The Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-06-09, Page 6There are many -
new and changed
numbers in your new
telephone book—so
why not check over your ,1
personal list and add those
new numbers you're likely
to call from time to time
SAVE
TIME and TROUBLE
and AVOID,
WRONG NUMBERS
Keep a list of the out-of-town
numbers you call, too! Long
Distance service is much faster
when you call by number.
NEWS OF DUN GAN NON
DUN'GANNON, June8.: ,Mr, and
9!S. George cies ittfit been
visited recently by the former's
brother-nndaw, Angus iillcKay,
Strasburg, Sask., and' brother, Ed.
Hodges, 'Clinton.
Mrs. Charles Fowler has receiv-
ed word that her younger sister,
Mrs. C. C. Anderson, is critically
ill
hi ,a Winnipeg hosipita. Mr.
and Mrs. Fowler and -son, Tom,
were recent visitors with her bro-
ther,. 'Rev. Glen Balt Woodford.
Mr. and Mrs. Omar Brooks and
family were recent~ visitors with
her brother, Roy •Atkinson, Brant-
ford.
Wesley Alton, London, visited
his cousin, Harvey Alton, on Sun-
day.
Miss Jean Errington, London,
spent the week -end with her ' par-
ents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Erring-
ton. --
Chester Durnin and daughter,
Miss
Miss Marjorie Durnin, of Irwin,
Pa., are spending some holidays
with the former's parents, Mr. and
Mrs. R. J. Durnin.
Mr. and Mrs. James Reid, of
Port Elgin, were Sunday visitors
with his mother, Mrs. Charlotte
Reid.
Mrs.• Joseph Hamilton. was
hostess for the Ladies' Guild of
St. Paul's Anglican Church on
Thursday afternoon, being an hon;_
orary member of the Guild. There
were two honorary merbers, six
members and two visitors present.
The afternoon was spent at quilt-
ing. MrS. H. L. Jennings gave a
report of the Deanery meeting .at
Lion's Head. Atthe 'close oaf the
afternoon, refreshments were serv-
ed by, the hostess, assisted by Mrs.
W. Caesar and Mrs. T. Park.
Mrs. Tom Webster, 6th conces-
sion of West Wawanosh, and her
daughter, Mrs. Bill Bradley, and
Brenda,' of Goderich, spent a few
days visiting their cousin, Mrs.
Mi nie Hail, Brantford.
Meeting Held.—The June meet-
ing of the United Church WIYfS
was held Friday. afternoon at the
home of Mrs. J. Rivett. Mrs.
George Hodges opened the meet-
ing with prayer. Mrs. Arthur
Elliott led the worship service.
Mrs. Harvey • Anderson read the
Scripture lesson. The roll call
was answered by 14 members and
two visitors. It was reported that
eight house calls and three 'hos-
pital calls were made during the
month. Mrs. Rivett read a letter
from Miss B. Gerhard, a mission -1
ary in Manitoba. Mrs. Graham
McNee visited from the Nile
branch, and read two poems. Mrs.
Cecil Blake read a chapter from
the study book. Mrs. Robert
Irvin led in reading the. alphabet
on overseas relief. Mrs. Hodges
closed with prayer and at the close
of the afternoon -Mrs. Rivett served
lunch.
Sells Form.—Marvin »Urnj.n has
sold 95 acres off his 100 -acre farm
to Arthur Young. Mr. Durnin
will colitin•ue far the second sea-
son operating "Sleepy Hollow Rid-
ing Acadeany" at Port Elgin.
FORMER LOOAL GIRL
GRADUATE'S AS NURSE
Among the recent graduates of
Brantford General Hospital School
of Nursing was Miss Norma Jean
Warnock, daughter of , Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Warnock, of London,
and formerly of .Goderich.
,After the graduation exercises,
friends were entertained at a re-
ception 'held at the Sydenham
Street Church. Guests were pre-
sent from London, Sarnia, S•treets-
ville, Toronto, Trenton, Seaforth
end Goderich: Miss Warnock was
the recipient of many lovely gifts.
