The Goderich Signal-Star, 1958-03-27, Page 10GUS,
REV, OW GREEN G.1VES
ADDRRss AT ` i igm' ',kl,
The `W& . 1..met at the home
of Mrs.. O. Johnston, where Mrs. J.
. 'Gianston presided. The guest
lea*elr. Rev. R. Green, gave an
irisPirational address.
The. president, Mrs. Cranston,
conducted the business portion.
The secretary, Mrs. T. Graham,
read the minutes 'of the last meet-
ing and %Mrs. Johnston, the treas-
urer, gave her report. The num-
ber of visits to shut-ins was 85
and 32.40 in gifts.
Lunch was served by the hostess,
with touches of green predomin-
ating in honor of St. Patrick's day.
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HADWARE, PLUMBING, HEATING
PHONE 283
DRIVE-IN OPENS
Sunset Driv -In Theatre of-
ficially opens fol' the season
on Thursday evening, April 3.
Some one attending that even-
ing is going to win a big, de-
licious Easter ham. The lucky
car license number will deter-
mine the winner. The open:..
ing" FiRtatraee„,�,, �`'l j .be..` pid1 Back ;14
The "Night" with'Jilin"Vitale
and Mona Freeman. Box of-
fice opens at 7 p.m. Heated
concession booth will be open.
2,000 Acres Less
Following the announcement
that the Canadian Canners
plant at FACt.er will not oper-
ate this year, D. H. Miles,
Huron County Agricultural Re-
presentative says it will mean
a 2,000 acre degrease in cash
crops -=peas, beans and cab-
bage. ' The plant employed 250
workers.
An extremely good run of
sap was reported on County
farms at the end of last week.
GOLF CLUB NAMES ITS
COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN
The Maitland Golf Club on Sat-
urday completed appointments to
the executive committee.
Committee chairmen appointed
were as follows: Sports, Frank Cal-
laghan; ' club house, Fred Rouse
and William Prest; membership,
Miss Bess Tobin; finance, Ron
Menzies; ways and means, Jim
Britlell.
Appointed as secretary -treasurer
was Mrs. Martina Schneiker.
POSTED TO GODERICH
• Helmar Snell, a policeman in
Seaforth for over 25 years, has
been promoted to Corporal and
transferred to the OPP detachment
GODERICH at Goderich. He will be making
his home in Goderich • when ac -
11 & 13 i commodation can be obtained.
It takes
friendly
people
like
Jean Mailer...
A.e,tti
'O Rax,
o serve friendly ' people like you
Many things make good telephone
service pn".'il)le, but none is more sital
than good telephone people. Jean Mailer
is a tsl,ica! example. As a skilled tele-
phone operator. courteous and effi-
cient. Jean '�Ilil,li/c•s the thousands
of l,col,le Idlo help to mak(' telephoning.
more cn:jo\,lhle for cr,nntic'<,
(haus 111 C„lillllllllitle.', l;:rge and slllall.
Whenever you require assistance,
friendly telephone people like, Jean„
Mailer are there to help you—at any
hour of the, (lay or night.
This assurance, that there is a ca-
pable alert operator always as near as
your telephone, is one of the many
little• things that make ',our telephone
seri ice such a truly good value..
THE BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA
b
# lig MODERiOfB' §"IONAL.STAft
M
Letter to E I icor
Dear Editor:
We noticed, that you invited
letters from both sides of the p) e -
sent election campaign, so h ee
goes:
Ili `the Nineties it was the ¢Na-
tional Policy Conservatives. They
'changed it to the :Liberal Consery-
' 'ti ; 1a d. i t4.n urns geo4;
so they changed it to Progressive
Conservatives, but ,now the old
Conservative has dropped otit of
sight, and it is the, John, Diefen-
baker party --a one man party.
Would you like this kind of
-par to run our country? Before,
thegt,,,into power, we. heard a,
gree deal of how'rlie would blast
his ay into the American, Market,
but John's powder must have got
wet, as we have not heard that
blast yet.
Since he got into power, he said
he would take 15 percent of the
American trade away and give ,it
to England. And he came down
te• - oronto --and- ..sat_ down with
Leslie, and got Jimmie Duncan
away on a trade commission to
England—a $30,000 man, and may-
be a half a boat -load of lesser
types. Now we would like to know
who had to pay these men, or if
they got what they were used to
gettirfg here. Jf we did we would
expect a ldt of big , orders for
buying, or the farmer would be
out on the deal, but when England
offered them free trade they shied
clear and that was the last we
heard of the trade commission.
