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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1966-05-26, Page 14The GrderA h Signal -.Star, Thursday, May 20, 1 St. Helens k " TS«Mrs. Don Pan- ltatfeeker and Rooger ,were Week- end eekend; visitors with Mr, and Mrs. .10=0 Fletcher Of ' Merlin4. ., Mr, tnd Air$, Don Taylor had, as $lunacy dinner guests follow- . a service, M Che, bapltrsm 1 sexvr. ,r. Ind, N Mrs. Chester Taylor, Mr. Aid Mrs. Ernest Walker, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Taylor and Mr. and Mrs. M erray Taylor, Doug- las ownlas and Ruth of Wting!ham, and Mr, and Mrs: Gordon Miller and Mrs. Ron Sprague of London. Frank McQuillin suffered a . afraetw?ed right hand, following a tarn accident. George McQuillin of Toronto - was a° weekend visitor with -Miss Beatrice, Charles and William McQuillin. Mr. and Mrs. lioy Gardner and little daughter of London 'were holiday visitors with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Cur- ran and Paul. Mr. and Mrs. Fred McQuillan attended the spring convocation at the Kitchener auditorium on Monday. Barry McQuillin re- ceived his B.A. degree and is a graduate of the Wiaterlpo Luth- eran University. Mre- reenatned with her family for a few days. Dn Stenday morning Rev. A. E. Willis conducted baptismal ser- vice„atothe St. Helen's surc h „ Michael Richard and •Lisa Mau- reen Taylor,, ,children of Mr. and Mrs. Den Taylor and Karen Elizabeth,. daughter of -Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Eggleston were bap, tized. Don Cameron and his Bel- fast Chair rendered several musical nuznbers at this service. Miss Nancy Cranston .of Lon- don, spent the holiday with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Allan Cranston. -Mr. and Mrs. Norris Wilcox and family of Stoney Creek, Mr. and Mrs. Warner Smyth of 'Tees - water, Mr. Claude Haughton of Toronto and his sister whp is visiting from England were weekend visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Err; ngton and family. Mr. and Mrs. Glen McDonald of London were weekend visitors with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Harold Gaunt H�lrnesville �- HQLMESVILLE—An apprecia- tion banquet was held in the liolmesville 'United Church on Thursday evening, May 19. Guests included Rev. and Mrs. C. Park, the organist and° choir, the Sunday--ac-haolete+achers and affiicer:=s, messenger leaders, Hi -C 'Councillors and the men who attend to the heating of the church from week to week. Fol- lowing the banquet Mr. Fred Bisset. of Goderich showed ; pie - tures. of . a trip to Vancouver and through the U.S. to Cali - aa, as well as many local .fora scenes: -Mer- D: Gliddoneexpr-ess- ed thanks to Mr. Bissett for sharing his picture-takh g hobby with the group. Rev. C. Park thanked the ladies of the con- t gregation• who were responsible for this delightful evening. Messengers Meet The messengers met in the Sunday School rooms on Friday afternoon. The. hymn "Jesus Loves Me" with Laurelanne Bond at the piano. opened the meeting. Sharon Patter read the Scripture.' The offering was taken by • Jo Anne Cook and dedicated by Glenda Blake. Mrs. G. Blake took the story period. Wendy Miller called- the roll and Mrs Patter discussed plans for . a • June picnic. ' Madeline Yeo and Wendy Miller were in charge •of the games., Cookies were served by Linda Blake; :God Save the 'Queen by-Shiarion Patter closed the meeting. Mayor's Campaign Shows Progress Mayor Walkonz's war on trails er parking in Harbor Park has r.eaelieda stalemate, lent the eampcess,aig,gn has shown some sue - The Mayor began the drive when he anounced in his in- atigural address to council he in- tended to Dar the mobile Manes this year. , Trailers, however, are al- ready being moved into the iciest end