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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1955-10-06, Page 10t_. QOARE DANCE PARTY '14,43011y . h50 people attended the • AicAyare dance party in the .anditor- Utra oaf the Goderieh Memorial Mena Thursday night last given ► :Nlr. and Mrs. S, C. Anderson. r In charge of e square dance calling was Mr. Burt Hall, of De- troit, well-known Michigan caller and instructor•, and Mrs. Hall. TIME TO Its or 1 1 DRIVER CONVICTED Oil. +,A EUSIGAR C'RASII A dispufW over a manual {urn signal figured in the coarwvietian of a London man on a ,cta ,,pguNTeeare- Less driving in court here lath week. Hugh Alan McLear[ was convict- ed of the charge by Magistrate D. E. lialmes and was fined $15 and costs or five days. He pleaded rrut guilty. • The charge arose out of d bus - car • crash at the intersectier - of No. 21 Highway and the Bayfield - Clinton road on Labor Day. Mc- Lean was driver of a Windsor- Godcrich Greyhound bus which col- lided with a car driven by Adam Kirchner, of Bayfield. Kirchner claimed he made a right turn signal as he approacheci the Bayfield -Clinton road from the south. His evidence was supported by his wife, a passenger in the car. 'McLean said he saw Kirchner make a lift turn signal. The ear, he said, crossed to the left of -the white centre line, 'then suddenly turned right onto the side road, He said he appYied his brakes and tried to miss the car, but could not avoid a collision. Everyone needs protection. Is Insurance offers you 24 hours a day protection against financial loss: See us about fire insurance, automobile insurance, liability in- surance. FURNITURE RE-COVERING — REPAIRING REIO'S UPHOLSTERY SHOP NOW IS THE TIME. Chesterfields, Sofas, Chairs, etc., re- - upholstered. Quality coverings to suit your furniture. —ESTIMATES GIVEN FREE—. PHONE 1102W 59 HAMILTON ST. 37-39-41-43-45 as near (ZS your telephony' A COMPLETE Y'UST SERVICE IN WESTERN ONTARIO Call RAYE B. PATERSON, Trust Officer Bensall, Ontario, Phone 51 For • Estate Planning and Wills • Real Estate Services • Investment Management and Advisory Service e 31/2% Guaranteed Investments • 2i/2W on savings -deposits may be mailed Or (Contact Any Office Of GUARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANArIA Toronto • Montreal • Ottawa • Windsor Niagara Falls • Sudbury. • Sault Ste. Marie Calgary • Vancouver LOOK OUT, THE THE CADUERICJA S1GSTAR PROGRAM CHANGED BY *TUMOR FARMERS FALL SEASON HUNTERS ARE WITH US AGAIN The- hunting season is here again with\tlje many dangers that accOl- pany it. Each fall there is the usual staid list ,of precautions pub- lished in papers abotit what you should do. Editor 1111 Smiley of Wiarton' treats the subject in light- er vein which will probably make a morelasting-impression o on care- less hunters than trying' to talk to them sensibly. The article follows: When you start off on a hunting trip, look down the -barrel of your gun to make sure nothing has built a nest there during the summer. If you can't see through, put a shell in and fire it. That usually removes any obstacles. It some- times removes the head of the hunter, as well, but that is one of , the uncertainties that make hunt- ' ing a thrilling sport. Always have your gun loaded while driving in the car. If there's an acettlent and they can't cut you out of the wreckage, you can always ,shoot your way out. Be- sides, you'll get a big laugh cut of the look on the driver when he hits a bump and the gun goes oft, putting some daylight through the roof of his new Buick. °' You may find you have to climb 1a fence, when you get there. ,A lot of hunters are killedtrying to get through or over a fence, while carrying their guns. Don't take chances. Grasp your gun by the barrel, use it as a vaulting pole, and sail neatly over the fence. Now, how do we carry the gun? It should be heldin the right hand, barrel pointing toward the ground. Always walk with the safety catch off, in case you have to get a quick shot away. If the gun is held in this way, and you stumble over ' a root, you'll only shoot off a toe. I•f you held it with the barrel pointing up, you might blow your head "off. And ling a , toe, especially that one that's had an ingrown, toenail for years, -is much preferable to losing one's 1 head, Ask anyone who's.. done. both. Career Men in Khaki The Signalman "Get it there first; but first, get it right." Signals - nerve system of the Canadian Army -- a high-speed, accurate combination of radio networks, 'telephone and teletype systems and motorcycle despatch riders. The Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, with other corps, offers hundreds of good -paying, life- time careers. The opportunities for advancement, special training and travel are many._ A visit to your Army Recruiting Station will soon show,-_ without obligation, how you can fit in. Remember, in the Army you team up with men - and leaders you can rely on ; right down the line. - � + I Don't wait till you can see the white's of their eyes. If some- thing moves in the bush, blaze away. It