We heard a great deal about
the pipeline when they were irking
to put it through. Now the Tories
held -up P,arliament for 16 days
and they never said whether they
were for it or against it. Now
Mr. Cardiff says it takes $1,000
an hoar to run Parliament, so if
the members work as long hours
as the farmers, some of you can
figure up what the pipeline hold-
up cost us.
They never had much to say
about "Louie," only that he squeez-
ed the pennies,- but --that was not
a bad thing, as people were spend-
ing money like drunken 'sailors,
aad thought it 'would never end.
I was beginning to think a lot of
"Louie," as I thought they were
turning him into a Scetchman, and
you know' how clannish the Scotch
are.
Now when "John" got into
power, he never had any money
to spend, and Louie's nest egg
went to his head, and he soon got
rid of it. And we don't know
how much more, as he was afraid
to bring down a budget to show
what he ,had spent.
True, he raised the pension to
$55, but don't forget that it was
the Liberals that put on the baby
bonus, which has done more good
to help raise a family than any-
thing else. a
This election should never, have
been cilled. The Liberals only
criticised some of the measures
that were brought down, but John
-thought it was a good time to
bring on the election. • He don't
need to try to put it on anybody
else's shoulders for he is _the only
one to call it.
Mr. Cardiff has been our repre-
sentative for .18 years, and what
have we got "0." So don't expect'
too much for riow when the ,Tories
are in power all he got was a
"herd laddie's job."
JAMES R. STIRLING,
R.R. 3, Clinton.
^
In. a 20 -mile race, ' a man would
win -aver a horse because of his
endurance.
THPRSDAt.MARCH?'th,'
own Hall - P.O. Swa.p
pposed By 23 Shops
40 le p
SELL ITTNRUTHE �
Imperial Oil
Products
FOR • • PROMPT SER-
VICE AND QUALITY
-- . _PRODUCTS,
conte"c`it-
B. R. CHISHOLM
Phone collect Dungannon
19-r-2'
"Always Look Tq
Imperial For The Best" •
1tf
Easter Breakfast�,Rolls
Yield -11 dozen rolls
!� cup milk
1
. 1,•'
3
1
cup granulated sugar
teaspoons salt
'cup shortening
cup lukewarm water
teaspoon granulated sugar
1 envelope active dry yeast -
11 t teaspoons lemon extract
4 cup (about) once sifted all-
purpose flour '
Scald milk; stir in the 1A cup
sugar, salt and shortening. Cool
to -lukewarm. Meantime, measure
lukewarm water into a large mix-
ing bowl; stir in the 1 teaspoon
sugar. Sprinkle with yeast. Let
stand 10 minutes, then stir well.
Stir in lukewarm milk mixture,
lemon extract and 2 cups of the
flour; beat until smooth and elastic.
Stir in sufficient additional flour to
make a soft dough—about 2 cups
more. Turn out wdough on floured
board or canvas acid knead 'until
smooth and elastic. Place in a
greased bowl; grease top. - Cover,
Let rise in a warm place, free
from draft, until doubled in bulk
—about 1 hour.
Punch down dough. Turn out
on -lightlyafloured---board- or canvas
and knead until smooth. Divide
dough into 2 eglit .portions. Shape
each portion into a roll 9 inches
long; cut each roll into 9• equal
pieces. Cut each piece of dough
into 3 and shape- into tiny' balls.
Dip balls in melted butter or
margarine and drop 3 of ' them into
each of 18 greased muffin cups.
Cover. Let rise in a warm place,
free from draft, until doubled in
bulk—about 1 hour. Brush tops!
with melted butter or margarine
and bake the rolls in a hot oven
(400' F) 20 to 25 minutes.
•A petition, apposing a sugges- I construction of an entirely new
tion that the proposed new post post office on
"lice npw where
ndeea th
ite druilt he a thC Tt3vliit mai _ street.
Council is now awaiting further
word from Mr. Cardiff. So far, it
is not committed to any course of
action in regard to thsuggested
exchange,
.now stands, likitpresented to town
Council Friday. The document
was signed by the proprietors of
23 business firms situated on or
near West street.
Without comment, Council laid
the petition aside until, a report
is received. frons Elston Cardiff,
MP for :Huron. 'Mr. Cardiff was
earlier. , instructed by Council to
find out exactlywhat stage has
been reached in plans for the new
federal, building which is to be
built here.
The petition stated: "We, the
undersigned, petition the Council
the Municipal Corporation of
the Town of Goderich to reconsider
the recently published decision to
approach the Federal Government
with a request that the town pro-
perty on East street, on which is
located the Town.. Hall, - be. ex-
changed for the Federal Govern-
ment property known as the Post
Office Building on West street. "'
"We feel that such an exchange
of property will be detrimental to
those businesses presently 'being
operated by us on -West street and
in the vicinity of West street."
