The Goderich Signal-Star, 1957-09-26, Page 8Al
BUSINESS DIRECTORY
CHiROPRACTIC
HERBERT B. SUCH, D.C.
Doctor of Chirop 'atie
Meg glours: .
Moan Tihufi's.--9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
Tues., Fait. -9 can, to 8 Ia.m,
p.m. to 8 p.m.
Wed. & Sat. -8 to 1.38 a.m.
Vitamin Therapy
f cosier of Smith St. and
Britannia Roa Phone 341.
Fourth Conviction
For Same Offence
Results In Term
A. M HARPER
Chartered Accountant
Office House
343J 343W
® E 23 Hamilton St, Goderich
zti
��
Stiles Amlulance
Roomy — Comfortable 0
Anywhere —• Anytime
PHONE 399
77 Montreal St., Goderich
HAROLD JACKSON
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
HURON AND PERTH
Phone 474 SEAFORTH
P.O. Boxy 461
FRANK REID
LIFE UNDERWRITER
Life, annuities, business
insurance.
Mutual Life of Canada
Phone 346 Church St.
Alexander & Chapman
GENERAL INSURANCE
FIRE
AUTOMOBILE
CASUALTY
Get Insured—Stay Insured—
Rest Assured. •
A. J. ALEXANDER
C. F. CHAPMAN
Bank of Commerce Building,
Goderich
Phones 268 W and 18 W.
Promote safety and prevent
"This is the fourth conviction for
this man in the current year and
last year for the same offence,"
explained Crown Attorney H. Glenn
Hay. when Murray G. Popp, 19, of
Dungannon, appeared in magis-
trate's court here.
He was sentenced to two months
in jail and instructed to pay court
costs or serve two weeks more.
Magistrate D. E. Holmes ordered
that the vehicle be seized.
Constable Martin Horan, of Gode-
rich, testified that he observed the
youth driving a sedan delivery in
town on August 23 while his lic-
ense ,was under suspension. The
constable Teamed that the vehicle
was registered in the name of the
youth's girl friend. Popp has been
married since, the court was in-
formed.
John Hudson, 24, of Toronto,
who failed to notify the Depart-
ment of Highway's of a change of
address within the required period
of time, was fined $15 and costs.
Hudson said to be a former resid-
ent of Goderich, was stopped by a
local police officer on August 14.
For failing to yield the right of
EDWARD W. ELLIOTT
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
Correspondence promptly an-
ewered. -Immediate arrangements
can be made for Sales Date by
calling Phone 1621J Clinton.
Charge 'moderate and satis-
I faction guaranteed.
F. T. Armstrong 1
OPTOMETRIST
Phone 1100 for appointment
SQUARE GODERICH
CEMETERY
MEMORIALS
T. Pryde & Son
EXETER
Local Representative—
ALEX SMITH
_ GODERICH
146 Elgin Ave. Phone 158
sirs w.—DRIVE SAFELY. AIIOOMMIPIMMMNMIMMMINMOBIIPMIIII
Borrow where money service
has improved with age
When you borrow money, you want shrike
that's backed by years of experience. That's
why most people turn to HFC, providing a
money service backed by 79 years' experience.
At HFC, you receive prompt attention, friendly
but businesslike efficiency, your money in one
day, and your choice of repayment plans.
Phone or visit HFC today.
HOUSEHOLD FINANCE
az„ozazze/beiatada
R. K. Fitd r,,Manager
35A West Street, second floor, phone 1501
GODERICH, ONT.
"My Life Insurance man
did a grand jib for me, Ed"
All talk over the back fence isn't about sport, or politics, or tele-
vision programs. Very often it's about such vital things as looking
after the family and having enough honey to retire on.
Your li5e insurance man is well equipped to' solve these problems. -.
He i5 T1aine iti analyse airthe face -about et family's future require- ' -
ments. He serves Canadian families by offering practical plans to
meet individual needs.
Life Insur€utce representatives have exceptional training opportuni-
ties today. Their own companies provide em with basic courses
covering a wide variety of subjects.
Through the Life Underwriters Association of Canada they have
access to the e.xperience•of many able men who have helped to make
Canadians the world's best -insured people. This Association has a
2 -year training program for its members. And, in addition, for
those who desire to pursue more advanced studies, there is a 3 -year
university extension course leading to the Association's designation
of Chartered Life Underwriter (C.L.U.)
This thorough training plus practical experience in helping people
explains why millions of Canadians have welcomed the services of
the modern Life Underwriter.
