glance at the facts will bring a.„smile to your face. Fact number one:"modern automatic gas heating equipment is remarkably low in cost. , • You can actually rent a gas conversion burner for as little as $2.95 a mon*'payable on your regular"gas bill. Or you can buy a new gas designed furnace for as little as S'3.80 a month— and you can.take up to five years to pay if You wish. Fact number two: natural gas home heating will reduce your fuel -costs. - Whether your home has normal or extra -thick insulation; you'll 4111P find-tha,t your ftiel costs are consigtently lower with gas than. with 'either liquid fuel on the so-called "flameless" heating system. , Fact number three: no other fuel is as dependable as natural gas. Yo'u never have to order gas—it's always there --saving you frayed temper andi,nxiety. Stormy weather that knocks out power lines and snarls up traffic can never keep natural gas from heating 'your home. 'Oyer half a million people in southwestern Ontario are already smiling with natural gas. Why not.join them?, Call your heating contractor, department store or gag company soon. UNION GAS COMPANY The Friendly Fuel that never jails. NEAR & HOFFMEYER - " Plumbing and Heating 55 KINGSTON ST. " 11111M111111111110111MPIP 524-7861 1 WORSELL BROS. Plumbing and Heating 122 SQUARE • atitate„. 524-7952 .1 PIONEER THRESHERS BLYTH.:—.Harold Turner of Goderich was chairman of The Huron Pioneer Threshers and Hobby Associaion meeting here on September 28. He express-, ed appreciation for the co-oper- ation Shown at the recent suc- cessful reunion. ' It was decided to have a ban- quet on Tuesday, Nov -ember 3, in the MemOrial Hall, Blythe ee. It was decided to discuss at a future meeting the possibility of settingup a board of man- agement for the Association's activities. QUICK CANADIAN QUIZ 1. Which province has the great- est fresh -water area? 2. In dollar value what was the leading product of Canada's mining industry in 1963? 3. Is the average investment to provide- one new job'in Can- adian manufacturing $3,790, $9,500, or $13,490? 4: When lt is twelve noon at --Wirmilm, what irthrtline at Vancouver and at Halifax? 5. Canada's 1963 national income was $32,600,000,000. Whgt propoition was spent on pub- lic health and welfare pro- grams? ANSWERS: 5. $4 billion, or 12.2 per cent. 3. $13,490. 1. Quebec. 4. At Vancouver, 10 a.m.; at Halifax, 2 p.m. 2. Crude pelropum, $633 millione% One good thing about silence is that it can't be repeated. tam. 1 ••••'. ' ...•••••-• The Green Thumb — by G. MacLEOD ROSS' . • WHAT BEES SEE. 1.1 -scale that it becomes small won -1 thgrunil-Cducationists bog - These of us who Were corl.gie at the problem of establish- scious at the ',urn of the cen- tury perhaps have a better re- ference datum etan those of more recent vintage agailist which to appraise and marvel at the discoveries, the gradual rending of the veil of ignorance which has encompassed every walk of life si•nde 1900. Some will remember the advent of the telephone and the Mlarity occasioned when the, maid in the doctar'shouse, having an- swered it for the first timee re- ported: "Theifloomin' thing, even said goodnight to me," Catching the murderer, Crip- pen, on the high seas establish- ed wireless telegraphy:. The internal combustion engipe re- volutionized transportation, while the atomic explosion a Hiroshima demenstrated "wea- pon surprise" on a scale which can only be paralleled by the introduction of a machine gun at the Battle of Hastings. Know- ledge In every field of activity is growing on such a geometric 41' Business Directory lio\ Call Lodge AMBULANCE SERVICE ,bliX.,OR-.INIGHT•••,----- Prompt — Efficient Expeilenced Drivers TELEPHOt4E 54,7401 R. W. BELL OPTOMETRIST F. T. ARMSTRONG