It was Councillor Bruce Sully
who originally suggested that an
exchange of properties might prove
advantageous ,to the town. Under
the proposal, the present post of-
fice would be converted into a
Town Hall, and the present Town
Hall would be wrecked to -. make
way for a new federal building.
It is - understood that present
plans of 'federal authorities call for
ALARM WOULDN'T UND
The town fire alarm wouldn't
work when a fire call was sent in
about 9.15 a.m., on Monday. Fire,
men were contacted by phone. It
was •a, chimney fire at the corner of
Park street and Cambria road
which was speedily extinguished.
'OFFICIAL VISIT •
There was a good attendance
when_ George Falconer, DDGM, of
Clinton, paid is official visit to
Huron :Lodge, No. 62, - IOIOF, here
last week. Gordon Bannister,
noble grand, presided. Reports of
committees were very encouraging,
and the evening concluded with a
lunch provided b / the social com-
mittee.
A
GENERAL MOTORS
VALUE
OME TRY THE SMOO1HEST-CHEVY:
THAT EVER WHISPERED `Bl/V?
Silence says volumesabout
Chevrolet! Quieter engines
tell of super smoothness
never bettered by any great .
any price. - .
AndtIievro-let moves from a
standstill to cruising speed
like greased lightning with-
out the thunder. Then ride
Chevy — and be even more
amazed: One of two new
suspensions smooths your
way like broadloom — while
23 kinds of insulation in ' its
Fisher Body all but -swallow
sound completely. Absolute
newness fromroad to .roof -..
supplies the answer! -
H
KINGSTON STREET
First, on a 30% stronger X -built
frame, Chevrolet's stylists placed
the sleekest, roomiest and most
luxurious body they'd.ever plan=
ned. But - not before. Fisher engi-
neers . saw to it that 'Chevrolet's
"Sound Barrier" body matched its
-beauty in practical protection.
Next, Chevrolet increased "its
power range with the most effi-
cient V8's ever built ... radically
new, with Machined -in -block pre-
cision for pace -setting perfor-
mance and :economy. Total engine
choice is now six, with four cream -
smooth - transmissions. It's the
widest selection ever—available in
every Chevrolet made! - ,
Talk about smoothness! Chev-
rolet tops it off with a choice of
two new rides: Standard on all
Chevrolets, completely new Full
-Coir- suspension -means a:" big ad-
vance in riding comfort. Deep steel.
coils at all four wheels soak up
road shocks like a sponge! Ancj.
Chevrolet engineers went even
further to bring you the suspen-
sion news of the year Level
Ride — the lowest -price -i1 air ride
available ! * You just'have to try it
--to--know how easy--ride.ean bel--
Yet, with all its newness, this
smoothest of all Chevrolets comes
to you at its traditionally low price.
Little wonder than Chevy's whis-
pering "Buy !"-to.more Canadians
than O'er before. Come try 1958's
most popular car at your
Chevrolet dealer's s'oon !
*Optional, at small< additional cost, on
,V8 models with- automatic transmission.
The most
modern, ejlcienl
engines in
the world!
LET 'S8
SEE YOUR AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER FOR QUiCIt APPRAISAL -- PROMPT DELIVERY
q
ROUSE AUTO ELECTRIC
EOPLE'S. EASTER
SALE
C• 1858D
PHONE 165
'1*t�•iv �'`%f`}S�F S'•tDtti'D`%� a. r < ..»h' +v.2 °�be�a"CY3h
Whatta Sale
r. N.Valatir.4
Now 1.n 'Full Swing - - Continuing - Through Easter
MEN'$ GA�BAItD1NE �
...LA DIES" B LO U�S E SWindbreakers BATH tOWELS
Sleeveless cottons, also woven stripes and
checks.. High count broadcloth. Sensa-
tional value at
Attractively styled with zipper
two flap pockets, collar, 'elastic
button Cu . Reg. $4.98 for
front and
waist and
94c
Huge mill purchase of Terry bath' towels, made of
soft looping and absorbent cotton. Wash fast
color.
Men's
____,...__ ty.,
Laches' griefs ''' 2 ,
�h�r�s Made to se11 for 49c a pair. First quty.Long ,.-
5teeweSport
!bite they asst:
HUNDREDS OF S-PECALS{n assortedy wolf_
da"iit4•olFr, �1_ d,.M
I.npairs or
•�1
For A 'Happy. Easter!
■' s ®�
JOIN THE ;ASTER „PARADE OF. SHOPPERS' HEADING FOR PEOPLES BIG 'EASTER SALE 4110.
•