THE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA
L.2576
Just about everyone has heard
of Juliette and quite a few know
that one of her hobbies is cook-
ing, but few people know wlio all
the cooking is for—her husband,
Tony Cavazzi. Here she makes
one of her specialties, Curried
Lobster a la Capetown.
way at an intersection, James
Glousher, of Auburn, was fined $15
and costs. Originally, he had been
charged with failing to stop at a
stop sign, but that charge was
dismissed at a hearing in Wing -
ham. The case arose out of a
collision of two vehicles.
�— —o --o
FiNDS ' RIGID RULES FOR
CAR DRIVERS OVERSEAS
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Morris and
son, of Saltford, have returned
from a trip to the British Isles.
While in England, Mr. Morris
noted a car licensing system which
he feels could be adopted in Can-
ada to advantage.
A oar driver has _tor appear- be-
fore a board three times before
he gets his final license to drive
a car. When the license plates
are first given to him there is a
large letter L on them to denote
the driver of the car is a learner
and caution should be taken when
driving near him. Before the L
is taken off the license plates, the
driver must pass rigid tests to
make sure he is entirely capable
of driving a car.
While TV sets are getting num-
erous in England, the number of
stations and% variety of programs
is limited, he said. A TV ownet
has to pay about $75 in taxes a
year to own a TV sit.
SEE and NEAR
HI-FI
NOW
Bring your favorite
record if you wish.
Various Sets on
display.
MORE VALUE FOR
YOUR DOLLAR AT
HUTCHINSON
RADIO & TV
Huron Rd. Phone 498
38, 40, 42, 44, 46, 48.
i°4;4.*
OUT ON A LIMB
WITH BILL. SMIiLEY
One of the nicer things about
growing older is that we grow
steatily more pure. It's astonish-
ing how we simultaneously shed
sin and don morality with each
passing year.
w
About 24 years ago tonight, for
example, I was climbing over a
garden wall with my shirt stuffed
with grapes, when a voke of un-
earthly loudness and ferocity
shouted: "Hil Youl" My heart
leaped into my moyth, 1 leaped to
the ground, the grapes, poliPed out
of my shirt and I took off like an
intercontinental missile, pursued'
by outraged roars and heavy boots.
Later, in the sanctuary of my
bed, did I regret my wickedness;
revile myself for shattering one of
the ten commandments, and swear
I'd never do it again? Not much.
What I did was regret the grapes,
revile myself for being half scared
to death and swear a return visit
to the orchard as soon as the heat
was off.
t * W V
That's what 1 mean. Today, I'd
never consider doing such a thing.
Oh, 1 might give my golf ball a
'very small kick if it was in a Par-
ticularly bad lie in the rough, and
nobody was looking. 1 might tell
my wife' that' I'd paid the hydro
bill in time to get the discount
when 1 knew perfectly well that it
was in my hip pocket, unpaid. But
I'd never dream of doing anything
dishonest, likestealing grapes.
Other people are the same. The
older they get, the better they get.
Not long ago we visited an old
acquaintance, a woman in her late
-thirties. She --had. &.:teenage daugh-
ter
aughter who was out to a dance that
night. The girl was to be home
by one. As the hour neared, her
mother kept breaking off her talk
about her church activities and
glancing at the clock. At one-
tifteen, she was fit to be tied. The
kid showed up about one -thirty.
You should have heard her mother.
You'd have thought the youngster
was completely depraved.
. * 4. is
Later, as she served a cup, of
tea and vehemently wondered what
was going to become of these un-
disciplined, irresponsible teenag-
ers, I couldn't help casting my
mind back. Twenty years ago our
hostess had been a regular young
rip, whose specialties were drink.
ing gin out of the bottle in the
rumble seat of roadsters, and
going for mixed midnight swims
au nature!.
•••••N•••N•rY,vWN••
And it sure counts when a
man wants hip clothes cleaned
in short order r thus
what you want? . . Thorough
cleaning and careful clean-
ing! ..Quality work at within -
reason prices! . . and your
suits returned to you looking
right,_fitting right. Phone us.
GOD lZl T
DRY CLEANERS
y-wr ter S'r. C , /21LS
C.R. t.OWE t Yr r'.
:k *
Re.cen;,ly 'I spent a week -end with
an old college friend. He had dis-
tinguished himself at .lhe univers-
ity, not through his athletic or
academic prowess, but because of
his incredible Memory for the
words and obscure tunes of Riley's
Daughter, There Was An Old Monk
of Great Renown, and other such
bawdy but deathless ditties. Satur-
day night I tried to get a song or
two out of him, but he was strange-
ly reticent. In the oid days you
had to hold him down and stuff a
sock in his mouth to make him
stop singing.
