The Goderich Signal-Star, 1964-11-19, Page 9777,7
Landed value of the catch -of
Canada's see fisheries totalled
$115 million ing 1963; landed
value of - the catch of the in-
land fisheries is about $20 mil-
lion annually.
PROGRESS: A state of hu-
man .development Where a man
pays a laundry for destroying
his shirts and collars.
If you want to know what's
behind the headlines, ask any
housewife.' She'll tell you it's
,her husband, especially at the
breakfast table..
- By advertising a product, a
manufacturer sells more and by
selling more he ,canna cut unit
cost in production, thereby
making the product cost less.
u can save on most big
purchases if you buy with
cash. Get that cash now with
an HFC Big Purchase Loan.
Shop anywhere for the best
values on major appli-
ances, furniture --even
a better car. Then repay
HFC sensibly and con-'
veniently. Borrow with
confidenceatHousehold
finance. •
ASK ABOUT
CREDIT LIFE INSURANCE
ON LOANS AT '
LOW GROUP RATES
AMOUNT
OF
LAN
P MONTHLY
86
months
PAYMENT
30
months
20
.months
$ 6.1-2
32.86
44.13
58.11
''.14-446:42-
PLANS
12
months
$• 9.46
51.24
69,21
9;1.56
$1'00
550
750
1000
4600-
$, .a .
-----81.65
, ,
::
$ '
23.,73
41.45-
,2200
2500
83.71
95.12
,:,:
94.62
107.52
129.41
147.05
201.46
228.93
The annual Commencement
and., Graduation ,Exercises of
G.D,C.I., is to be held in the
Collegiate Auditorium on Fri-
day, November 20, eommencing
,at 8.15 p.m. -
Chairman will be Principal
0. L. Day. Remarks will be
made by the Board Chairman,
Mr. Barrie Walter.
• Presentation of honor' gradu-
ation diplomas will be made by
S.' Wheeler and the secondary
school graduation diplomas by
H. Bettger.
Scholarships will be present-
ed by J. Stringer. Bursaaaies
rr r
W. J. Denomme
FLOWER
Above payments include principal and interest and are -
based on prompt repayment, but do not include the costo,
Life Insurance. -
Phone
8432
will be presented as follows:
Maple Leaf LO.D.E., by Mrs. M.
McGill; Branch 109, Royal Can-
adian Legion by G. Chambers;
Goderich Graduate Nurses' As-
•saciation by Mrs. "James Don-
nelly. Awards will be: Cath-
olic Women's League by Mrs.
James Donnelly; G.D C.h Cadet
Corps by Ralph Munro; W. H.
Robertson soholarship by A. R.
Scott; B. R. 'Robinson award .by
Ralph Munro; A. M. Robertson
award by A. R. Scott,
,Subject prizes will be pre-
sented by Robert Jewell for
'grade 9; Ralph Foster for grade
10; Ted East for grade 11;
Norman McDowell for grade 12;
Larry Rieek for grade 13.
Music will be supplied,by the
G.D.C.I. choir under the direc-
tion of W. Tucker.
The guest speaker will be
W. S. Turner, B.A., LL.D., Dean
of the Ont e e • • • e . -
cation, London. He will •e in-
troduced by Gerry Ginn.
The vi1edictory address will
be made' by Miss Nancy Watters,
who is now attending the Uni-
versity of Western Ontario.
The Goderich Highland Danc-
ing and Piping Association held
their first competition of the
season on November 7 at the
'Goderich District Collegiate.
Winners in the various events
were:
Novice
Fling, Brenda Harrison, Mary,
Anstay,,. Gayle Fisher. Sword,,
Gayle Fisher, Brenda Harrison,
Lesley Lambert.
Eight Years and Under
Fling, Marissia Zuliani (Wind-
sor), Sylvia Zuliani (Windsor).
Sword, Marissia Zuliani, Bren-
da Harrison. Irish Jig, Marissia
Zuliani, Sylvia Zuliani.
.10 Years and Under
Fling, Ida Riggs (Windsor),
Nancy Hangrar (Windsor), Kim
Mailloux (Windsor). Sward,
Nancy Hangrar, Ida Rrggs' Hea-
ther MacKenzie. Irish Jig, Kim
Mailloux, Nancy Hangrar.
13 Years and Under
$.word, . Mary Ruth Rush,
Seann Triubhas, Mary Ruth
Rush, Kerry Toll, Cheryl Young-
biut; hornpipe, Mary Ruth Rush,
Cheryl Youngblut, Kerr3y Toll.
16 Years and Under
Fling, Linda Young, Barbara
GODERICH
35A West Street --Telephone 3•. a -73J
" . (above the Signal Star) '
DAYOk
NIGHT
Agalht for 2g -hr.
FILM DEVELOPING
AIM
GODERIC.H , ,ONT.
Dancing Every Saturi1$ °fie '"i? oung'Crowd
No Slacks .or Jeans
'-- -TH'I OVEMBER-2l`st'— . --
"THE, ROULETTES"
of Kitchener
9 p.m. to Midnight Admission 75c per person
Catering to Weddings, "Luncheons, Banquets, etc.
