The Goderich Signal-Star, 1957-11-14, Page 3-- r..
ARMY CHAPLAIN'S SERMON
Vision Inspired Sacrifices
By Men With High Ideals
"Where there is no visio.., thre4
people perish," was the text of an
inspirational sermon preached Sun-
day morning at St. George's Church
by Rev. Dr. K. E. way tor , chaplain
of Branch 109, Canadian, Legion,
and principal Protestant ehapiain
os ,tee IA Canadian Army (luring
World War II. It was the occasion
of the annual chtaich parade of
ranch 109, Canadian Legion.
Headed by the Goderich Pipe
Band, the parade moved from the
Legion Hall to the church. Due
to the weather, not as many Leg-
ion members as usual were in the
parade. Also in the parade were
the Maitland Air Cadets> and the
Women's Auxiliary of the Canad
ian Legion.
The color party was made up of
Bud I athieson and Joe Chambers,
for the Legion; Mrs. M. Sheardown
and Mrs. A. Thomas for the Wom-
men's Auxiliary; W. Brown for the
Air Cadets. -
Why did soldiers of Werld Wars
I and II and the Korean War join
the colors, many of them perishing,
it o asked in his sermon. HOLSTEIN CLUB
Was it not because of the deep
conviction in their hearts for the
ideals they held-, he suggested. NAME'OFFICERS
Where there is no idealism, a
nation deteriorates; it falls away
said Dr. Taylor. During World- .William Haugh, of Clinton, was
Magical Results!
Ftthree-+bedroom house was
offered for sent in the claeei•
Pied eolunins, of The Signal -
Star last 'week. 'It was rented,
on the same afternoon as the
paper came out. More than
20telephone calls Were recew
ed by George C. Feagan, who
advertised the house.
In last week's Signal -Star,
Mrs. Annie Morgan advertised
for a sterling silver brooch
which she had lost. Although
it had 1beeaa lost for about two
weeks, the ad recovered the
brooch, valued as a keepsake,
foe her.
Every week,. there are count-
less such stories that could be
told of the results obtained by
Signal -Star classified ads. Why
not put them to work for you,
too? These ads accomplish so
much at so little cost.
War II, there were times when the
allied forces were frgstrated--on
the brink of defeat. There were
times when the British Empire
was closer to defeat than most
people will ever realize. "In
spite of it all, we never lost faith
in God" said the former army
chaplain. Goderich; directors, North Huron,
While World War II did not Ed. Brindley, R.R. 4, Goderich,
bring an end to wars, it did pre-
o- o 0
elected president or the Huron
County Holstein Club at its annual
meeting. He succeeds Ed. Bell, of
Blyth.
Other officers elected were, vice-
presidents, Peter ,Simpson, Sea -
forth, and Glen Walden, Lucknow;
secretary -treasurer, Hume Clutton,
serve our Christian civilization.
Looking back now -we realize that
the great wars were critical phases
in the overall life of conflict with
sin down through the ages.
Any life which really amounts
to anything begins with vision,
said Dr. Taylor. Today the cause
of much trouble is the aimlessness
of people. Wars brought , ,o our
attention the need to arise from
petty differences and self interest.
Those who gave their lives in' past
wars did so to protect the spiritual
values we enjoy today, he stated.
0 - –0 (D
RESTAURANT RENOVATED
The interior of Eiackstone's Res-
taurant has fbeenepainted and the
layout re-arrand. During the
week it was closed, the "Morning
-Coffee Club," which unofficially
reviews doings about Mown, tem-
porarily suspended operations. The
after-school 'teen age gathering
also missed its usual meeting place.
But now, Blackstone's Restaurant
is open again. •
George Hayden, Gorrie, and Leo
Ruttan, Fordwioh; North Central,
Vern Hunter, Lucknow, Dick Prec-
tor, Belgrave; South Central, Alvin
Betties, Bayfield, Howard Feagan,
Goderich; South Huron, William
Boyd, Walton, - Wellington Brock,
Granton. _ ..