park. About six trailer own- ers have picked sites and are readying their units for sum: mer residence. Mayor Walkom does not ac- cept their presence as total defeat. ``Trailers are being allowed to use the park, but in reduced number," he said. "Last year, and many times in „ the past, they were so crowded together there wasn't' enough room to walk between them, This year we're weaning ,them out." He reports large areas for recrea- tion will now be available at the camp. Total victory in the ban4the- trailer eampaign — which is actively backed by the. Gode- rich Horticultural Society—has eluded the mayor because. of a ters are holding open house on Saturday, May 28, at 3:30 p.m. at which time the girls will display their year's projects. Mothers and,all those interested in home- making club work are cordially invited to attend. Miss Sandra Williams of Bur- lington, spent the weekend at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Williams. Mrs Gladys Whitmore, Blyth, spent the weekend with Mr. atid" Mrs. Orville -Blake. -Senior Citizens • The Senior Citizens held their first meeting of the month May 4. A business meeting was held with Mr. A. Kitton in the chair, after Which contests were held. The winners were Mrs. J. Mar- wick, Mrs. R Orr, Mr. J. Mar wick, Mrs. Wilkinson alnd Mrs. C. Thompson., The door prize was won by Mrs. Voliens. Lunch was 'served by Mn.sThompson and her committee. The second meeting was held on May 18. Cards and crokinole were played. The winners at 500 were Carl Cooper- and Mrs. Ethel Huston. At euchre Mrs. J. McIntyre and Mr. Kitton. The crokinole prizes went to Mr. Chas. Young - and Mr. Prouse with Mr. J. McIntyre taking • tome the door prize_The next meeting ,will be held next Wed- nesday. difference of epinien on, fawn eoiunt;il, Mayor WA kern Said only he and parks committee chairman of Such had come out in favor restrictive action at Harbor Park. "Those against the move say It' (the restriction) would hurt the t9urist trrde here," he said. Trailers owners are being en- courage dto use the Point Farm camp about four miles from Godericb. The park was opened by the provincial govei?nment last year, The town -owned Harbor Park provides hot water, picnic, rec- reational and other trailer faeili+ies for 56 a week.' Aver- age registration has been in excess ' of 300 per year, The Happy - Holrnesville Hat- • J. K.. SuIIy To Speak John K. Sully, president and general manager of Dominion -Road Machinery Co. Ltd., Goderich, will be a member of a panel at the 10th anniver- sary conference of the Mid- western -Ontario Development Association rn New Hamburg, next Tuesday. , _ --Other'° members .of -the panel-• are R. Stephen Rodd, a re- gional development and land economy specialist at the Uni- versity of Guelph, and Peter Klopchic, director of travel re- search for the department Of tourism and information. The panel . will discuss a comparison of economic de- velopment in this region with that in the rest of the pro- vince. Speaker 'at the dinner will be economics and develop- ment minister Stanley Ran - dell. GLIDDEN EXTERIOR PAINTS Set Bean Elections Outlasts ordinary paint by 50%. Acrylic Latex keeps its velvet finish clean and bright. Dirt won't cling — colors won't fade. Homogenized Spred Wit-.. requires less frequency of paint- ing than conventional house paints—resulting .in less time, effort and expense. Solves the problem of arm- tining brush drag and gives all- weather protection! It's the first choice of many homeowners! The self-cleaning properties of Endurance _House Paint keeps• Surfaces bright, clean looking. . longer. SERVICE ELECTRIC VICTORIA ST. N. G0l7ERICH .!..TD. Dial 524-8581 ATTENTION BEAN GROWERS TREFLAN may be obtained locally Phone or Pick Up At GEORGE WRAITH No. '8 