For 'rental information or reservations
DIAL 524-9371 or 524-9264
MacLeod. Sword,.Linda Young,
Barbara MacLeod. Irish
Linda Young, Barbara MacLeod.
20 Years and Under
Fling, Janet ,Young, Irish
Ji, Janet Young.
Piping
Novice March, Alastair- Pirie,
Linda Young. 14 Years and
under—March, Gdorge Turland,
Bob Worrall. Strathspey and
Reel, George Turland, BQb Wor-
rall. 16 Years and under —
March, Charlie MacDonald;
Bryan Ybung. Strathspey and
Reel; Charlie MacDonald, Ian•
MacKenzie.' 20 Years and un-
der — March, James Millar.
Strathspey and Reel, James Mil-
lar.
Benmiller UCW
Yuletide .Plans
BENMILLER.—At the U.C.W.
November meeting, the presi-
dent, Mrs. II. Davidson, presid-
ed. The roll call was a dona-
tion ..to the -Cancer Fund'
The recording secretary gave
the minutes of the October
Is' •r ,,av- a
talk and report on "Stewardship
and the good work the Home
Missions were doing.
Miss A. Baxter, social argl sup-
ply, said she was pleased to
tell the ladies that the parcel
had been sent to Mrrs. Qlton.
Mrs. A. Straughan and Mrs. W.
Treble read poems on, Remem-
brance Day. ,
'Picture'Pictureg taken at camp coun-
cil lay Miss Jane Fisher were
passed ,around for .the Iadies to
see.
The repgit ,was zive n on 1et-
ers, caaikls and visits to the
sick. Mrs. A. Straughan read
the report from the Huron
Presbyterial on 'the allocation
for 1965. Plans were made to
help a needy family for Christ-
mas. ,
The"Meeting closed •with pray -
Lunch was served by the
hosfcsses, Mrs. L. Rowe, Mrs. J.
Kernighan,-,,,Mrs. A. Straughan
The November meeting of St.
George's Woman's ' Auxiliary
was held in the Guild room with
the president, Mrs. F. Hunt pre,
siding and leading in the. Open,
ing prayers. Mrs. T. E. Prit-
chard read the Scripture.
Mrs. li°I:,• Tiehborne, social ser-
vice convener, reported 23 calls
on the sick and shut-ins. In
connection with •Dorcas work,
Mrs -13. Munn had .received yarn
to knit sweaters. A red _and ,
white 'knitted at was displayed
on, the table. Reporting for the
Girls', and Junior Auxiliaries,
.vus. O. Slemin said they were
having a home made bake sale
the following Saturday.' •
The annual •meeting is being
held In December and the pre-
sident reminded me1'ribers to
have their -reports ready. Miss
Bea Lauder,' Mrs. A. C. Biay
and Mrs,' G. Love were named
as the nominating, committee.
Mrs. F. F. Sale and Mrs. 'D.
Wilson gave graphic accounts of
• _LrLg
soli and ithe -Deanery meeting
held at Exeter.
Miss Bea Lauder gave the
chapter from the .study book
on "Undergraduates" written
by Miss Pat Bell, daughter of
an Anglican minister. .
The tea hostesses, Mrs. T.' E.
Pritcj ard, Mrs. W. Legg and
,s' Lauder served tea and
ch after the meeting closed,
wits a Modern Automatic
CLOTHurn
Four brand name, top-quality gag dryers to choose fro -fn.:.
',General meeting of the Leg-
ion Ladies'. Auxiliary was held
Novernber 10 with the presi-
dent, Mrs. J. Sherratt, presiding.
Minutes of the last meeting
were read.
Excellent reports 4ere given
by the ' va'rious committees.
Thank you letters were receiv-
ecj from •Westminster Hospital,
fo' annual Christmas gifts; also
monthly parcel for the adopted
veteran.
Mrs. "N. Kingswell was in
charge of nominations for slate
of officers for 1965.
ta��a
tce conduct monthly '.bingos
tery prize ,was won. by, B.
Harris. Lunch was .served by
Mrs,- Ruth. Taman` "anc _ a OM:*
m i ttoe.. "
aftwoommumormidniMeiniii
.
ENJOY THE •'FINEST° FOOD
IN .10WNN.•
chine.Ford ,`
Our Specialty; -'
!a`LSO TAKE-OUT, ORDERS
'.Q.PEN. -.DAILY T anti:_,to;._.1.O .p.
Open Friday,•• -and',. Saforday
Until 12 Midnight' •
SPEAK FRENCH AND BE
°t"' • SLAPPED
Do you think those separat-
ists in Quebec- might shut up
abdut the whole thing if all the
rest of us learned to speak
French fluently enough to give
them a good cussing out in
their native tongue?
e: * *
If this is a solution, let's get
cracking. But 1 don't think it
can be accomplished under our
present system of learning the
language. We are getting a
great many teachers of French
these days who can actually
speak the Ia,nguage. But the
system prevents their?. r'i3`it
passing it along to others,.