Long-term production certificates
were presented by Gordon Bell,
'St. Marys, Lfi.eldman, Western On-
tario District of the Holstein -Fries-
ian Association to Reg. McKeil,
Clinton; Thonkas Hayden and Son,
Gorrie; Huron County Home, Clin-
ton; Alvin Betties, Bayfield; G. C.
Tervit, Wingham, Hume Clutton,
Goderich, and W. Brook and Son,
Granton.
Honor list certificates awarded in
recognition of exceptional produc-
tion in Canada of purebred Hol-
stein -Friesian cattle went to the
following: Ross Marshall, Vernon
Hunter and -Sons, Lucknow; Alvin
Betties, M. J. Forbes, R.R. 2; Clin-
ton; William D. Clutton, R. R. 5,
Goderieh; Reg. McKiel, Hume Clut-
ton, Torn Hayden and Son.
••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• .R�P,o $100 ONYOUR
[ 1958 RCA VICTOR TELEVISIONS
SEE RCA VICTOR
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40 ALL RT ME W ST RN HITS. $5 00
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LES.
CHAPMAN
•
•
r
•
I38 EAST ST. (Opposite Fire Hall) PHONE 154 •
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PHYLLIS MARSHALL, well-known
to televasipn audiences for her sing-
ing of blues and other sultry num-
bers, appears regularly on the
weekly 'Cross -Canada Hit Parade
on the OBC -TV network every Sat-
urday.
o . O- O
Week -end visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. R. G. Sanderson were their
sons, Robert and Donald, and Mrs.
Donald Sanderson, all of Toronto.
MEMBER
•
5114 MacEwan' Insurance
Agency
9 YOUR AGENT OF PERSONAL
_ SERVICE,
WEST ST. PHONE 230
AN INDEPENDENT INSURANCE AGENT
GODERICII SIGNAL,STAit
GET READY FOR �� d (•
BIGGER COUNTY
COUNCIL BY '58
'Coat lea cation of the aPpoitttraont
of Leonard Westbrook as assistant
caretaker of Huron County Court
House at a salary of $2,700 a year
was submitted to County Council
on Tuesday by Deputy Reeve Owe -
ter MaicWiiinney, Exeter, chairman
of the county property committee.
He is to replace John Drew, who
returned.to England.
Eight new chairs and eight new
desks have -been procured at a
cost of $1,400 to take care of ex
pected , additions to the County
( eunoif when new legislation takes
effect in 1058.
In order that private hearings
may be held at the Children's Aid
offices, they have been partitioned
and the ceilings treated acoustical-
ly at a duet ofabout $600. The
County, Committee has recommend-
ed that the rental price of the of-
fices be increased $25 a month.
The old photographic equipment
at ,the Registry Office has been sold
to the University of Western On-
, tario for $300.
Downstairs rooms at the County
Jail residence have been redecor-
ated at a cost of $360.
In Business Here 44 Years, James
Campbell Opens New, Modern Store
Within three weeks of the exact
date he purchased a drug business
in Goderich 44 years ago, James
A. Campbell today opens in a new
location an the Square. The store,
formerly oboupied by NLeCreath's
Grocery, has been completely re -
modernized into one of, the smart-
est laid -out drug stores in a wide-
spread section of Western Ontario.
Born in East Flamboro Township
in WentworthCount', about 16
miles from Hamilton, James Camp-
bell attended Waterdown High
School. Instead of returning to, the
family farm, he decided to ,become
a druggist: After graduating from
the Ontario 'College of Pharmacy,
he worked in drug sVoees at Massey,
Cobalt, Perth and Toronto, Ontario:
While in Toronto, he heard the
d ug store of S. E. Hick at Gode-
rich was for sale. This he bought
and operated in its location, now
the Ivie,Mary Shoppe, for about
seven years. Then, he moved to
the location from which he has
now moved and in which he oper-
ated for nearly 37 years.
