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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1964-11-12, Page 9• • 0. rve Seminars GDC! Students Relate United Nations Meets A United Nations Assembly was held at the GDCI Auditor- ium on Wednesday, October 28. Participants were Susan Bell, Joan Everett, Mike Berry and Robbie Witmer. During the past, summer, 0 se students attended United ions Serninars „as follows: ses Bell and .Everett at. the University of Waterloo; Mike Berry at the University of West- ern Ontario; Robbie Witmer on a two-week trip to New York City and the United Nations building. Miss Everett, in her report to the Assembly at the GDCI Auditorium, told of her being a delegate to the Seminar at the University of Waterloo and how she was to represent Greece in the Seminar government at t rr'll 'tvrersity of W tr 5 -S told of touring the new build- .-.•... _Lags therOnd , o,� _attndilrg a. hootenany. 7.Amng--.th•e • speak- ers heard were representatives' from France's Consul General office at Toronto and the first secretary of the Soviet Embassy at Ottawa. The Soviet speaker declined to answer more ques- tions t n he did s er.,,•. Cone 'e aft''tl set -`aS. 1�e For talks-w'i'fi°i-15roirgki:s. and stud- ents at the U. of W., including th'e° exchange students from Africa who pr peed, to- be uite interesting. "The Seminar,"nqsaid Miss Everett, "widened our out- look. and diminished, our pre- judices, giving us a clearer pic- ture of the complications of world affairs and the need for greater understanding.", New York City Robbie Witmer told of his trip 'to the United Nations. He w 'r• enroute, by young people from °hie. The Ohtans asked such „questions as: "Do you speak French?"; "Ls Canada still a British Colony?"; "is. On- tario as big as Ohio?." ' On the way to New York the group visited Ottawa and heard Par- liament on the flag debate, and also historic Boston. At New York there were 200 -delegates in all. The United States of- ficials showed they were true segregationists by placing the boy delegates on the eighth floor of a downtown hotel and the girl delegates on the 20th floor of the same hotel. "De- spite this handicap," said Rob- Moderator Fred Davis and panelists Betty Kennedy, Gordon bib, "the stay ' in New York Sinclair and Pierre Berton are featured on Front Page Challenge now in its eighth season on, ,the , CBC -TV network. The regular panelists and guest panelist each week try to identify news- paper headlines associated with challengers. -. - y, 1011 proved most enjoyable.for most of us." The first day the dele- gates toured the United Na- t'ons buildin_ and had 4`two. briefings on finances and the, "Peace , keeping .machinery of in visitingg--dlffOr'eilt mbass .s. (Before leaving New York City visits were made to sucth places as Grant's Tomb, the Empire State Building,, Rockefeller Cen- tre, Radio City Music Hall and the New York World's Fair. he, s ainl im res-. ,..y R. you have a lot of money ,you want to get rid of," said Robbie. On the way Thome, visits .were-made.,.ta...Philade1p.hia,.. Get, tysburg, Washington, D.C, "Per- haps' one of the highlights of the trip occurred when we visit- ed the grave of the late Presi- dent of the United States, John F. Kennedy, at Arlington 'Na- tional Cemetery," said Robbie. He expressed thanks to the Add, fellows and Rebekahs of Huron County who financed his trip �� ed Went by bus with six other Can- and who plan to enter the con- adians who were joined at _Sar test again this year. SEE THE n.. 1C1 DISTINCTIVE PEkSONALIZED a CHR1 GREETING --CARDS AT 'THE Signal -Star Win Holiday Trip To -Europe= maa: h n1 - stay -one-of.