0 0
UNION
GODrERuICH TOWN-
8.—Flower Sunday.—
flower Sunday service
Union United Church
with Padre Ben. Garratt, Clinton
Radar Schotrl, as guest speaker.
The child!ren's choir, under the
direction of Miss Clara Ann Fuller,
sang special selections. The
church was beautifully decorated
with baskets and bouquets for the
occasion. Several friends and
visitors were in attendance.
'OBITUARY
NL•11a N` i�[4 -
: Funeral service was he, d• cur.Sat-
urday at 2.30 win., flex' Neil; Macy
Donald, 80, a former Goderich resi-
dent, who died 4in Wednesday
night of last week in, Scott Mem-
orial Hospital, Seaforth.
Mac. • MacDonald ,had -Jived in
Goderich most of his life. His
wife, the former, Mabel Carver, ,
died in 1047. •
'He was ,born here and lived in
Goderich until going to Seaforth
18 months ago to make his home I
With his daughter, Mrs..'onald
Dupee.
Surviving besides his daughter
is one sister, Mrs. Grace Pullen, of
Lbs Angeles. ;
The remains rested aty the Lodge
funeral home, where service was •
conducted by Rear. H. A. Dickinson,
of North Street United, Church.
Interment' was made in Maitland
cemetery.
Pallhearers were John Vincent,
Jasper McBrien, Richard .Labxon,
Reg 'Jewell, Fergus McKellar, and
Bruce Dupee.
o
MRS. JOHN GREIG
"A former resident of., Goderich,
Mrs. John Greig, died on Friday
at the Muir nursing home, Sea -
forth. She was the former Minnie
Acheson, of •Goderich, - and had
lived in Seaforth since her mar-
riage 61 years ago.
She was a member of the Pres-
byterian Church. Her husband, a
former well-known Seaforth tailor,
died several years ago.
• She is survived by one daugh-
ter, (Evelyn) Mrs. W. D. Clark,
Sarnia; one brother.., John . Ache- ...
son, Goderich, and one sister, (Eva)
Mrs. Philip Horton, Toronto.
.t "u neral service was held - n
Monday aftoon from the Whit-
ney funeral home,conducted . by
Rev. D. G. Campell. Interment
h asst' made in Maitlandbank ceme-
o •.o 0
NILE
NEM, June s,: Mr. and Mrs.
Adam McCartney and Mrs. M. Nays,
ce Clinton, . visited 'Mrs. Amelia
MdIlwain and William Watson on
Friday.
Rev., George Watt aid Graham
MeNee motored to Sault Ste. Marie
to attend ;the United Church eonl-
ference. -
Miss Mary Currey is in Toronto
at a convention of •+deaconesses.
. Mr. and rs., 3 d. Hopi 4an, of
Stratford, an
t ltifr and:. IR' . Law
renee Schmidt and Grace Schmidt,
of Tavistock, were visitors with
Mr. and Mrs, „9.;r41,d- Bere -and fern -
fly on Suiday.
Bev. "D. ' MacMillan, former
minister at Dungannon:, Was
charge of the services at Nile
-Church on Sunday .whip Rev: G.
Watt took the 'anniversary ser-
vices at ploy's Church in the /tea
charge,
117r. and Mrs, Tom McPhee, Har-
vey and Orville, attended the fun-
eral of 'Mrs. Albert Becker (former-
ly Elizabeth Nivins), of Blyth, ori'
Sunday.
The 0817. re-aillll+iation service
w ,s held in • the basement: of the
TkHMSDAY, .•,JUNE 9tb, 1956
• church on Tuesday, gay 34, with
anothelrs of the members and the
,'WMS* present. Marie Knight and
Dorothy Rutledge were in charge
of the worship service. Miss
Currey 'represented the WMS. At
the end of the service., Rev. George
Watt spoke to the girls and gave
the closing prayer.
p�BRIDGE o SCORBSp
Four, tables were played at the .
daekly tournament staged on Mon-
y night by Goderich Bridge Club.:
Scores were: Mrs. F. Curry and'
P. F. Carey, 42%; Mrs. Fn H. Leg
.and Mrs. W. G. MaoEwan,, 40%;
Mrs. A. A. Nicol and Mrs. -F.