Other drug stores in Goderich
when he first came here were those
of Dunlop, Wigle and Batland.'
When he served his apprentice-
ship with Parke and Parke, drug-
gists at Hamilton, he received $4
a week to start, he stated.
Mr. Campbell has been active in
N••••.•••••••••N•i•••••N•••••••H••••••••••••
AT
THE
AIR-CONDITIONED
PARK
GODERICH
PHONE
1150
Now Playing --Joel McCrea and Felicia Farr. In
"THE FIRST TEXAN." in Cinemascope and Technicolor.
Mon.--Tues—Wed.—BY Popular Request 1 1
"Tammy and the Bachelor"
—IN 'SCOPE AND COLOR --
A Blue -Ribbon Winning romantic comedy get in the deep South
where a plantation owner is involved with an impoverished
minister's daughter.
Debbie Reynolds—Leslie Nielsen and Walter Brennan
Thur.–•
Charlton I4oston—Anne Baxter °and Gilbert Roland
Whereby a Texan, Civil War Veteran, marries a dancehall girl
and. helps restore a rundown ranch.
"Three Violent People,'
bl'b —IN VISTAVISION—
Coleing—•prod Astairo and Cyd Marisa) in "Silk Stockings)."
a•••••••••••••••A•••••••••N•••••••••••••••••••&
err'
an isten
an Istel
'FA
what we just
JAMES A. CAMPBELL
community affairs since coming to
Goderich. He is a past president
of the Lions Club nd wItee for-
about 26 years the Sunday School
Superintendent and treasurer of
the Goderich Baptist Church. For
about 11 -years he was the repre-
sentative of District NI 2, extend-
ing es far north as Own Sound,
on the council of the Ontario Col-
lege of Pharmacy.
Auto Clips, Cruiser;
Conviction Follows
A Mitchell district 'youth, whose C.
car was in collision with the Gode-
rich police cruiser, was fined $15
and costs, or five days in jail, for
careless driving.
Appearing before Magistrate D.
E. Holmes here Thursday, Henry
Harry Van IMoorsel, of R.R. 5, Mit-
chell, pleaded not guilty.
Constable L. Theriault told- the
court -that he was driving the cruis-
er when -the accident happened in
the vicinity of The Pillars at about
4.45 a.m. on -October 21. It ap-
peared that Constable Theriault
had driven past the lumber yard
and stopped at the stop sign be-
fore entering Cambria road.
Mr. Van ,Moorsel said that he
stopped at the lights at the corner
-where Viotoria street, Kingston
street and 'Elgin avenue meet. }Ie
saw the headlights of the cruiser
and thought it was on the sane
rood as he must take to get home.
lie claimed 'he was blinded by the
cruiser lights and drovestrai.ght
ahead, instead of turning right to
go out Huron road. When he real-
ized his mistake, it was too late
and his car struck a utilities pole
and ricocheted into the cruiser.
The cruiser was damaged but there
was no damage to his own car, he
testified. His sister, a passenger,
was thrown out on" the road as a
result of the impact, but she was
only .shaken up.
Constable Theriault said t'ha)t the
lights of the cruiser were on low
beam at the time of the crash. The
cruiser lights have been adjusted
so that they are aimed low even
when they are on high beam, he
stated.
There were skid marks for 138
feet leading up to the pole, struck
by the youth's car, the officer testi-
fied. `Further evidence for the
crown was given by Police Chief
F. M. Hall and Constable A. South.
Pointing out that the youth was
unfamiliar with the road, defence
counsel. James Dannelly contended
that Mr. Van Moorsel might have
been guilty of an error in judg-
ment but not negligent to such a
degree as would iwarrant a conviic- -
tion for careless driving.