Corisu!tingOptonetrjst REFRIGERATION • and &PPLIA'NCE SERVICE 4 All makes All types GERRY'S APPLIANCES The Sauare Phone 54-8434 "The Store That Service. - Built" Rea 1,, Eatit&Askiltram RUTH VAN DER MEER DIAL 5,24;7875,- Gedeil Agent " For WILFRID McINTEE REALTOR. Walkerton STILES AMBULANCE Roomy — Comfortable • Anywhere — Anytime DIAL 5244)43- 77 Montreal St.,.Goderich Alexanderand. Chapman GENERAL INSURANCE REAL ESTATE PROPERTY MANAGEMENT Canadian Imperial Bank of CoMmerce Building Goderich Dial 524-9662 . FOR THE BESf IN PORTRAITS DAY OR NIGHT , Stan Hadden 118 St. David Street DIAL 524.887 Roy N. Bentley P1.1111.-1C_TAttT Road ; Et," 15TE71723i521 GODERICH — ONTARIO Butler, Dooley, Clarke & ,Starke Chartered Ac,:ieuntants, rrustee in: Bankruptcy • 4 Licensed Municipal Auditor 39 St, David St., 524-8253 GODERICH, ONTARIO ti Ben Chisholm • Esso Irnperial Products 20 Albert St., Goderich Office -524-7502 ome-524-7835 OliS01.11?fref TOUR 11 ItJSURANC WITH' PETERS.MA( EWA REA/, •‘' cooteic„tt • • • •••• er LolormtlAsn', AdOce fl ' NOttlkt A. M. HARPER CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT 55-57 SOUTH' STREET TELPHON dODEgICH, ONTARIO , 524-762, James Richardson & Sons Ltd. "Serving The Feed Dealers of Western Ontario" PHONE 524-8388, GODERICH SUN LIFE a progressive company in a progressive industry GORDON T. WESTLAKE Phone NM, *Bayfield SUN LIFE ASSURANCE COMPANY OF CANADA ing an effectiv.urriculum ••=, .Consider our relationship, with the animal world. Three years ago a doctor wrote: "With- in the next decade or two the human specie S will establish communication with another species—probably marine." • He was referring to his endeavors to intercommunicate with a dol- phin. MTN Bats Sgrpmnr. ,p1sP has eatabhs* .the fact that oats emanate a .series ofultra high frequency sound ' waves from the echoes of which they locate thCenselves in space, while flying at sped and in the dari.. IT is old hat that.,4he hearing range of a 'dog exceeds that of man. Ail except one dog, which came to fame in a "New York- er" cartdbn that showed his mast ee bloiVing on a dog .whis- tle. His frots is see* apologiz- ing to a canine fri&p$ because he hes to keep 1ookiitig up at his master: "1 have to watch him. 1 don't want him to know I can't hear it either," the ex- plains.. Well established, too, is the sophistication .attributed to the Pees and the birds which every parent empioYs in his firsttilt- ed efforts to explgtfisex to' his iTTPflre'r step forward. Mr. M. W. "P. TWeedie was, as we all were, brought up to believe that the T W. J. Denomme FLOWER A1441 Phone 8132 524 - OR NIGHT 04,111 ce 1. 1,1-EGR p 0 . Ac-3nt for 24 -hr. FILM DEVELOPING 1 -1Y -does a faribet need farm work accident in- surance after the busy season is over? bright patternS- and colors of the flowers were given them so that they rnigh' advertise them- selves to bees and butterflies which visited the flowers for nectar and the process car- ried fertilizing. pollen from one flower to the rext. The bees and the wasw, the butterflies and the moths and F,orne species 4of fly are all known to possess large compound 'eyes, while in. some cases it has been shown that they can .distinguish colors, Bees and butterflies certainly have this power and it is one of_ the f with „them, or thoughtwe did. However, human ,yision, 'Which is a -sensitivity to electro -mag- netic yibratIons,• is limited to a range known aS' the visible spec- trum. Longer v.,10~ lengths than red and short than vio- let are invisible ,to the human eye. But it has been --demon- strated that .tne spectrum of the- bee extends• into the ultra- violet which Means -they can see a color denied to us humans. An Exper,knent • Here, as in all.' human pro, ress, curiosity...came into play. • Tweedie was intrigued to dis- cpver whether:the flowers them- selves present a pattern of ul- tra -violet colo, so he devised an experiment. He those' the flowers of two potentilla vari- eties, creeping -cinquefoil (P. reptans) and comnion silver- eeit".