Saunders, 37; Mr. and Mrs. J. K.
Hunter, 35.
Supporters of Tom Pryde
Today Is Election Day
Your Vote And,[nfluence
Is Respectfully Solicited
Ol s-erted by Iluro.n-Progres ive Corse vative A5.5ocia'tion
RETURN LIMIT — 7 DAYS
Between GODERICI•I
and Return Fare YOU SAV'E-
STRATFORD - - - $1.80 $1.10
KITC'HENER - - - 2.75 1.75
TORONTO - - - 5.05 315
THIS
. HANDY
NEW
Blue Book of
TELEPHONE NUMBERS
• is yours for the asking — in
regular or pocket size. Drop in
or call our nearest Business
Office for your FREE COPY.
Bargain. Fares also apply between T'ORONTO
and Return Fare YOU SAVE
MONTREAL - - . - $12.90 $8.15
OTTAWA - - - - 9.55 - 6.00
- Also between points listed and INTERMEDIATE
Stations with proportionate savings.
THE BELL TELEPHONE
COMPANY OF CANADA
Children under 5 travel free -5 and under 12,
half -fare.
Regular 150 Ib. baggage allowance
Watch for BargAin Coach Fares in effect
'June ,14th and 15th.
Watch for Bargain Coach Fares n effect July 19-20.
CANADIAN NATJONAL-RAILWAYS
UP THE
NAL
4
Chevrolet's new high compression
engines—VS or 6 cylinder—give
the kind of responsiveness that
makes any hill seem small. They're
unbeatable in the low priced field.
No Car 'in the Low -Priced Field
Equals Chevrolet for ' .
Steadiness, Stability and Smoothness
AROUND
THE
CURVES
Chevrolet's new, low centre of
gravity, 'new, wider -spaced rear
springs, and newtubeless tires
combine to form a balanced
road -hugging ride that puts Chev-
rolet stability in the sports car
lass.
There's an easy way to prove the above statement. It doesn't cost a cent and it's lots of fun. Take
a demonstration drive in a. Chevrolet. You'll find that most of your old ideas about low-c"•ost -
motoring will be completely changed. If you're curious, your salesman will tell you about the
many, many new features that make Chevrolet's ride so superior. But without being told a thing,
you will know instantly that Chevrolet has given ,a tremendous break to the, man who wants,.
"lots of car" at a low, low price.
Call your local dealer today. Tell him you want to .take a "Pleasure Drive" demonstration in
a Chevrolet. -
for the sweetest ride of your life, ROAD TEST -:=STREET TEST—HILL, TEST.
motorarmic
" Pentions to Aged * Needy ` Disabled
New :Schools * Hospitals• *- Recreation Centres
blamer Research * Polio Vaccine
Lawrence • eaway * 'Niagara Power Development
OVER
THE
ROUGH
Road shocks rareh reach the
driver of the new Chevrolet.
\ New angle -poised, spherical-
:" joint front suspension smooths
the road in front, and longer,
tiy.,,,more flexible springs cushion
blimps at the rear. '
* Lowest Provincial Taxes in'Oanaud * No Income or Sales Tax
* 48% Total Levy in Grants to lVlunicispalities. '" Road Subsidies * Schools,
* Federal-Provincial.Conferen
e;hetitoIr't BSI,°Afr`'Spoil Coupe
C-28550
The telaxingr• mile -eating way
Chevrolet flows 'ahead at legal
highway speeds is unbelievable
In a car that's priced so low.
Try if for yoot'self- . - "Measurer
Driv'e'" b Chevrolet today.
(inserted byutfot#^ve Ak eiatio i