Next morning, Sunday, he acted
kind of mysterious. Wanted me to
go for a walk with him. 1 thought
he was taking me to the bootleg-
ger's, and was about to demur, but
decided to humor him, and went
along. When we got there it seem-
ed 'a funny place to find a boot-
legger, but you never know. Five
minutes later my mouth was still
hanging open as 1 sat in the back
row of the Sunday School and
watched my friend, arms waving,
face beaming, leading about a
hundred small tykes through the
strains of Jesus Loves Me.
4 is 4 4
Last April, I bumped into an
old Air Force side -kick, in a coffee
shop in Simpson's, in the city.
Hadn't seen him .since nrussells,
1945. His right name was Dick,
but we called him The Count in
those days, because he was reput
edly, and enviedly, living in sin
with a beautiful, ries Belgian
countess. He was a big handsome,
devil-may-care chap in those days.
# r a 4
We chatted. He was a little fat,
a little bald, pretty dull. "Re-
member when we used to car you
The Count?" I asked, in .aro effort
to establish common ground. He
muttered something like "count
me out" and launched rapidly into
a monologue on reie work he was
doing with iUvenile • delinquents,
through a church group. He finally
ran out of breath, there was an
awkward pause, then: "Guess you
'haven't met the wife," he said
heartily, turning to a large red-
faced woman sitting beside him,
eating a vast sundae. It was not
the Countess.
4
You can see them everywhere:
people who were once steeped in
sin, and now pass the collectionplate or haTler in the back row of
the church -Thole; who v;,ere wire
steeped in gin and whose indlamecl
noses now light the way for the
valiant armies of the prohibition
cause.
It's plain to see that people im-
prove with age, morally, if not
physically. But 1'd still like to
know why. Is it because they have
learned to respect the law and
other people's property? Is it be-
cause they know the day of iudg
merit is bearing down and they're
trying to cover their flaming youth
with a nice coat of camouflage
prey. Ot- is it simply that they
don't have the stamina to be sinful
any more'?
AMC"
SIGNAL ---sten
;tom. � Y,, SM. 26th, l957
iladies to- be pemcd). Six -member
f viceRlasesideaac. 11
lierison Tuckey He. s sG�c194a
Huron County LiLerais
Hon. Fartpthar Oliver, leader of '
the opposition in the Oaatario Leg-
islature, was the speaker of the
evening when the Huron Liberal
Asaaciatiol held its annual meet-
ing in the community hall at
Zurich on Friday evening, Septem-
ber 13.
Saying it was time for the Lib-
eral party to assess itself, Hon. Mr.
Oliver said: "The fall of the Lib-
eral party on June 10 was not so
much a support of the Tory party
as it was a vote against the Grits.
There was no one thing that de-
feated the party, but the gathering
up of various factors of a govern-
ment that had rode the crest for
so many. years," he said.
"The Liberal party is basically
and fundamentally one of reform
and will revive itself after a period
of rededication and a working out
of its .problems," said the speaker.
"If there is federal election
next May or June, I predict the
premier of this province will call
tor a provincial election in the
fall," said Mr. Oliver.
Mr. Oliver was introduced by
James Scott, of Seaforth, who stat-
ed that the -speaker had sat con-
tinuously at Toronto for 31 years,
having been elected when +22 years
old.
Past president Ivan Kalbfleisch
chaired the meeting, with W. G.
Cochrane as secretary. On the
platform were ,Hugh Hill, Goderich;
Andy McLean, Seaforth; Ilu'gh
Hawkins, Clinton; John A. Mei wen,
Brucefield. The riding was well
represented at the meeting.
New Officers
The following slate of officers
was adopted:
President, Benson W. Tuckey,
Exeter; past president, Ivan Kalb-
fleisch, Zurich; secretary, W. L.
Whyte, Seaforth; tteasurer, George
Deichert, Zurich.
Vice-presidents W. G. Cochrane,
Exeter; James
Vice-presidents,
Goderich;
Garnet Hicks, Ueborne Township;
Roy 'Ratz, Stephen Township;
Dennis Bedard, Zurich; Dr. A.
Addison, Clinton; Ivan Forsythe,
Tuckersmith _Township.
Honorary presidents, Hugh Hill,
Goderich; John Armstrong, Hullett
Township; Albert Kalbfleisch, Zur-
ich; Senator .Golding, Seaforth; W.
H. Robertson, Goderich; Ephriain
Snell, Clinton; Pat Sullivan, Credi-
ton; John Eckert, MoKillop Town-
ship; Elgin Rowcliffe, Usborne
Township; John A. McEwen, Stan-
ley Township.
Officers of Ladies' Huron Liberal
Organization—President, Mrs. W.
L. Whyte, Sealorth; , secretary, Mrs.
Jean Hildebrand, Seaforth: treas-
urer, Mrs. Madeline Edward,
N.�
famtammittssimosimmatimognalw
A minute for safety beats a
•month c,,.. repairs. --DRIVE S�AFF-
10.44011.11,4104141.11111111411114.411160.