-JP.:“"---afisertn.6)--V&tli"-of which appear to ,our eyes as plain yellow flowers. When these flowers are photographed under ultra -violet light, a pat- tern appears,, invisible to us, but visible to the bee, The 'outer part of the •petals reflect JJ -V light, but the centre. part does not and so the flower prez. sents -a black hull's eye to the bee_ But this is not all...he. Sees.. beeped) aeteeeieavidedeemorer to burl's eye are some brightly illuminated points which are the nectaries, Thus it is. that the u -y sensitive insect is guid- ed ,first to the flower, next to its centre and..„4Rally.,441.9 my friends, Is the reason why you can find the honey So' easily on the shelves of your grocer. BACKACHE • ' • The Goderigh *Sigriel-4tar, V8ORY, octobir,. athe . e • • ,e ..... • , '. • ...i "4 4 ' ''',et 444;;,•,:,, httiel,,".•-e.''' • .0' Mr. and Mrs. Karl Schmidt are Pictured following thdir wedding in St. Ansgar Lutheran Chureh, Toronto, on August • 22, 1964. The bride •Is the former Gall Bernice Lockhart, e daughter -of Mr. and Mrs. John T. Lockhart of Auburn,' and 'the gioom's parer& are. Mr. and Mrs. Artur 'Schmidt of Caracas, Venezuela.. Rev. C. , Paulsen officiated. ACCIDENT PREVENTION GROUP HOLDS CONVENTION HERE* About 100 representatives of industry in Perth and. Huron counties attended the fall din- ner meeting of the Perth -Huron section Ofhe Industrial Ac- cident Prevention Associations held at Harbourlite Inn on Tuesday, September 29. Highlight of the, meeting was a panel ciise,ussion, during which case.hi§terieeeewereeepeeentelee Ol-'-indttetriaFaeeidehtS.;..followe'ci- BraircVFSTOF ITTO-1-6-Wnrey might have been prevented. Acting aS p.inel moderator London P anel members were Roy Mehl, Creighton, of 4i n, Dernis •Jones, Peer Sanson, .Robert De, G. Lloyd'and. L. B (. hanaThel. m- - embers were' asked 10 give their v!ew of means b' which each of the' accidents under discussion might' have been prevented. Questions frem. 11*:tattiot-t*etiSS'Od':,. The Irreetine,;,• intended as the_ kick-off of. thc IAPA's safety drive thin'ing Oct•Ob6r,. was chair- ed by Harry Graper .•of Strat-1" ford. W -11'..0,"Hara of Stratfard reported' on the •campaign 'pros- When kidneys fail to remove, ''''' ...... excess nide AO wastcag.,.. backache—tirodleeling—. .5 , KioN Y.k.. disturbed rest often may % PillS 4. follow. Dodd's Kidney Pills ks,t.k, follow. Dodds kidneys to normal ,,,:,,,,-;--i• ',..,1'. duty. You fool bettor, sleep better, work better. 80 .. Because plenty of farm accidents happen in the winter too . . in - the barn while working with nervous animals ... in the barn- yard when it's slippery in the driveway while pow -plowing with the tractor. • Farm work accidents can happen at any season! That's whyoyou need year-round protection against the costs of accidents. And you can get this coverage with CIA's FARM FAMILY PROTECTION PLAN For more intormation, call: George Turton 319 Huron Road,- Goderich 'Dial 524-7411 CIACo-operators . insurance Association r 441: You •Must Try ... 