Highway, Goderich OR Phone 524-7002 SHAMROCK CHEMICALS LIMITED No. 135 Highway, London - Phone Collect 45651 'ateA 21.2.23 w Activities LOOHA - 'hie regular W.M.S. Meeting of Ashfield Prestriterian Church was held en Thursday afternoon .at the home. of N re. Richard West. Mrs. Ditnald. R. MadCenzie was a recent visitor in Stratford. Seott MMOharles, son of Mr. and Mrs: Donald McCharles of Brantford, spent the past week with his grandparents, Mr. and Mrs. Oliver McCherles, Miss Mable MacDonald of Windsor spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. David Mac- Donald and family. lio"Tne for the holiday week - Personal Miss Gertrud Wilkes of Gode- rich, was a recent guest at The Guild Inn, Scarboro. Susan B. Corless, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Corless, 38a The Square has graduated from the University of Western On- tario with a bachelor of arts degree in history. Susan will be working at Chateau Lake Louise for the summer. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Breckow sPent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Victor Campbell and Larry of London. Service Heli For Youth -Gerald Fritzley A funeral service was held. Saturday for Gerald '1VfcCbr4niclt Fritzley, 20, of 99 Parks St., who died May 18 as the result of injuriesreceived in an 'auto- mobile accident' on Highway 21 north of _ here. Gerald had been active in hockey and baseball. He is survived by his parents, Mr. and Mrs. ,P. M. Fritzley, a brother Joseph and sister Linda, both at home. The service wasconducted at the Lodge Funaral Home by Rev. G. -L. Royal of Knox Pres- byterian 'Church, 'and burial was in Maitland Cemetery. Pall- bearers were Victor Whetstone, Jack Chambers, Michael Dren- nan, Frank Me arty, John Adams and Raymond Black. 1VIeetings of the Ontario Bean Growers Co-operative and the Ontario Bean Marketing Bard will be held in Central Huron Secondary School, Clinton, next Monday. Both meetings are scheduled to start at 8:30 p.m. , The OBMB meeting is to elect committeemen and nominate bean producers to serve as directors of. the Ontario Bean Producers' Marketing Board for. district five. In L�chalih end . at, the Don .MacDonald residence 'were Finlay 1VIae- Donalds of Chatham, Miss Sally and Louise MacDonald of Windsor. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Mac- Lennan spent the weekend visit- ing in London. . • Mr. and Mrs. Don Ainsley and family of Toronto spent the weekend with Mr: anal Mrs, Frank MacLennan. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Finlay- son are the proud grand- parents of the second son born to Mr and Mrs. Bill Rogerson of Toronto, last week. KINGSBRIDGE o- KINGSB1IIDOEE—Mr. and Mrs. and children of London, Mr. and Jim Martin, Joe, Peter and Ted Mrs., Maurice Dalton, Hamilton Martin spent the holiday week- visited Mrs. Dennis Dalton over end near North Bay. the weekend. Mr. and Mrs, Cletus Reynolds, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Gibbons, Sudbury, spent the weekend Burlington: Mr. and Mrs. Ciias. with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Dalton Blonde, Oakville were recent and family. Dther holiday visit- visitors with Mr, and Mrs.. Ray ors with the Daltons were Mr. Dalton and Mrs. Gordon Valad, London, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fitzgerald Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Hansford, and family, Stratford spent the Galt. holiday weekend at their home Mr. and Mrs. Sandy MaPher- here. son and Sandra Liynn, Oshawa, Miss Mary Lou Drennan, Gode- rich spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Drennan. rs. Maurice Edwards, Mark, Mary Ann and Sharen visited Mrs. G.