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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1958-09-04, Page 2Pay* 2 T s Advocate, September 4, Thea newspaper believes the right to express an opinion in public contributes to the pro' press of the nation and that it must he exercised freely to pre.. serve and improve derioeratic government. Lives At Stake Recent death resulting from an accident at a rural intersection in this area serves to emphasize the hazardous condition which exists on many town- ship roads. At the intersection at which the local fatality occurred, a high crop of corn obscured the vision of both drivers. The intersection was unmarked; !.here was neither stop nor warning sign on either road. This is not the most serious condition which exists on rural highways, though the results of this accident were tragic. At intersections where there are stop signs, the markers become obscured by weeds, grain or fence posts. Rarely are there warn- ing signs when an intersection conies below the crest of a hill or around a turn, and the driver is not aware of the crossing until he is in it. While the corner farmer may relieve part of the hazard at such intersections by being careful about the crop he grows there, as the inquest jury recommended last week, we feel the onus for reliev- ing the situation lies more directly with township councils and the Ontario Department of Highways. Generally, it appears that municipal°councils in the rural areas are not concerned about road warning signs, perhaps understand.bly so because the members and the ratepayers are quite familiar with the roads and fail to understand the position of the motorist who is not acquainted with the haz- ards. And, naturally, municipal councils, pressed for funds, are not anxious to spend considerable money purchasing and maintaining expensive road signs. The idea, however, that signs are not needed because the majority of ratepayers are familiar with the roads is not a safe one. Familiarity sometimes breeds carelessness and rural drivers often place themselves in extreme danger by ignoring the hazards which exist at unmarked intersections. It is therefore as much in the interest, of the local resident as the touring motorist that proper warning signs be erect- ed.. We believe the only solution to the problem is through regulations of the Ontario Department of Highways, enforced by officials of that department who might tour township roads once a year to ensure that proper marking are provided. Action is required , to alleviate the situation soon. Lives are at stake. !nkrmation (Award Winning'Editorial By W. E. Doole, Editor, Brampton (Ont.) Conservator) Perhaps one of the most taken -for -granted and least appreciated Rights in the democratic way of life is our Right to be Informed. Like sunlight and fresh air, freedom of speech and freedom of the press tend to become so much a part of our daily life that we give them little thought. And' yet, like sunlight and fresh air, these freedoms are indispens- able to healthy growth and well-being. Their removal would stifle our existence. The seeds of corruption and totalitarianism. wither and die under the bright glare of unbridled and unprejudiced publicity. Communism and Facism grew strong in those countries where a free press was strangled. In Canada and in the United States, the spotlight of free speech and free press shrivelled on the vine the ridiculous efforts of the Nazi bunds, the Communist cells, and the KW, Klux Klan. The highway -contracts and Petawawa scandals were erad- icated when exposed to the light of public informa- tion. Freedom fighters all clown through the ages have struggled and died for the Right of the Public to be Informed. But the fight goes Jan today. Less spectacular perhaps and maybe less obvious are the insidious inroads of today's efforts is t o ham -string the channels of communication. Whenever you hear of a newspaper being barred from a legitimate public meeting, whenever you hear of another bureaucraticrestriction on pub- lication, your Right to be Informed is at stake. So it is in jeopardy when a newspaper surrenders con- scientious editing and news -gathering to build accept- ance of propaganda "hand-outs". Your newspaper has the challenging