44. I 44 A -.ARA FALLS, CANAP4 • NAflIANSHtHRY Dead* Animal REMOVAL 'for dead and disabled Jn i nna Is call collect, Darling & Company of Canada Ltd. Phone HU 2-7269, Clinton Dead animal licence number 262,-C-63 49tf GIVE YOUR HOME THE NEW. LOOK • NOW IS THE TIME TO DO YOUR EXTERIOR PAINTING DONE. TO YOUR SPECIFICATIONS HOURLY OR CONTRACT RATES CALL 524-9302 FOR FREE 'ESTIMATE 39-42 • CLOSED FOR VACATION We will be closed for a week's 'holiday 'OCTOBER 8 to OCTOBER 14 SKELTON'S APPLIANCES WEST STREET pects for campaign 'Chairman L. A. Schmidt, Stratford, who was not present at the tneeting. Mr. Graham, Goderich, re - pored he had 'taken over the position' of chairmanof the Western Ontario iiiirisfon of the , IAPA, after the former chair- man, J. E. Con, had moved away from the area. He said thereelyeuld :b.:e;iiiL:gleearigeS., in the T . Councillor Bet Squire -brou- ght, greetings from" the. Town fGoderich. Russell said .graee preceding ce.inner7_sRev.he-.pp,1,a,nir afor was intrcdticed by Rol! Frii of Stratford. STUDY HURON SHORES •, . The fifth anbual field trip of the:Ontario Geography Teach- ers " Association stopped briefly at' Goderich or, ,Saturday, Sep- tember 26 for noon lunch at TigX1nlep'am.. The. group, 3.4 in number, was making a study of the Lake Huron shore ii•om Kettle Point to Red Bay. on the Bruce. Peninsula. One c,f the, group was Christophe - Lee, of ,,Simeoe, son of Ernest Lee, Q.C., of Toronto. AUCTIOA SALE TUESDAY EVENING; OCTOBER 13th, 1964, 8:00 p.m. SHARP at the CLNTON LEGION HALL, CLINTON, ONTARIO REPOSSESSIONS BANKRUPT STOCKS 'and 'many, many personal consignments consisting of: APPLIANCES • FURNITURE • TELEV1$1ON Refrigerator' with cross top freezer, 2 electric ranges, long skirt washer, 17 cu. ft. Food Freezer that holds over 500 lbs. frozen food, deluxe automatic wailer and dryer (electric), combination radio and 3 -speed record changer, 5 different television sets (all reconditioned and in Al working condition), 2 hostess chairs, platform rocker, hi -chair, telephone' table, step stool, chrome rocker, writing desk, 9 x 12 rug, step a'nd coffee tables, 4 dinette and kitchen sets finished in chrome and coppertone, 2-2pce. davenport suites complete with a hi -back swivel rocker, 2 -pe. French provincial chesterfield suite in a nylon cover, 3 other modern chesterfield, suites in 4-3-2 cushion sets. (All these sets are samples, from the last LON- DON FURNITURE SHOW,) • 3 'bookcase bedroom suites in light and dark finish complete with box springs and mattress, 2-39'1' continental beds complete with box spring and quilt fop Wiattress and head boards,:4-54'.' quilt top mattresses that fit any full size bed, 2-pce. chestabed living room -suite that folds.out to a full i size, bed with a spring -filled mattress built' in, 2 sets of table and trilight lamps, 1=54" continental bed, and MANY OTHER ITEMS TOO NUMEROUS TO MENTION. All the appliances in this sale are guaranteed lo be Al working condition when hooked up in your home.- BACK TO SCHOOL CHILDREN'S CLOTHING — ALSO — A LARGE ASSORTMENT FOR MEN anli WOMEN JUST -ARRIVED ,A large selection of Fall and Winter clothing has just' been received for auction from one of the largest clothing wholesalers in Canada. CHILDREN'S CLOTHING Lined jeans, snow suits, jackets, pyjamas, crawler sets, pullovers and cardigans, winter coats, sleep and play sets, shirts and .blouses, dresses, 3-pcevelvet sets, T-shirts, coat and hat sets, jodphurs, leotards, 'Underwear baby shirts, housecoats,'sleepert, babies' orlon knit sets, Hood- ed sweaters, skirts, training pants, glox'fes, poodle socks, arpd many other items. MEN — Work and dress shirts, polo shirts, jackets, dress pants, work and dress socks, pyjamas, beltsn and ties, underwear, slipper socks, sweaters and other items. WOMEN — Dresses, blouses, sweaters, pullovers and cardigans, skirts, nylons, slipper socks, fall coats, 2-pce. suits, stretch slims, purses, jackets, and other items. THIS OUTSTANDING SALE,WILL BE THE BEST AND LARG- EST OEFERING. THAT WE HAVE EVER AUCTIONED IN THIS HALL-, AT ANY TIME.' DON'T MISS III See You At The Sale. AUCTIONEER — LEO E. BIRD TERMS: CASH — CHE'OUES ACCEPTED ONFURNITURE 3% sales fax In effect. 1 au. ' • • , • ,