-Kinahan over the week-. end. t. Mrs John Kelly is, a patient in Goderich hospital. Mr. Kelly is a patient at Maitland Manor nursing home, Goderiah. Mr. and Mrs. Len Woodley and family vi3ited Mrs. Clifton Austin. Mr. and Mrs.• H. Lamberties, ;Mrs. Clifton Austin, Mrs. Dennis Dalton, Brian and Maria, Miss butch 'AKE itantk"iii attended–the Meyer-Dirodat wedding Satur- day morning in Hesson' and re- cerprtion wfUll*win'g. Mr. and Mrs. Arnold Marsman BAND CONCERT The 32 -member Goderich District Collegiate Institute Viking Band will give its first public concert in Court House Park Friday from 7:30 tintil 8 p.m. Mrs. Eugene Frayne,. Mary Ann and Lisa visited her parents Mr. and Mrs. Kraemer in Hesson over the weekend. Mr. and Mrs. Joe O'Keefe -and Mary Anne attended t he Amadeo-Cancilla wedding. in To- ronto last weekend. • Mr. and Mrs. on MacLean spent the weekend in Colling- wpod with Mr. and .Mrs. Allan MacLean and fatally. Dads and lads at the Lions Club hockey banquet from this. area enjoyed the outing. Lads who played hockey during the winter from this area were Bill, Brad and Bob Mae enzie, Russ iVfonierief, Graham and . Greg f-laniilton and Ken and David Parrish. Spending the holiday week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Mac- Kenzie was Mr. Ray MacKenzie of Toronto. The Explorers of Ashfield Presbyterian Church met on Tuesday evening at the church with their leader Mrs. Henry MacKenzie. Graduationexercises were held to which parents acid friends. were invited. Mrs, Ewan MacLean spent the weekend in Sarnia. 4-H Swine Club The second meeting of the 441 Swine Club was held in the board rooms in Clinton, May 17. A short quiz followed the dis- cussion of swine aationS. Methods of tattooing ' lie pigs were illu t rated boy.. Bb.- #dickey: -Th next meeting will be held in the same building on June 21 with veterinary Dr. Turnbull of SeaLBorth, "as guest speaker. OUR SPECIAL NYLON LIFTS • FOR LADIES' HIGH HEELS 85c HEWS SHOE REPAIR 71 HAMILTON ST. CANADA1111111111111111111111111111111111111111.111111111111 LTD. OF STRATFORD Accounting Department REQUIRES Industrial Accountant Interinediate Stages of I ..I.A., C.G.A. Course.- or equivalent in practical experience. Attractive starting salary, excellent employee benefit program, good prospects for advance- ment with a progressive and expanding company. APPLY TO: MANAGER INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS Co�perBesserner OF CANADA LTD. 105. St, Patrick St., Stratford Interviews Arratefed To Sunt Applicants' Convenience CALL STRATFORD 271-1760 .GERMAN CHOCOLATE CAKE • • SUGGESTIONS TARTS SQUARES LONG HOT DOG ROLLS HAMBURG BUNS - CULBERT'S BAKERY "The Home Of Tasty Pastry Since. 1877" 1111111111111111111111111111.11111.111111111111111111111 NOW! WOOD GRAIN YOUR OLD CHEST for approx. with FLECTO Decorator Finishes" Put' ylecto Decorator Fin- ishes right over old surfaces. L. No paint or varnish to rerhove. Easy to apply in two simple steps, no- special skill neces- sary, no special tools requited. Over 100 Flecto Finishes to choose from. Put new life in old . furniture, walls, cabinets, picture frames, interior and exterior •doors, Ask for' Flecto Antique Marbelize and Wood Grain Finishes, sold by , •13y the manuf't're or RED Hrr Foodmaster Open Nitely Until `I0 )p.m. • a 91 VICTORIA ST. NORTH GODERICH WHILE THEY LAST FRESH PORK SH�ULDERS lb. tetalfonf SMOKED Picnic Shoulders LB. SWIFTS PREMIUM 59c SIDE BACON ENJOY THEM THIS WEEKEND- PIECES SWIFTS SWEET' PICKLED BACK Bacon LB, 79c Peameal Loin. Pork Chops.: LIQUID PLASTIC Midget Style Spare Ribs . em.'LE, HERIz KETSUP 2 fca 85c QUART SIZE FACELLE ROYALE PAPER . OMO 69c Towels 4 ROL5:1. 