respons- ibility of keeping you informed on all matters af- fecting your economic, cultural, political and spiritual welfare; to bring you facts without fear, favour or prejudice. A conscientious newspaper when it fights to uphold Freedom of the Press is not pursuing a selfish objective. It is not merely seeking greater license for irresponsible axe -grinding and monetary gain. It is in truth battling for your Right to be Kept In- formed. Xbe cuter ximesillibotate Tunes Established 1873 Advocate Established 1881 Amalgamated 1924 c fi L„ Published Each Thuriday Morning at Stratford, Ont. A11thhorized as Second Clam Man, Post Office i?ep'f, Oft.We AWAltbt Fronk. Hoare I5'eettie 5hlpid, !teat 'treNf Yawn (Cenada), 1951/, A. 4i. Nolen Trephy,'generat excellence for tlewstpapert published Iii Oritario,. town* between, 1,300 And 4,500 population, 1958, 1957, 1956; J. Geotge. iohndtbn Trophy, typogrepitttat axaeitlence (Ontario), 1951; E. T. Sfepheiieel Trophy, beef .060' page (Ontario), 1956, 1955 All•Cenade ThSuran'de Ftderefleii rtetleriat safety awarit, 953, Peict,In•Aflvince Cleculeflffii, March . r :. 3440 *U65rr*lPl"ION ttecret Canada $4.00 Pew Yee USA $5.55 MERRY MENAGERIE r Walt Disney 01958 i ,,lt Thula,. Prod;uttons. Worlq Rights Reserrii 'a�t1i%4' "Bye, 'bye, dear—have a nice flight:" .14111!1111111liflll111111111f11111i11111111111i111i11;lIIIIIt11l11111111111111111111il llllnllllll llllll111111/IIIt1111111111111n11111111111 Sugar AND Spice Dispensed. By BILL SMILEY 111111111111111111141It1l1111111111111111/1I1111t11111IIIIIn I77n1111illlinil Ullt,ll/1111 {IIt11I11111111111111111111111{I 111 lltllnllll111 Who wouldn't be a school teach- er during the first week in Sept- ember? Those long, boring mono- tonous two months of holidays are finally ended, thank good. ness. And there you are, as de- lighted as Daniel in the lion's den, face to face with 30 or 40 miniature monsters who are just busting with health and hellery, and are all ready, willing and able to turn you into one big, quivering twitch in a matter of weeks. * * * * Who wouldn't be a farmer when September rolls around? Cattle so fat they can scarcely walk. Golden grain up to your navel. Nothing to do but jog around to fall fairs. Not a worry in the world. Except that the bottom might fall out of the cattle market the day before you ship Or a hailstorm will arrive the day before the combine does, have -you, and that you don't have to take them for a blasted drive, or swim, or picnic, every time you show yourself around the rancho. * r1 i Oh, there's a certain sadness in the knowledge that summer is aver, and that lasts, only a day or so, Any red-blooded Ca- nadian knows deep in his boots that summer is merely an un- real state, of mind that has no :more substance, no more stay- ing power, than a pleasant dream. * * ,, Summer is strictly for women, children and tourists, For men, it's just a matter of running around in a circle for 60 days, and getting not only hot, but no- where. Come September, the average Canadian male settles down, gets the well-worn shoul- der to the familiar wheel and * begins to enjoy life, instead of Who wouldn't be a resort open- plunging about like a dart in ator in September? Your pests windstorm, as he does in July of guests all vanished with La- and August., bor Day Nothing to do but sit around and count the profits and plan the trip to Florida. Or count the ten long months before there's any more money coming in, and plan a trip to town to see the bank manager and make a payment. * Wlio wouldn't be a weekly edi- tor as September dawns anew? Just back from the annual con- vention, where youwined and dined and whined with the best of them. Feeling like a skeleton and confronted with a mass of editorials, a column and six obituaries to write, rather sur- prised that your own isn't among them. 4 M•. A M• Name one mother who would- n't be a mother in the first seven days of good old September. Gone are the dreary days of summer, when there was noth- ing to do but lie around in the back yard, trying to get your bosom tanned. Arrived are the gladsome days when life begins, not at 40. but at 7.30 a.m., and the hours, instead of dragging, are filled with happy little do- mestic tasks right through until you careen into