I.�l.
BENSON W. TUCKEY, of Exeter,
who has been named president of
Huron Liberal Association.
Goderich; vice-presidents, Mrs. J.
Pearson, Zurich; Mrs. William Mc-
Guire, Goderich Township; Mrs.
Archie Morgan, Usborne Township;
Mrs. G. Zwieker, Crediton; Mrs.
Harper Rivers, Exeter.
lfonorary presidents, Mrs. Joe
McConnelI, Seaforth; Mrs. Lyle
Paisley, Clinton; Mrs. A. Y. Mc-
Lean, Seaforth; Mrs. Roy Lamont,
Zurich.
Officers of Young Huron Liberals
—President, James Taylor, Hensall;
secretary, Murray Dennis, McKillop
Township; treasurer, Reg. Black,
Zurich; vice -,presidents, Bruce
Erskine, Goderich; Alvii1 Betties,
Goderich Township; Winston Shap -
ton, Stephen Township; (three
TV ANTENNAS
SOLD
SERVICED
$ REMOVED
INSTALLED
Les Chaprnan TV
Phone 154 104 ElgtnnE.
-22tf
•••�•ea•aeaiaeeka . � � 1 }w!K
waq tfr
bihbjck&p...urno
Mama
cULHIACCOwit
Ask your branch for folder about
this popular new "Royal" service
The nurse is saving regularly
for a vacation trip
"no Coo: elwwtives have been i
power since 1043i End they have
had all the leach in the world.
They have mole through prosper-
ous tames and the resp onsib$lity
for these good times has come
from the outside. The Ontario
government will show in March
one hundred and ten millions' of
new money. The money comes
from taxes :paid by the people and
the government is only the instru-
ment through which this money is
returned to the public through
good roads, pensions, health insur-
ance, etc.," said Mr, Oliver.
"Mr. Churchill, the new minister
o£ agriculture, has advised, `the
farmers of the west to .go into the
feeding of livestock to use up their
surplus grain. I'm into livestock,"
said the .speaker, "and I am pot
getting as much for my cattle as
I paid last fall. I, for one, don't
want them going into livestock.
"The governments at Ottawa and
at Toronto have a problem on their
hands to solve the agricultural
situation. Durnen,- /the past few
years, there has bellla depression
on the faduna but the` only depreo.
simaa experienced in this country
is in agriculture. Population on
the fares has decreased from 85
! •v cent ; ,s 10 per cent and the
politicians have less interest nn the
farmers' .support. The Jfle burn
government subsidies to i rmera
amounted to millions. Forty-three
subsidies were wi ass 3 out by the
Frost government,' said Inc. Olin er,
A resolution was pa sod expreess-
ing confidence in and appreetation
of the work carried on by Mr.
Oliver, and assuring him of
per cent support.
HOME, SCHOOL, AREA MEET
The- 20th annual Home and
School Regional confeenee will be
held at East st Elgin, 111 41 School,
Aylmer, on Wednesday, Vetober 2.
Among the 'topics to be discussed
will be "The Relatton3pOf Home
and 4phool Associations to Scher
Boards."
1"1
B,easonable sperm allows more
time to act:-DRIVii SAFELY.
Seer,"riff \Coal„•
ORED”
Here's a coal
so CLEAN that
it just seers
to SPARKLE!
OVERFOLT COAL CO.
PHONE 1002 GODERICH
a o
�� ogre rHS• Lip
?` 1N,• �JL
«°otRnC0
fight Classes
GODERICH DISTRICT
COLLEGIATE lNATlTOTf
Courses in BOOKKEEPING
BASIC ENGLISH
TYPING
SEWING
SHOP 'WORK
and other subjects if registration is sufficient.
REGISTER
at the School
MONDAY, SEPT. • 30
7.30 P.M.
OR BY TELEPHONE — 508 — BEFORE THAT DATE
-37-38
The father is saving for the things,
a growing child will need
v
�v.
r. o.von.ner,-_.,,,,2.- r.+f.:A.w.op R.:4•14M!?t ., , •
Both have a
bank account - and
t purpose for saving
Nurse and father both agree that some things
are too important to leave to chance. So,
like most Canadians, each uses a chartered bank
for planned saving, making regular deposits
to' accomplish a definite purpose.
Your own savings plan may be a short-term,
odest one — maybe a vacation trip, or new
drapes for the living room. Or your goal
may be long-range, like providing more
security, greater comfort a s d independence
for you and your family.
But whatever use you find for the money you
save, you'll always be glad you saved it!
Save at a bank — millions dol
I I'
THE CHARTERED BANKS SERVING YOUR COMMUNITY
4,