-t-he,fou•r jowe•li•er3�,skore in Goderich could win a holiday `i it ra " ro i erg plus $500 -spending money ast; well. The next 100 prize winners will receive a ,32 -piece set of gleaming silverware in the new- est design. The grand prize winners will fly via Swissair tb Geneva or Zurich in Switzerland. On their 3,,s th:ey,,... ll be free- to,-,tra-, vel To many other c fuhtries in Europe. • To et'. complete details on this jewellers -Sponsored - day in Europe," contact any one of the four Goderich jewel- ers: Reg Bell, Brock's Jewellers, ' Don MacRae or N. T. Ormandy. 'Courtesy is one item,everyone appreciates. BAKED FEARS WITH MARSHMALLOWS QUICK OVEN DESSERT 3 Ca.nadil,Ch•0`1'ce Can-' -ned .Pear Halves 1. tablespoon sugar 1,4 tsp. cinnamon 1� lemon, sliced paper thin G�-:1:1�•a l`-fil'1•l l I-�':ll•l'.C%W�-�.._..�..::_:� _.. 'lace drained pear halves in a baking dish with Me '`cup ,of their juice. Mix sugar and cinnamon together and sprinkle over pears. Place a paper -thin slice of lemon on each pear half and a marshmallow on top of the lemon slice. Place in a moderately. hot oven (400°F) for about 5 minutes or until mar- shmallows are delicately brown- ed and pears are heated. through. Serve. immediately pouring the j,ttice.;left in the baking pan over For attractive recipe folder, write to the Ontario Tender Fruit Institute, 241 Food Terminal Building, The Queensway, Tor- onto 10, Ontario.• - FINANCIAL STATEMENT GODERICH LIONS CLUB Following is an abbreviated Statement of the Account and Expenditure of The Goderich Lions Club for the fear ending June 30, 1964. Receipts and Balance Carried Forward EXPENDITURES: Health and Welfare 527.45 3oys and Girls • . 2064.94 Sight Conservation 305,80 Civic Improvement , 155.32 Canadian National Institute far the Blind 250.00 Foster Parents 212.00 Care 300.00 St: John Ambulance Society 100.00 Plated in Student Education Fund Administration Insurance 8346,97 rl 500.00 50.00 81.30 5546;81 K. F. WILKINSON, Treasurer , t1; ``Cit1 unship and Education" was the topic for the November meeting of the Goderich W.I. with Mrs. Harry Dodd as pro - was was ans1 'tfi'by TE11 " ir'•"Where- I would like to spend a Can- adian holiday." • sence, Due to Mrs D. Rrehls• , s'k „ Mrs. 'J. Cook, assistant secretary -treasurer, took over her duties. Arrangements were made .to "take .a program and lunch to Huronview on Decem- ber 2nd to celebrate December birthdays of the residents. Mrs. N. McInnis is to convene .the program. Those donating g' is ate asked to wrapand l'ea`ve them at . Dorothy's shop. Mrs. A. Wilkin moved' all bills be paid:- Each member was asked to bring a gift of new clothing for infants for the Children's Aid shower to the next meeting in December. Plans were made 4o =go one afternoon a month to do mending at the local hos- he Marclr•-•bazaar.- The Ontario Ho ital asked or entcitainmen or patten s soon from - the Goderich W.I. This, too, is being planned. Mrs. K. Wilkinson gave a splendid report on the area con - venation which was held in Lon, don. Several- members . from_ Goderich« ••-attended including Mrs, NI • Clairmont and?' Mrs. C. Ruffell who took 'part in the parade of lr,fles', costumes of yesteryears. A quilting bee was held at Mrs. K. Wilkinson's home and a quilt was made for the War; Memorial•• •tal at ,• !t ae� JuryDitv ��S �nt�resting The November meeting of the Maple Leaf Chapter, I.O.D.E., was held at the home of Mrs. 13. H. Ainslie, with the regent, Mrs. A. M. Harper, presiding. The members were requesedto be present at the Rememb- rance Day Church Service on Sunday, November 8, at North Street United Church, and at the Cenotaph service on Nov- ember11.Mrs. J. Skeoch briefly gave her impression of serving on jury duty; Although over- whelmed at first by the thought of` serving,, she found it a most enlightening and interesting ex- perience.,Mrs. S. C: Anderson,tcoener 'of services at Holo and Abroad,. reported briefly on • the semi- annual meeting ,held last month in Toronto. A more detailed account will be heard at the workshop meeting in March. The Deeemoer meeting• will be held at the Bedford Hotel in the- • form of •a dinner meet- iig.