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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1957-10-10, Page 10THE . GOO RIOR $IGNAL,S AR `i4'trI4oI#i flounced ss yet, Mr. Nereid Beele hart'saceepteneet of the >l➢a9ft ltlii of FssetivieXI dirffeteee wilt e101ge shOW. mhe, COWIN petits eoiuuan iu this issue c ntaans farther news about the G.L.T. You're clever safe e ou a "to af- ford one carelesonient.-DBIVE CALENDARS • e# eudars, with the Hid „Beer U of Aiteaodra He ita! on SO 'tent *re Blow printed and are l R* ode by members of the Wo- lOW& Ineepital Auxiliary. With spaee aaxnutd each date to VIrilie >MEiI Teminelere of coming *lade in whi _,+, the owner is inter - oiled, they are calendars that come itititie Itaiidy.• PAST RELIEF FOR RHEUMATIC PAIN M I N AR 0 S"KIND W PAIN" LiNimENT 0 brdon Turner, 04 -year-old Stan- ley Township dean, was to start work Monday at a new job, Ws lawyer said in court here last week. There was a change in Mr. Turn- er's (plans, however, as Magistrate D. E. Holivaes sentenced hien to three mouths. in jail for keeping liquor far sale. A second offender, he wa also ordered to pay court costs o serve two weeks additional. Provincial Constable A. Hardy, of Goderich, told of finding 24 cases of beer under somer straw in Mr. Turner's barn on September 30. The Turner property fronts on highway 4, South of the RCAF School, the court eras informed. Altogether, police seized 360 pints of beer in the raid. No one was around at the time except the accused's own family, said Con- stable Hardy, ,hut he added that there had been previous complaints about the place. Constable Hardy said that the raid had been carried out as a result of evidence given in an abduction case heard in court re- • Protective "silver -wrap" on Coal keeps heater surfaces clean, increases efficiency. ORDER NOW OVERHOLT COAL COPHONE 1002 . NOTICE CHANGE OF BUS TIME TABLES FALL AND WINTER SCHEDULES. Effective October 7,-1957 1' Obtain your copy from your local Agent. SAMIS MOTORS -PHONE 344. THE WESTERN ONTARIO MOTORWAYS LIMITED KITCHENER ONTARIO •SSIIRA#CE COMP'S"r 5b,ce /889 HEADOff/CE: #YA1'ERL00:04WO %ti EBB ROSS 'Says: Why not retire on Easy Street? With our Dominion Security person- al savings plan ypu can co-ordinate your Old Age Pension with personal savings. Choose the monthly income you need, now, to start your retire- ment before age 70. Let's talk it Over! E. M. ROSS Representative Goderich, Ont. Phone 37 Ask about our low cost GroufLife Insurance Plans. nder Straw, en t Ta Jai i cently. The beer mentioned i':�; the abduction ease had been se.eurs ed at Mr. Turner's place, it was learned. James Donnelly, counsel for Mr. Tenser, said that the 61 -year-old man Ls the father of eight children -including six that are still at- tending school. He -had just won a job as a commissionaire and was to stat Monday, • he added. The magistrate ordered confisca- tion of the beer. 0 0 0 SATURDAY EXCURSIONS • .o TORONTO EVERY SATURDAY (TO AND INCL DEC. 14th) Good going and returning same Saturday only. EXCURSION FARES FROM Allanford $5.05 Guelph $2.05 Palmerston $3.55 Brampton .95 Hanover 4.60 Sarnia 6.85 Brussels 4.60 Harriston 4.00 Southampton 6.25 Chesley 5.05 Ingersoll 3.95 Stratford 3.65 Clinton 5.05 Kincardine 6.20 Strathroy 5.50 Elora 2.60 Kitchener 2.60 Walkerton 4.85 Fergus c,,, 2.60 Listowel 3.80 Watford 6.05 Georgetown 1.30 Mitchell 4.20 Wingham 5.05 Goderich 5.30 Owen Sound 5.05 Wyoming 6.50 Paisley 5.50 • Corresponding fares from Intermediate Points. FULL INFORMATION. FROM AGENTS T.7-6© BAYFIELD BAYib LD, Oct. 7. --Mr: and Mrs. Jas. Day and family, Pleasant Ridge, Mich., spent the week -end at their cottage. Mr. and Mrs. A. S. Charlton and three children, Stratford, spent the week -end in the ° village. Mr) and Mrs. Harry Bauer and Tommy, 'Waterloo, were at their cottage over the week -end. Mrs. R. J. Larson is a patient in Clinton Public Hospital where she underwent surgery. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Larson and baby, London, arse visiting R. J. Larson. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Castle and four sons left last week to reside in Kitchener. Mrs. F. V. Martin left on Satur- day for her home. in Detroit after spending the summer at her cot- tage. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Pounder and children, of Dawson Creek, B.C., arrived on Thursday to reside in London. They are spending a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Seotchmer. Mrs. C. W. Brown spent last week with hex sister, Mrs. A. Arm- strong, Stanley Township. The Wanstead Co -Op. held a three day convention at the "Little Inn." Dr. and Mrs. Aron Chapman, De- troit, spent from Friday until Tues- day at their cotjtage. Mr. John MacLeod, Port Burwell, spent Thursday and Friday at his home. Mr. and Mrs. Don Matthews, Lon- don, spent the week -end at the Albion 'Hotel. Miss Ethel Blair, London, spent the weeltnd . at her home. o ... -O- o ' HAD NO PERMIT Pleading guilty to driving with- out a license, a 17 -year -bid Gode- rich boy was fined $15 and costs or five days. The charge -was laid after ,the boy was involved in a minor accident, Magistrate D. E. Holmes was told. .-n. Per capita consumption of cot- ton, synthetic and wool fabrics in Canada today is about 42.5 yards per year -about three times the world average. uIcI( CASH. LOANS arrow the cash you need, quickly and easily at Trans Canada Credit. Takeadvantage of the new low rates. Up to 30 months to repay. Your own credit, backed up by your car or household effects is all the security we need. Call . us today. THE ALL -CANADIAN LOAN COMPANY CRIMY 148 THE SQUARE PHONE 797 TSF' -6 k10 0 o0 OUT ON A LIMB WITH BILL SMILEY It's a good thing Thanksgiving comes along once a year. It gives us a chance to go around looking thankful for a day or two before we go back to our habitual expres- sions of sour indignation at the shabby way in which the world is treating us. Lh 4, . d It's good for the facial muscles to ease them out of that cramped scowl once a year. Of course, there's the odd fanatic who goes around being thankful all the time. His silly, happy face stands out among all our nermall, froweing ones with the incongruity of sweet - peas in a slaughterhouse. Maybe it's just as well, though, that Thanksgiving has become, via our national virtue of putting first things last, merely a day to watch the football game, close up the cottage, or get in that last game of golf, with a turkey dinner orgy thrown in somewhere along the line. if we really took the occasion seriously, we might get into all kinds of trouble. 4, e. t$ Imagine the chaos that would result if everybody started being truly thankful for what he had, and not vont.ingj something more. Our entire economy would be shat- tered if people stopped grabbing for all they could,gets Two years of people being satisfied with last year's car would ruinthe autoino- bile industry and„ throw hundi$eds of thousands out of work. If people started patching their old trousers, instead of throwing.. them out, the textile industry would be wiped out in no Hine: If they began to make&) with what they had, and were thankful for it, the entire structure known as free enterprise would conte crashing about our ears. .Advertis- ing executives, whose job is to make people want what they don't really ,need, would be leaping from high windows. Finance companies, bad cess no them, would be a shambles overnight. And you can scarcely view with equanimity the feeble makeshift society we'd have without the finance company. 7 t* Next thing to collapse would be our whole political system. How can you have democracy if every- body is thankful far -what he has? Think of the• consternation if the usual windbag who seeks office, saying: "It is only on the insistence of my many friends that I run, and my only thought is to work ceaselessly to serve my country and my fellow -taxpayers of this banner riding," were to say, when approached, "Nah. I dowanna run for parliament. 