32-0Z. COOKING OIL QUART SIZE MAZOLA 89c CHEER. MONARCH Margarine LB. 2,9c 69 Cheerios FOR 69 NABISCO 18's •— SHREDDED 28.OZ.e80'fTLES KIST WHEAT 2 FOR 69c GINGER ALE 5 FORS, 20 :14:0 SAYS CORVAIR S UNSAFE FAMOUS RACING DRIVER "STIRLING MOSS" .:.SAYS IT ISN'T The most maligned . ear of the past decade is the Corvair. Some- how, somewhere, someone de- cided it was an unstable car because of its rear engine and swing axle rear suspension. The rumor spread. Eventually there were accidents. And inevitably, survivors took the (builders to count. Only GM knows " how many millions of dollars it is threat- ened with. but the amount would be staggering if the cases were lost. Luckily for General Motors the all-important initial trial was decided in favor of the de= fendants. LB. 1 09 The situation `snakes for --sen= sationalism and recently . some eager but ill-informed • writers and broadcasters have been giv- ing it an airing without fair regard to the actual facts about Corvair. Twice the CBC has in- troduced the matter on its pro- grams, the most recent occasion being on the program "This Hour Has Seven Days." Un- fortunately it repeated the claims being made in legal actions' without calling on ex pert opinion to refute them. What makes all this so danger- ous is that it can seriously -dis- turb the -sale of the car. Truth is that the Corvair is a vet? good car. And it deviatesi from the rather .unimaginative way in which North American cars have been engineered dur- ing the past 20 years. The cur- rent model is not only different from the rest of the crop but it comes close to being a family sports car. As such, it doesn't deserve the slander it has been getting. Slander which is unfair, untrue, grossly exaggerated. In addition, the public- attitude towards oars is riddled with long-standing beliefs, fantasies; and an unreasonable resistance to quick change. To alter the traditional North American con- cept of how a car should look, or be constructed, is like spear;, inig out- against mother, . crew - cute, or the supermarket. Let me sum up with the fol- lowing: The;Corvair was, and is., a perfectly safe, automobile. It was guilty of- only one thiilg— being different. (And in our. society, that is often sufficient to convict.) Rumor, prejudice,. and just plain driver inadequacy have combined to drive this. -fine--a-utomabi-le to–the–courts.- It's Irt's a witch-hunt on wheels, Stirling Moss thinks so, too. His expert testimony on behalf of the Corvair hcLped GM win the first case with an 11 to 1 jury decision in less than'four hours. LB 99cI 112.49c 32 -OZ. SALAD, BOWL Salad Dressing 49 64 -OZ. LIQUID STARCH How can this -happen? Easy. A man's feelings about automobiles can overrule his common sense. GLIDE 45c LARGE SIZE ROBIN HOOD Cake Mixes 4 FOR 1. Box Plants SERVICE Petunias - Asters -Marigolds ELECTR1C GODERICH LTD. Victoria St. N. • 5248581 a, 111.11111111.111 Npw Available Tomatoes Impatience - Pansies, etc. 42 i.16);ATilbEs NEW POTATOES 10 �x 69c F R49 PIT STOPS . . . "This Hour Has Seven Days" came on with a follow-up to the program in which it endeavored to prove that manufacturers are not equipping their automobiles with adequate safety devices. Re- corded phone -calls. permitted drivers who • had been in .ac- cidents to talk about ' their ex- periences and blame the auto, inobilee,..,.The program made a point of mentioning the makes. involved, concluding with a politician's compliment to the show and a comment by Henry` Ford presented in such a way as to seem derogatory. Since automotive d e s i g n. safety and marketing : can only be fudged by experts with•years of experience it is unfortunate that the program appeared to speak with authority and knowl- edge. And how many of these broadcasters, politieians and .ac- cident survivors use the great- est aid to safety—seat belts? Very few., I'd bet • SEE ME STEW SPLAN ABOUT MY 1966 CORVAIR DURtN9 OU1t DEMONSTRATOR SALE BAIRD MOTORS GODERICH` LTD. 414aHUR014 RD. 5244311'