might be another hunter, but there's always a fair chance it's a deer or partridge. When you do fire, don't worry what direc- tion you're, pointing. It'll teadh some of those other jokers to keep their heads down. It's old-fashioned to wear bright red clothing in the bush. Statis- tics show that 98 per cent of the hunters who have been murdered in the past ten years wore bright red garments. So why not wear something that blends with the bush? You can ;,neak up on the , game that much easier, and there's a good chance you can sneak past the other hunters, without them spotting you. ' If they " do, make sure you get your shot away first, then drop to the ground, and let them blize away. If you chance to become lost in the bush, don't -panic. Just run in circles as hard as you can, yelling. at the top of your. lungs. and firing your gun as fast as you calf. When you have run out of breath and ammunition, sit down quietly, light Your pipe and take stock of the situation. If the stock -taking shows the shelves to be pretty bare, there's one solution. It works best if theyek's a 3ood stiff breeze. Just gather - o•me�birch 'bark, pile it in a clump of day brush and [:tart a good bush fire. When the firefight- ers arive, you are no longer lost. One further word of caution. When you bag your fires[ hunter; don't brag about it. It just isn't (lone, in hunting circles. Don't even allow yourself a small smirk of s.athisfaction as you pint the notch in your gun. Alter all, there's nothing so unusual about your feat. Hundreds of others have done it. Any damnfool can shoot a hunter. And quite a few do. • A number of Important changes were made in the • Junior Farmer program for 1955-56 when the directors of the Junior Farmers' Association of Ontario met in the Parliament Buildings, Toronto, on ep'tember 26. The public . speak- ing, debating and choir competi- tions were discussed, as well as a program for leadership training schools. One decision concerned the eligi- bility rule which states that par- ticipants in projects sponsored. by the Provincial Association muse not have reached their 29th birth- day by D,ecem'ber 31 of the current• year and must be members of the Junior Farmers' Association, of On- tario for 1955-56. These rules brought .into force at the various District Field Days this !past sum - titer had occasioned some diseus- sion and disappointment.. The de- cisioi that these rules would apply to such projects as the public speaking, debating and choir com- petitions was upheld, but only 'after considerable discussion. A new regulation in the public speaking competition requires that local clubs sponsor- a com- FALL SEEDING URGED TO HAVE -WINTER FEED e rof age, e n To 14 ttl�glblie^�rot' inset Irk 17 to 40 y a e g . ski l 1 d tradesmen .. ,...�-.ted..f3*Wherrsppplying..gime..bli'14.eectif cafte...or..nthdr proof. of.age; Akftly' right visit the Arnty Recruiting 'Station nearest your home. • No. 13 fir onnet'_bepot, Wallis ttouse, • • -' Rideau & Charlott.. Sfs, Otto iia, Ont. -- Telephone 9-4507 Atinte Reertkttin9.£ttyllon, 164'''W.IIington.,St., Kingston, Ont. =- Telephone 4738, Army'Recruiting Station, 90 *icfitAt'<tt�d • W #,,1`C ronift�" .Ont. Teelphone EM. 6-0341 - Local 276 « ,Ilii. 7 ersonnel depot, Wolseley Barracks, eJttf+ri 'd1 lzob«th Ste„ London; Onf. - • Telephone 44601 total 135 Army464.Oln4„ S•tot on, 3b matte St. W NorthBoy, Ont. -W 'telephone 456 • I! r y `Recruiflnt Sftation, 1 K St, East, Hamilton, Ont. -gets'[ hone 2.871011 trre4w.o HIGH CHOOL DIPLOMA You can get your High School Education by study- ing at home in your spare time. PAYMENTS—ALL PROGRESS ' RAPIDLY—LOW MONTHLY BOOKS FURNISHED. Graduates will receive the High School Diploma of the American School. SEND NOW FOR FREE BOOKLET AND SAMPLE LESSON. AMERIICAN SC+HOOLL Dept. G -SS., 424 Wellington Street; London, Ontaritol Please send me FREE and without obligation your 44 -page booklet and sample lesson on High School home study. NAME AGE ADDRESS With many herds getting almost winter rations of hay or silage during much of July and August, a scarcity of these feeds is likely 1 to occur before the pasture sea- son next spring. Assurance of a '. good supply of fall pasture will help to overcome this scarcity to 1 some extent. It iS doubtful if 1 dried out, overgrazed, pastures will produce too well now, even with ' rain, and heavy grazing of alfalfa during the fall months will serious- ly reduce the volume of holy or pasture next year. A mixture of oats and fall rye, one bushel of oats, one and a half bushels of rye per acre, seeded now will make good fall pasture and reduce the load on permanent pastures and meadows.' It will take ' from three to four weeks after seeding before it is ready. to pasture. The oats grow faster than the rye, so pasturing can start sooner than if only rye were sowni, If the field is early and well drain- ed, the rye will provide early spring pasture before other pas- ture crops are ready. This is :also a decided advantage when the 'hay mow is low. The catch of new seeding will probably depend on favorable weather for the rest of the fall. At present, it,,,doesn't look too good. Faced mith the prospect of failure. of this spring's seeds some farmers are considering fall feeding to be sure of a hay crop next summer. The success of fall seeding will likely depend onfav- orable weather for 'growth in the fall, and not too severe a winter. Seeding can be without a nurse crop or with a very light seeding of oats, which will give some pro- tection and then die over winter; If attempting a fall seeding for the 'first time, remember these points. 