1 like it here on the farm." Without politicians, our country would be in a sorry state. It would be like a gain' ripe cheese without the maggots. There's no use pursuing the whole idea any further. The very thought of the shambles we'd be in, if we all started being thankful, makes my blood run cold. Busi- ness ruined, democracy lost. Why, if we let this thankfulness get out of hand, we'd be just a mass of mis- guided Christians wading around up to the knees in the milk of human kindness. Such anarchy might eve& start us thinking about some of the people of the world who have a lot Tess to be thankful for than we have, and who knows where that might lead. Why, we'd be just as liable as not to give them a few billion bushels of wheat, or do something equally silly. r It couldn't happen here, you say? That's what they said about rock 'n' roll, brother. It's not that simple. We've got to fight it. People are weak, you know. For example, suppose the farmers stop- ped complaining about the wea- ther, and just said: "I'm thankful we had a good crop last year, and Ma and I have our health. There'll either be a crop failure or there won't, and there isn't much I can do about it." That may be trite, but the first farmer who said it would be destroying a tradition that goes back thousands of years. =6 a 46 What do you suppose would hap- pen if schoolteachers stopped kik Ong about being underpaid, and admitted they were thankful to work in cosy classrooms, get -•tots of holidays, and retire honorably with .a reasonable pension? , I'll tell you what would happen. All kinds of young' people would want to be schoolteachers. Imagine where that could lead. Think -what would happen if all the steady drinkers in the world enelsjenly became thankful theY were not yet alcoholics, and stop- ped guzzling. Millions of waiters, brewers, truck drivers, distillers and salesmen would be jobless. Governments, deprived of all that tax revenue, would fall like spent rockets. There'd be no money for baby bonuses. The birthrate would fall, there'd be enough housing to go around, and the builders and money -lenders would be out of business, 6-1t1Aa ifs b e' 'e e♦ ♦� 4, w o 4/It I: SC° IN GODERICH ON WEDNESDAY -16 OCTOBER A SPECIAL RCAF CAREER COUNSELLOR! pi:(I out Wilco • cif you it7 . c"its b1t' r+ptatln . trader. !raetuoq •-' bray --- t,ensrrti and other benefits 4, AT THE TOWN HALL from 3 p.m. ---- 6 p.m. 0 0 0 0 Illy now, I hope you have the picture. Society, and the world as we know it, would crumble into dust if this being -thankful business got the bit in its teeth. So, on Thanksgiving Day, keep a tight rein. Don't let yourself bo carried away. Just keep in mind the eel- amitous consequences if you lot it got out of hand and scowl, brother, scowl. n A gond look boats goad luck in the qOb of safe driving.- DRIVE SAFELY. Modern Trend is eeause of .appareAt lack of interest in competing, the (held day of GGCf thy, ed f r 14$t Thur3day rafters 1, et wee ewe celled indefinite y. Ther .were only 20 boys who signed the list enoting their inteaitien of taking rant in any of the events. d rte t. umber of girls who were interested in competing was about 30. The list for students to sign show. ing they wanted to compete was posted in the school for a pernod of about two weeks. When the number of pros- pective track and field athletes was so small, Principal A. R. Scott decided it was not worth cancelling all classes for the afternoon for so few devotees of track and fiekl sports. A track and (field day was planned last spring at GDCI but was called off, too, when interest was too small. Last time a field day was held at GEM was in 1054. Looks as if today's students prefer "spectator sports" rath- er than the participating variety. 0 0 0 Maple Leaf IODE Has October Meet The October meeting of the Maple Leaf Chapter, .IO0E, was held at the home of Miss E. Cooper with the regent, Mrs. R. Hughes presiding. The educational report, given by the convener, Mrs. A. M. Harper, told that five books had been sent to the adopted school. It was de- cided that a prize for English in Grade 12 be given in place of the essay contest. Night gowns were handed out to be made and knitting was brought in for the work of services at home and abroad. real plans were made for the Fashion Show and for the semi-annual meeting to be held in Brantford, October 24 and 25. Delegates to this con- vention are Mrs. A. Waters, who will carry the Chapter's standard, and Mrs. R. Hughes. LARGE ORDER PLACED WITH MASSEY HARRIS - FERGUSON A third large order, this time for 1,000 Ferguson tractors and 6,500 implements, has been placed by Yugoslavia with the - United Kingdom subsidiary of e,Mass ., Harris -Ferguson. The Companye.t total sales to Yugoslavia since the contract was made in 1956 now amount to $18,315,000. EYACIDS Ro your Rest.. M y people never seem to get a good night's rest. They turn and toss -blame it on 'nerves' -when it may be their kidneys. Healthy kidneys filter poisons and excess acids from the blood. If they fail and impurities stay in the system -disturbed rest often follows. If, you don't rest well get and use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Dodd's help the kidneys so that you can rest better --and feel better. 136 Dodd's KidnePiHs Litile Theatre Plans A PIay Mus. Allan. MacDonald, known to- Goderich residents for her‘delight- fel performance on the blades, promises them another interesting performance when she wanes the boards, as Lucy, in "White Iris." Mrs. Floyd Lodge is reviving this play as the Goderich Little Theatre's entry for the tenth an. TY ANTENNAS 0 SOLD 0 SERVICED • REMOVED • INSTALLED Les Chapman TV Phone 154 38 East St. -22tf DAtAY A&*3 THERE'S NO MATCH - FOR QUALITY - AND THAT WHAT WE GET IN MILK FROM ANDREW DAIRY 1, • 1 ;Mel !Drama ,Festival in November. Other rnombek,' of the east w.vi:ll be Bar. Floyd Lodge as 141409e J4 s. Hobert Wilson as o areas, and Mrs. ,Druce Sully as Jessam.Y. Mr. Charlepl. Brown, president of London Little Theatre and district representative for this area for the Western Ontario rama League, will open the Festival. Although the adjudicator is not being ani SEE and HEAR HI -fl NOW Bring your fa,vonite 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. COMPLETE DISPERSAL SALE OF TWO HERDS 31 REGISTERED HEREFORDS Thursday, Oct. 17 at 1.89 p.m. 10 Cows with calves at side. 2 Herd Siresn,(inoluding) 0. A. Larry Domino 48th and Del Zento Portage, Plus 5 Bred Heifers and 5 Young Bulls. Sale to be held at the }"iinlayson Farm, 21/a miles east and 2 milts south of Brucefielt% HOWARD C. WRIGHT, Oroniarty, Ont., Owner. ART FINLAYSON, ICippen, Ont., Owner. W. S. O'NEIL, Auctioneer, Denfield, Ont. FOR"Your Fountain Favourites " • V lS�ITOur fee &yam r90 ge i�t, akta[(7", What do Life nsuw4nce C.ompan►ea Do with all the, rnortey Life insurance companies must report their financial operations to the Superintendent of Insurance.* According, to the latest official figures here are the facts about the Life Insurance Dollar: Where each Dollar comes from: 74¢ comes from premiums paid by policyholders for insurance to protect their wives and families .. . and for security in their own old age. What happens 821t is for policyholders. 430 is paid out to living policy- holders and to beneficiaries. 390 is invested for future benefits to policyholders. 26 comes from earnings on policyholders' funds. These' funds are invested under Government supervision and help to develop Canada. to each Dollar: -18¢ is used for normal operating c'.penses which include taxes, licenses and fees paid to Govern- ments. *The latest report from the Superintendent of Insurance, Ottawa, shows that in 1956 the life insurance companies in Canada paid out 5371 million in benefits to policyholders. By far the greater part of this money (5,236'million)9went to living policyholders. THE , LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA L 357D 61, THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA DON'T BIE COLOR-BLIND WHEN YOU BUY COAL'••: `".= Get 'blue coal'... and be sure! Don't just order coal ... insist on `blue coal'! This famous fuel is so good, it's trade -marked blue for your protection. Carefully graded and inspected from start to finish, `blue coal' gives you the clear full flame that means better heat -thrifty heat -safe heat. Thousands of Cana- dian families rely -on tiri'ftigh-grade anthracite for real heating economy with far less waste - far less attention to the furnace. Remember, don't be 'color-blind when you buy coal. Get 'blue coal,' the anthracite that's so all -fired good, it's tinted blue. EDWARD GOAL CO. GODERICH .' PHONE 9R 'blue coal! CLEAN...»SAFE .LOW COST HEAT 1