• A committee was .appoint- ed to 'look after the arrange- ments. Mrs. G. L. Royal, Convener of World Affairs, read a paper en- titled "nada—What Is It?" It related to some of the his- torical background and political aspects which led up to the passing of the British N9rth America Act. "Let us remember our his- tory and have, hope for our fu- ture. If we will, we can unite all of our 'various nationalities to' build a.. national conscious- ness and',so make the Confeder- ation di Canaaa a reality for Mrs. H .Dodd introduced MI'. Ernie Barker 'who showed color- ed•slides of the beauty spots he .had ,.seen....on..a..trip _„to._the..East•.. Coast as well as many of the local ones near home ands the beautiful sunsets for whieh Goderich is noted. Mrs. C. Lockhart showed the work she had done °at the Bourse on block printing which was held at Hensall. She ex- plained how this interesting art is done. Mrs. C. Straughan convened a delicious lunch. Eight guests were present, .also several new members. - '• In the• middle ages printing, was considered a•"genteel" oc- cupation and to get in the busi- ncss .a[ nr.frntices _ac^tu.allV _PATI. =master printers -for-,their--train - Fait: n n to rn_ teach of�fietn old. b �p ALL WHEELS EASY TERMS ASK ABOUT -CANADIAN TIRE'S ,sal FAST EXPERT INSTALLATION INSTALLED 4 MOST MODELS — Choy., Pontiac, 1'1951.58; Ford, Meteor, 1949.59; Dodge, Plymouth, 1.949.56. BIG SAVINGS FOR OTHER CARS — For example, Chev., Pontiac 1959-62, ALL 4 13.95 WHEELS �..:.........».-......... Certified mechanics carefully check entire brake system -•' PLUS many safety extras. COMPLETE BRAKE OVERHAUL EXTA- LIFETER MUFFLERS CHIVALRY: A male instinct which prompts a mc,n to protect awoman from every Mian but himself.' best selln bier n Can Any beer this popular. you should try! Carling Black Label Beer brims over with thirst -drenching flavour! Pour a tall cool one tonight .:. y.ctiu'll know why Black Label is the big favourite.. with people coast j o coast! say: "MABEL;,, BLACK -LABEL!” .� �c er�tw linsta tat on Save time Save' money and ge. pleasing operation,. Free Replacement GUARANTEE Against Blowout Chev., Pont. 1954-64 (most) .23 INSTALLED BIG savings for other cars .NvotitoteN Vitt ;TV, . the next 1100 years,' said Mrs, Royal. Mrs. R. W. Hughes' thanked the hostess for ,her hospitality, and the meeting was adjourned with the singing of "God save the Queen." PERSONAL Mrs. Joe Gillis of Cloverdale, B.C., is staying with Mr, and Mrs. Allen Larder and family. Ralph Gillis is'' staying with Mr. „ 4nd` Mrs. Phil Bissett and family and attending G.D,C.I. Thee, odexiteh Sim' uNI w S OFF TQ D,A4IFQRr !r Mr. and Mrs. Elmer' Cra'nsterl left by oar on SundaY tnl~ theta new home iri Pasadena, Dalt; fornia. The staff of Alexander and Chapman held a' farewell party for them at the Belford Hotel Friday evening, M. Cranston was with Alexander and"Chapman for the past five years. For some . yea'rs, Mr. Cranston• operated ` a funeral home and also a furniture store in Goderich. The couple will AUCTION SALE >5� m s �d;;, dor ft` fraietld kt .j] °Pth xti:e,pe b man and ,ae11 Urian is worries a:lgotit '. ,nt whip the 01110,7:• werrie4 ,ral his last one. at the CLINTON LEGION HALL, CLINTON, ONTARIO MONDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 16th- — 7:30 p.m. SHARP REPOSSESSIONS —"'BANKRUPT STOCKS and many, many personal consignments consisting of: APPLIANCES • FURNITURE • TELEV4ION Refrigerator with cross top freezer, 2 electric ranges,, long --sk-let- washer-r17--c-u•.:-f1--Food Freezert-Mat-holds--over-300•;ib frozen food, deluxe .automatic washer and dryer (electric), combinition radio and 3 -speed record changer;. 5 different -television--sets• (aH-reconditioned-and-in Al -working conzl' , -2-hosfess -chairs, platform rocker, hi -chair, telephone table, step stool, chrome rocker, writing desk, 9 x 12 rug, step and coffee tables, 4 • dinette and kitchen sets finished in, chrome and coppertone, 2-2pce. davenport suites 'complete with a hi -back swivel rocker, -'1 -pee. 