bed at midnight. There are over 20 ranges of mountains in Canada and the highest peaks are in the St. Elias Range. in northern British Col- umbia and the Yukon, 1111l nig, News Of Your LIBRARY By MRS. J. M. S. Little do we realize when we listen to performances on a TV what a story of perseverance and 'achievement lies behind the performance. A good example of this is found in. :the life -story of Eartha Kitt as told by her self in her own way in, Thursday's Child This book traces her path from the cotton fields of South Caro- lina to the bright lights of Broad- way. It is a story that snakes the Cinderella tale seem tame by comparison. * Eartha Kitt's book is in four • * * Yes, indeed, that first week in parts, the first of which describes her early years in the South. September can be pretty rugged, Childhood ended when she be - But it has its sunny side. For came a member of a troupe of one thing, there's the certainty dancers playing on Broadway that winter will soon be here. and touring Mexico and Amer - and your relatives don't come to ice. in Paris a •third life opened see you in the winter. up with a debut as a success- * * * * ful night-club singer. After fiu- Then, there's the knowledge ther successes in Europe and in that a few weeks of nature's the night clubs of London she finest effort in the weather de- returned to make her mark in partment lie ahead. A chance America, Finally she emerges as for a last fling at the trout. with- a mature artist with a Broad - out having to clamber over an way triumph. assortment of tourists to get near As one reads this book he re - a stream. The joyous realize- alines that her success as a tion that the women have aban- writer is one more evidence of doned the golf links, and the fair- her gifted nature. If her story ways echo only to the, tread of is a joy to read it. is not. be. strong silent male grifarn, the cause her lifehas been all roses, veins throbbing in their. fora.. * * * * heads as they fight back the Librarian Mrs. Hilton Laing naughty words, has completed her four-week * >i. * course at Wirigham and has been There is the deep joy r;f snow- successful in obtaining her Class ing that the children are hack E certificate. under the benevolent wings of * * * * the educational and social sys- As the holiday season ends and terns, and that kr the next ten we get down to "brass tacks months they'll be completely nc- let us resolve to snake more use eupied with. school, Cubs. Brown- of the library and the facilities res, music lessons a n d what- It offers, jottings By Grand Bend Popu!cir Even 1n Late i800's .. The following account of the early days of Grand Bend was written by Mr. Bruce Bossen- berry and appeared in Grand Bend Holiday. a weekly paper •distributed free in .Grand Bend during the months of July and August Mr. Bossenberry look excep- tion to a statement made by John A. ,Gibson in the Toronto :star which read: "The village got its start as a summer resort in 191? when George T cc'ieston built a casino adjacent to the beach area and developed 40 acres of land. Business slowly took root along the main street, and cottages fanned out to the north, and later to the south— across the Aux Sable river." Mr. Bossenberry writes; From time to time this sum- mer we have read several ar- ticles an the origin of Grand Bend as a summer resort, and as 1 have lived in the village longer than any other resident I have been asked several times to tell the truth of the beginning of "The Beni" as it was called those days. There are several older persons living in the vil- lage at present who were raised within a mile or so of the vil- lage who can vouch for any statements T may make, herein. They are Mrs. F. Geromette and her sister, Mrs. H. Hamilton (the milk man's mother) and J. W. Holt and his brother Beit at present they are all residents of Grand Bend. As a six year- old boy 1 came to Grand Bend in 1888 with my father' and we stayed at the Brenner Hotel (Mr. Brenner was my father's brother-in-law and of course niy uncle.) There was q::ite a large for several) picnics here that day. The original Brenner Hotel was built many years before that and the main, or frame, part of the present building was built in 1892, About three years later Mr. Brenner built a