1. Grasses are likely to be more successful than clover. Timothy, . Orchardgrass, Brume and Per- renial-Ryegrass are suitable:. 'Red Clover, Alsike, Sweet Clover or Alfalfa can be used in the mixture and with favorable con- ditions will survive. 2. Seed as early as possific to get, the grealef possible owtIi and'" root development this fall. 3. Use a liberal amount of suitable fertilizer to assist in getting a good stand. 4. Seed shallow,, on a well pre- pared, firm seed bed. Window cordso will last longer and operate more smoothly if they are rubbed with aft oil-sattirated cloth twice a year., 5 petition to deters the entrants in the county competition. This thauge was made to encourage. more participation at the local level. A complete' change was announced in the pro•vinc•.a,1 .debat- ing competition. Last year counties participating 'were required to enter one team of two members, debating a different topic each round. This year the inter -uni- versity system will >ae hiitrodticed. Under this system, .each county participating will provide twos teams of two members each one to debate .the" affirmative and the other the negative. In preliminary rounds, one of these teams will travel to a,, neighboring county while •t'he other will'debate at home on. the same topic and pre- ferably on the same evening. Three judges Will be required for each debate. The county whose teams secure the majar;ity of the six judges' votes will be declared the winner. !Sho•uld the result be a tie, the ecision will be • made on„_ Jpoints e county whose two teams mace the higher aggregate score being declared the winner. If the tie is still unbroken, a new debate will be held. Past President Carl Boynton out- lined the new procedure for the choir competition. For. the first time, the Junior«Farmer 'Choir Concert has been placed on a coin= petvtive • basis. This ,competition wi be held in, Toronto on January palong with the finals in the ublic speaking, quartet and trio competitions. In order to encour- age participation, , the competition hhas been divided into two sections: 'Section 1 to include choirs from counties wit. a Junior Farmer membership of 200 o•r less; Section 2 to include choirs from counties having mory than 200 membe..- O , You can always spot a well-in- formed man. His .views are the same as yours. otitj • . .said: `.`Do y'olt think' tele"- vision ele•..vision will replace newspapers?" Second man: "Don'[ be 'stupid, who would be silly enough to think of swatting a fly with a television set?" - 'WURAT a. Iv PIE 'Mat 40,50,60?" Man, You're Crazy Forget your age! ousands are peppy at 70. Try "pepping up" Thwith Ostrex. Qontains tomo for weak, rundown feeling due solely to body's lack of iron which many„ men and women call "old. ' 'Fry Ostrex Tonic Tablets for pep, younger feeling, this very day, New "get acquainted" size only 60c. For sale, i ,all drug stores everywhere. "Do it the easy wad !'" USE TIME Maw PAGIS When you can't shop in person - use the YELLOW PACES of yam. telephone book WA, afau4,Lig mai) coat 6.6,4t / V 3ditd 0,601 God. TWO Atakm, ,;(Ateiteodde4 ta met 3104.9--dt, 64, demoiya elf), emtalcuvt, The broken lines on the photograph roughly indicate the additional area to be occupied by new smelters and other buildings. Beyond the present plant (the aluminum structure in the middle ground) can be -seen the harbor and docks of Kitimat. f„ry;1 y' In August, 1954, only 31/2 years after ground wast broken, the Kitimat smelter commenced production of aluminum with an annual capacity of 91,500 tons. . Almost immediately a 60,000 -ton ` extension 'was started. And in the spring of 1955 the decision was made to proceed with a flexible program' to acid a further 180,000 tons to ingot c'acit . ... A progressive increase to .431,500 tons, more tihan+'tliree Mmes tli .size cll�e ortgtnl" in�fall'afioii, ate„ well on the way to our ultimate Kitimat goal of 550,000 tons a year.. , "This continuing expansion of Kitimat in succes- sive stages", stated Aluminium Limited president Nathanael V. • Davis, "should, we believe, help, 'to keep pace, with the growing free yorld demand for aluminum'and particularly th •demand In our Major export mar -leets, the United Kingdom and the United States." The new facilities will go into production step by `ten, itli the -first -unit starting rip in thc-falt' of 1956. It is expected that the present building program will be completed in` 1959. ALUMINUM COMPANY OF .CANADA, LTD d , 3'MELTOOS AT: $HAWINIfiIAN MALIONE IEAUHA*MOIS KITIMAT !`9