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 LOW DONS FURNITURE 'SHOW.) 3 ` bookcase bedroom suites in ht ars x.:•s plat r• are; r. d .spr"log_aaiL.:. top mattress and head boards, 4-54" quilt top mattresses that fit any full size bed, 2 -pee. chestabed living room suite that folds out to a full 94 size bed with a spring -filled) mattress built 4n, 2 sets of table and trill ht lam' s 1-54 cont; e,I ,e "� i� f�i°�" �ENTION oriel" 1�t'A"K°I "?�" �1'"°°' fiii��Ci�i'S O 67.4 MEN —.Work and dress shirts, polo shirts, jackets, dress pants, ULC work and dress socks, pyjamas, belts and ties, underwear, slipper socks, sweaters and other items. WOMEN — Dresses, blouses, sweaters, pullovers and, cardigans, a skirts, nylon's", slipper socks, fall coats, 2-pce. suits, stretch slims, purses, jackets, and other items. . e ,ti A ' 9 1 ' •� e All the appliances in this sate are guaranteed to be in Al working condition 'when hooked 'tip in your home. . .CHILDREN'S CLOTHING Also -A Large Assortment For Men and Women JUST ARRIVED A Targe selection t° 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-pce. velvet sets, T-shirts,•coat and hat sets, jodphurs, leotards, underwear, s • -babies' to katal cioc •�bab-sittrts�=honsecoat ..skee ors b b or t� se Y ,. p , e3 "sw.eafexs,�,:skirfs, training: panhSF,. gl:o�res,.. poodl�.sfl�ks;... ariil� • many other items. . W. E. Williams Representative GODERICH Tel: JA,• 4-7665 4 1 - •Caaw W1br �a•y•-b®: 14-iertai�i costs very little to add Double In- ' demnity benefits to your basic Manufacturers Life 4 teuranee ehey A d;aia,the' event of death by accident . as defined in the contract, your policy will provide double the amount it would normally bay. You can see why Double Indemnity is particularly -appealing to some people. Frequent travel- lers,,for example. 1� EXTRA! CARRY d BONUS COUPO Ss ON ALL PARTS 1 ! THIS OUTSTANDING, SALE WILL BE THE BEST AND LARG- . EST 'OFFERING THAT WE ,HAVE EVER' AUCTIONED IN j THIS HALL ,AT. ANY— e.~.4030 :{ ::!wg.;n�.w w.;�•.!�;;�:�.;wcisg�r•�;: +rid ;�• +Er:•,•cr, ;.fin:,:: SAVE "CQRQn "Nip".Whetstone SAFELY '36 North 'St, ,Goderich Dial 524-7394 One-stop' - banking 11i...�i. fe��� tai?�tatcs they ll be out o .. .� .. again, .with all thctr Nanking done. night now they Want .to cash a cheque, ge-1 something out of their safety deposit box, have their savings acco>xtnt book made up. Next time ? He nay be in ahNitait a, loan; she•to buy a money order for her taunt's birthday. An able,mhliging staff' looks alter them; and should•they need help on some financial problem', the manager is there — a good man to talk things over with. Complete .service. Trained people. Conven- ient, one-stop banking at your chartered bank, THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY,. Through 5,650 branches, all across Canada, //w chartered hanks bring full -range banking within the reach of everyone. t'1. DON'T MISS iT! See You' At The Sale. AUCTIONEER — LEO E. BiRD TERMS: CASH — CHEQUES ACCEPTED ON FURNITURE 3% sales tax in effect. er.11MOOMOn But Double Indemnity is rather like an optional extra on your new car—one of several from which you can choose to suit your particular needs. You -may well find that one of the other "op- tional extras" as more valu- able to ybu. A Disability \V'tiver, for example, which '2,7PatV-S-34.014 -prettut_un1• •s til: . • . eeft c�ure l t �.x� tre d n-a•b•1 O'r ,oltng, it might mime more" hilit�--stake it possible to ' take out more life insurance in the future even if ill health makes you otherwise "uninsurable." . Is Double indemnity the best buy for you? It depends on your needs --and you know those best. But it also depends on the alternatives available—and there Manu facttirers Lifc can Jielp Just rine a -call at the number above, any time. MANUFACTURERS —A— LIFE COMPANY • 18-64 Y • 1.1.0101 { »t