dance hall on the river just east of the bridge. This building is at present the top story of (he Brenner Garage,. There were quite a number a cottages at The Bend those days. But of course they were not of the type built nowadays, Nor were there any springfilled Mat- tresses, Cottage owners went to the farmers and filled their straw ticks. to sleep on. In 1895 my father bought the Old Woodbine Hotel (where the imperial now stands-) and the main part of the present build- ing was erected in the fall of 1005. Grand Bend had two general stores in those days, the Desiar- dine store owned by. W. B. Fat - lis and the one where Mr. Pugh and Mr. Harrison are now was owned by a Mrs. Bashaw. The first day of July was al- ways the big day those days and it would take a good load of hay to feed all the horses ( tied to trees) throughout the park where many of the cottages now stand. The Borth side of Main street was called the Exeter side as it was owned by a Mr. Jno, Spack- man of that town. The south side was called the Parkhill side as.it was owned by Mr. Gibbs, Mr. Dixon and Mr. Bishop of F'arlchill, After the canal was put thru in 1892 the property now called Southcott Pines. was called the London sidk as it was owned hy Mr. Geo. Heaman and Geo. and Wni Southcott. of London. T might say here that the present bridge of the river is the third one since my family came to Grand Bend in 1890 in 1910 1 bought the Imperial from my father and I think that the Brenner Hotel and the Impe- rial were widely known as very good hotels. 1' remodelled the Imperial and built to it and it was the first hotel on the eastern shore of lake Huron to have hot and cold water in all rooms and had a seating capacity of seventy folks in the dining room (which was not near large enough) so one can see that Grand Bend was quite a popular place in those days, I also believe that the --Please Turn To Page 3 11111!1 nlnllnininnlil11111111111111111111111111111111111111, 111111111I1111111f111111171I11,111111111111111111„1111111,1111111,1111111/ As the "T 1 ff o By .,11111111111111111111111111111111111/IIIIIIII,111111,I171111111111111tllllllltl IIIIII,111111111111111111111111111111111111111119111111111t1 50 YEARS AGO John Sherritt of Stephen was the unanimous choice of Liberal - Conservatives of South Huron to contest the riding. . August Kuhn of the Banff; of Commerce, Crediton, is on holi- days. Work will commence at once on the new ground of the Exeter Bowling Syndicate, opposite the mill, which they lately required, Misses Merle Gould, Maud Rollins and Ethel Sweet went to Toronto to attend. the millinery openings, Mr, Earl Spackman had charge of the organ at James Street church on Sunday in the ab- sence of Miss Brown. Gladys bearing was presented with a piano last week by her father as a reward for her good work in .the Entrance examina- tions. Rev, •Grigg will take the serv- ice in Main Street church on Sunday evening and shortly after he and Mrs. Grigg will return to India to resttine •their mission- ary work. - 25 YEARS AGO Bruce Canis was the winner of the fourth prize in a contest for the collection of pop bottle tops lasting one month and a half, Bruce collected 7,524 tops and won anairplane ride. The Public School Board asks that alt pupils starting school in the Primary roomreach their sixth birthday this year. Mr. James Handford who' is in his 94th year attended the Canadian National Exhibition. This is the 20th consecutive year he has attended. One of the .largest, crowds known, gathered al; the camp services on Sunday evening at Grand Bend when between 1,500 and 2,000 people came to hear Stephen Haboush, the Shepherd Boy of Galilee, with his message on the 23rd. Psalm, Twenty-four men under the leadership of Mr, B.W,F. Beavers net at Riverview, Park Monday afternoon and with three 'teams of horses succeeded iii hauling and building up about 100 feet of stone embankment on the south side of the river. 