'.Asa prominent educator said
the other day, "We take kids
from immigrant families who
speak poor English. We teach
them, French badly, encourage,
theto forget their native
tongue, whatever it is, and wind
up with youngsters ,who;; are
illiterate in three languages."
1 know from experience.' My:
mother had to,go" to a French=
jpeaking'school as.a child, She
learned the language wit; the
ease all children have in grasp-
.i.rig=.a- tongue.•m.Ali..-bei.-.life. she -
could rattle it off like a •.bebit-
ant.
* *
On the other hand, I studied
French for five years in high
school and four years in Uni-
versity. Nine years. Enough
time, you'd thiink, to learn to
speak French backwards. And
that is exactly how I speak it.
Perhaps the worst feature of
the 'teaching of French in :his
country is the false confidence
it engenders after exposure to
a few years of it. You can"
spiel off a couple of sentencet
without stumbling, and you be-
gin to think you're a regular our kids French when they're •
her,, ineffable form, aril iter .
tin.guislednelllgence. $b+ „
listened courteously, turned to
her friend, and shrugged huge-
ly. My 'brother said, "Come on,.
babe," and away they marched
arm in arm. I ,was left to fol-
low with the fat one.
• * *
A similar experience caused
me to forswear French for life.
It occurred in Lille, France,
soon after the city had been
liberated from the Germans
*:
It happened, in a night club.
The locals were very happy
about liberation and the troops
were very happy about, 'the
locals Everyone was dansing
with Fthhe French girls, ' even
i ell -
beaming. ' '
° * *' ' * •
�I. spotted a lulu, dark, charm-
ing, 'intelligent enough to ap-
preciate the fact that I, almost
alone among ,the invaders,
spoke fluent `Pr , As 1 ap-
proached the tables she smiled
a welcome, and her°escort, a'
handsome French lad, jumped
,up," grinned, and shook hands.
* .,_* •
So, in my fla*less French, I
asked her for a dance. . Y
least I'll swear that's what I
and slapped my'face'wHer boy
friend simultaneously turned,
rt*d and tried to kick'me inthe
groin.
* *
1 still don't know what, 1 said
to her, but I've never taken a
chance since.' On the rare oc-
casions, nowadays, when I have
enough money to eat in a place
where 'the menu is in French, 1
study it carefully for fen min -
,so, 'Chen, , i,nform, the'
waiter, in pure Canadian Eng-
lish, that I'll have the roast
beef. 'there's always Rosbif.
• *
The only solution is to teach
•:, p .•:r u ay ':l'it�lehtoiss hay ..T'..q.
, ,x o :tiro € an i u tk.nir�2n&na �anpeccLJor m
,sells, My young brother was earthly•reason. And little girls.
with me. The only 'French he will learn to say___`_`iYon"., and
knew was -crude;- useless stuff "O'ui" and "Peut-etre" in two
languages.
like; .•`Bebe, je t'aime" and
"Voti'lex-volts de bully -beef ou
des nylons?" . -
In contrast, I had a.. solid
grounding of high, , School
French, and had. been Iiv'ing on
th ;continent for a couple of
months, speaking the real thing.
-So we met yo•u•ngwlady
and her ?need. She was belle;,
but her pal was beaucoup. This
was my chance. In my • impec-
cable Grade 12 French. I step-
ped up to the doll and inform-
ed her of her ravishing beauty,
From now until December 31, youcan
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This is your chance to take advantage
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• ri
What's more, if you buy your gas dryd
during this special prornotion, you may
win one of eight new 1965 Westinghouse
"Solid State" all -transistor stereo sets
of Scandinavian design,.equipped with
/JIM -FM Tuner—FM Stereo and Garrard
changer. In addition; every purchaser
will receive—free=an attractive, lova-
ble Gas Genie p011 that will delight
the children!
Victoria Street U.0.W. roup 3
was helcl - at the.4home- of Mrs.
S. C. Argyle Thursday - after -
non, November 12th,l with nine
members present, Mrs. McKin-
non gave the call to worship
and also conducted the devotion-
al , exerpitos.
The Scripture was read by
Mrs. Frank Wilson. A moment's
silence in memory of a valued
member, Mrs.Jennie-MC'Donald,
was observed followed by pray -
was observed followed by prayer
and the singing of. a hymn. The
offering was taken and dedicat-
ed by Mrs. McKinnon.
Donations "'for the bazaar tea
tableswere listed. Birthday
and shut-in boxes were passed.
Stewardship reading was'gi;ven
by Mrs. Argyle, taken from the
leaflet on "What's 'My Busi
ness"? Mrs. Torn Wilson.'gave
an interesting and instructive
talk on "The overthrow of Com-
munism in Brazil" taken from
the study book. Mrs. Argyle
gave a talk on Trinidad,. A
lunch was served at the close .
of the meeting by the hostess.
Most newsprint used in the
'United State comes from
Canada,
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