It was stated in court that the
intersection where the accident oc-
ccu1red is a bad corner, and it was
suggested that the town might put
up more signs. For another thing,
it was said that the curve in the
road at this point slopes in the
wrong direction.
The lengthy skid marks indicated
that the youth had been driving
at an excessive speed, the magis-
trate felt. He regiateied a con-
viction.
0- 0 ---0
Mr. and Mrs. Bud Sturdy, of
Sarnia, visited at the week -end with
the farmer's parents, MT. and Mrs.
H. O. Sturdy, Weststreet.
o -- -- o e
The forest protection laws of
Quebec carry the heaviest penalties
of any part of North America.
Court Hears
10 Appeals
ought at
SKELTON'.S
APPLIANCE
0 0 0
an
"INGLOMATIC" DRYER
F -A -S -T- E -ST
D -R -Y -I -N -G
OF THEM ALL
Ten appeals were heard when
Court of Revision met in the Town -
Hall Friday night. Judgments in
the appeals were not handed down
immediately; a second meeting of
the court was to be held last night.
In comparison with former years,
most of the assessment appeals
heard Friday night were not of a
major nature. Last year at this
time,there were 25 appeals before
the court instead of 10.
Councillor W. A. Tipple acted
as chairman of Court of Revision.
Other members who sat to hear the 1
appeals were Councillors Peter
MacEwan, Frank Walkom, C. M.
R,obertson and Reeve E. C. Fisher.
Also in attendance were E. H.
Jessop, town assessor; A. A. Alas -
ander, county assessor, and S. H.
Blake, town clerk and treasurer.
Men Took Turns
At Wheel, .Both
Fined In Court
Two men who took turns driving
a car that was involved in a ,minor
accident, were both fined in magis-
trate's court here Thursday.
William Allen Walters, 19, of
Brucefield, was fined a total of $20
and costs when he pleaded guilty
to two charges --failing tb notify
the pravincial department of pur-
chasing a vehicle, and failing to
remain at the scene of the accident.
Ronald Everitt McDowell, 29, of
Seaforth, pleaded guilty to driving
while prohibited and was fined $3&
and costs or two weeks in jail.
The "cque.ttinn of a further suspen-
sion of his driving license was left
to the -department to consider.
Crown Attorney H. Glenn Hays
explained that Walters was driving
when his car struck a parked auto
at the harbor here on October 26.
The oar also struck the refresh-
ment stand. Fortunately, damage
to the stand and to the other ve-
hicle, driven by Ron Bushell, of
Goderich, was negligible.
The Walters car did not stop
and was pursued . through town
streets for a considerable distance
by Mr. Bushell. Later, the Walt-
ers ear returned to Goderich with
Mowell at the wheel.
Noting that a license suspension
doesn't seem to stop some people
from driving, Magistrate D. E.
Holmes said he wondered if he
should get tougher with these of-
fenders.
"Look what we got
In our Inglis Dryer!"
Full Range Heat Control
.Dries all fabrics quickly and safely.
"Ing matic" Door Shut -Off
Safet with, children around. Machine does not
oper with door open.
Satin -Smooth Drying Drum
Kind and gentle to all types of fabrics.
Inglo Control Panel
Automatic finger-tip controls.
Sani-Sun Germicidal Lamp
Controls coon household germs. Imparts clean
fresh--air-odor- tor your clothing.
Fully Guaranteed
You're always sure of service when you buy at Skelton's.
"Where?.. 1 told you
11
DELIVERS
OUR NEW
INGLIS
nd look at the
wonderful deal"
Reg. list $289.00
SALE price $219.00
"WE
7fl-
-SAVED
"Yes, we paid
only
$219.00
"Oh Yes! . .
they also said
we can have a
10 DAY FREE
HOME TRIAL AT
NO OBLIGATION"
And Terms To Suit You
4ffintorrimisionamissa.
we bought it at
ELTON'S APPLI
Phone 89-W
a
West St.