15 YEARS AGO A. total of 10,516 rationbooks were distributed in this district compared to 9,585 at the last distribution. LAC Fred Ford of Rockwood is a member of The RCAF band and accompanied the band to Chicago wirere they took part in a great musical festival, He is at present on furlough in Exe- ter. One of the most impressive parades ever held in Exeter took place Sunday morning when in response to the proclamation' of His Majesty King George members of the airforce and civic bodies paraded to Trivitt Memorial church for a service of intercession. A new hydration plant for the processing of fruits and vege- tables is being erected at the Exeter Canadian Canners. Principal Waghorn reported en- rolment in public school, to be 137. ' 10 YEARS AGO Exeter Rutabaga Company's new $80,000 plant at Exeter north will be ready to Dandle turnips this fall. A new four -cent stamp com- memorating the 100th anniver- sary of the achievement of re- sponsible government in Canada has been issued, Elmer Campbell, R.R. • 1 Exe- ter, of E.D.H.S. was awarded the school tuition scholarship up to $125 a year for two years for the County of Huron. From a 75.1b, bag of potatoes sown in the spring :Aloe Sanders has harvested 171 bags. A stubborn bush fire which for three days menaced thou- sands of acres Af choice resort property in the Pinery has been quenched, Provincial Constable John Fer- guson was on strike duty at Goderich over the weekend. Firemen and their wives held a picnic in Riverview Park Wed- nesday afternoon. T ThgArRICAL ,s1 uGs/... J1 ce8-,2 at iao, gar'teanlrer O ateaia, $1e„ Diene it:5.i 11'Cama. '!ills a voriderful Part. ' `otu .get shot early in the £iket Mt) end you'll have the whole eveiiitig to your tap - r061'0 �., .. A = ' ' 1 1 tti e1 ea. Kea puma btc4i , a4 vste.e iUs*Y* t;Cs tit • '(floid iU!L a e' GW..RA.NTEED• TR,.. UST CERTIFICATES • issued in amounts from $100 upwards for 3, 4 or 5 years. • earn interest, payable half - yearly by cheque. • authorized investment' for all Canadian Insurance Companies ia.nd trust funds, YOUR MONEY DOUBLES ITSELF IN 15 YEARS! in:I: THE STERLRUSTS WOW 372 Say St„ Toronto EMpire 4-7,495 (Miss Hodgens) 1-3 Dunlop St„ Borrie PArkwway 8-5181 (Mr. Alcorn) Bus jness Directory BELL & LAUGHTON BARRISTERS, SOLICITORS & NOTARIES PUBLIC ELMER D BELL, Q.C. C. V. LAUGHTON, LL.B. Zurich Office Tuesday Afternoon ' EXETER PHONE 4 USBORNE & HIBBERT MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office - Exeter, Ontario President E. Clayton Colquhoun R.R. 1 Science Hill Vice -President Alex J. Rohde 11.11. 3 Mitchell Directors Martin Feeney R.R. 2 Dublin Robert G. Gardiner R.R. 1 Cromarty Milton McCurdy R.R. 1 Kirkton Timothy 13. Toohey R.R. 3 Lucan Agents Harry Coates R.R. 1 Centralia Clayton Harris Mitchell Stanley Hocking - Mitchell Solicitor W. G. Cochrane Exeter Secretary -Treasurer Arthur Fraser Exeter W. G. COCHRANE, B.A. BARRISTER & SOLICITOR NOTARY PUBLIC Hensel) Office Open Wednesday Afternoons 2 to 5 p,m. EXETER PHONE .14 DR. J. W. CORBETT L,D.S., D.D.S. DENTAL SURGEON 814 Main Street South Phone 273 Exeter Closed Wednesday Afternoons G. A. WEBB, D.C. DOCTOR OF CHIROPRACTIC DRUGLESS THERAPY For Appointment - . Phone 608 DR. H. H. COWEN DENTAL SURGEON L.D,S., D.D.S. Main Street Exeter Closed Wednesday Afternoons PHONE 56 N. L. MARTIN OPTOMETRIST Mein Street, Exeter • Open Every Weekday Except Wednesday For Appointment Phone 35$ ARTHUR FRASER INCOME TAX REPORTS BOOKKEEPING. SERVICE ETC. Ann St., Exeter Phone 304 ALVIN WALPER PROVINCIAL LICENSED AUCTIONEER For your sale, large or small, courteous and efficient service at all times. "Service That' Satisfies” PHONE 119 DASHWOOD I ',I II/I/II IIIIIIIIIIIIn11111111mn� l nil lllll11l llll 11111111n1llnoi11111un1nn1n In1111,1inn11,n1t1111nnin,lnl t1141(,j' Tiine Limit" Ur, . message to all holders of 3% VICTORY !� uu BONDS `L..lr lJ After September 15 it is unlikelyel J that your 3%•o Victory Bonds will continue to sell at cyrrent prices' since ,their "convertibility"' expires on that date. Their present -value. exists largely because they are convertible. That is why it is important for you. to convert or sell for cash your 3% Victory Bonds NOW. Act at once, We also urge • you to take advantage of the offering' of the new Canada Con- version Loan 41/2% and 41/4% Bonds which can be bought for cash at 100 and accrued interest, NismTT,. TH0 MSON AND COMPANY, LIMITED Representative .P, F. CARE' 46 Witt Street, Goderich, 'Otitdt'Itr yy 1i Of th♦e'� ySy',iiy�blyAginis Ith your tree. yy yw P. L. McNAUGHION M. A. 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