The Goderich Signal-Star, 1958-10-30, Page 7N'At,
Band In
Attenda:nce
PARADE LEAVES .SQUARE at Bedford Hotel)' at 7 p.m. and heads fol' Arena. NO ADMISSION aHARGE To ANYONE,
Prizes for ` best five.in -each of; '1, comic; 2, Hallowe'en characters; 3, fancy dress,Godirich TNCLUD�NG FARE un b Lions .Club Note: ,Children •six ears •and under wilt be
- _ in m;• t over ,. � __and- Town `� o� Goderich.
judged_in up�ta• ��� �aao y � h��: o s�
Refreshments Served-. Enterfainmenf.
,
•
— WEDDINGS
OVERHOLT—SIMPSON
Marriage ' vows were exchanged
4 n a double ring wedding ceremony
kat First Presbyterian church, Sea -
_;'forth, on October 18 by Elizabeth
;
(Betty) Jean Simpson and Donald
I, dward Overholt. The bride is. the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Peter.
impson, R.R. 2, Seaforth, and the
k i oom is the son of Mr. and Mrs.
`rancis Overholt, of Goderich. Rev.
Leslie D.., Elden performed the
`keremony.
The bride wore a ballerina -length
"'tgown of nylon chiffon and net over
jaffeta, fashioned with a molded
Ptehiffon bodice and styled with a
`:owl neckline, of softly draped chit,
on which extended in the back to
till -length fly panels over the bout
nt skirt. A crown of seed pearls
td irrides*t, seri ,i�el
;,tiger -tip veil of silk illusion and
the carried i Bible, adorned
'rrtl'ith red oses a d white carna-
t ons:.
-Mrs. Roy Longpre, of London,
WHEN NATURE NEEDS
ASSISTANCE -.TRY
DR. MORSE'S
INDIAN ROOT- PILLS
'"empounded rrom effective inggre��-
dents, . Dr, Morse's Indian Root Pial
belp tiring quick relief to sufferers from
ogrnstipation or biliousness. Dr. Morse's
'Indian Root Pills help promote regu-
r'ity. Trythem- -at all druggists. C8-5
as matron of honor, wore a bal-
lerina -length dress of blue taffeta.
James McArthur'was best man and
Donald McArthur ushered. -
The reception was held in the
church hall where the bride's mo-
ther received the guests in a sheath
dress of aqua blue with black ac-
cessories and a corsage of red roses
and white mums. Thee groom's mo-
ther assisted wearing a sheath dress
of willow green and alabaster ac-
bessories.
For her wedding trip to New
York,.the the bride chose a black wool
sheath dress with white accessories
and a white, fur stoll with a corsage
of red roses. ` Thegroom, who is
with the Bank of Commerce and
has been stationed at Port Elgin,
has been transferred to Thorold
where they will reside,
BUCHANAN—KIMBERLEY
On October 18, at 2p.m., St.
John's._ Anglican Church, Smiths
Falls, Ontario, decorated with ferns,
baskets of .. 'mumsin shades of
bronze and gold, was the setting
for. the marriage of Lois Irene
Kimberley,' daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. William Kimberley, of Smiths
Falls, to Donald Swayne Buchanan,
son of Mr. and, Mrs. Harry F..Buch-
•anan, of Smiths Falls. Rev. Canon
G. H. Sadler.. officiated at the
double -ring- ceremony:-Mt'sr-Shir-
ley Ellis,, of Toronto, cousin of 'the
groom, was soloist, with ,Mrs. W.
McCreary as organist.
The groom is a son of Mr. Harry
.... ::l�........: )C•:,,.. _ 'acv?i1
"My Life Insurance man
did a grand job 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 money to retire. on.
Your life insurance man it well equipped to solve these problems.
He is trained to analyse all the facts about a family's future require-
ments. He serves Canadian families by, offering practical plans to
..,_.meet individual needs. ,
Life Insurance representatives have exceptional graining opportuiii-
ties today. Their own co,mpanies,,provide them with basic courses
covering a wide variety of subjects. ' '
Through the Life Underwriters Association of Canada they have
access to the experience of many able men who have helped to make
Canadians theworld'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
'4 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 welcome the services of the
modern Life Underwriter.
;:TILE LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA
F., Buchanan, a former resident of
Goderich. Mrs. Walter J. Buch-
anan was a guest at the Buchanan-
-Kimberley wedding and is spending
some time at the home of her
brother-in-law, Mr. Harry F. Buch-
anan and Mrs. Buchanan.
The bride, given in marriage by .
her father, wore a floor -length gown
of pure white silk organza, short
puffed sleeves and picture neckline
.with insets of Alencort lace, the
very full skirt falling into a cath-
edral train, the front having a band
pf lace. Her finger-tip veil was
held in `place by a crown of Alen -
con lace and seed pearls. She
wore a single strand of pearls, gift
of the groom, . and pearl earrings.
She carried a garland bouquet of
white carnations with bronze orchid
in the centre.
The bride was attended by her,
sister, Miss Audrey Kimberley, of
Montreal, as maid -of -honor; her
sister; -Miss~-Donna -Kiynberley, of
Toronto, and Mrs. Donald Robb,. of
Smiths Falls, as bridesmaids.
Mr. Vern Forrester, of Moncton,
N.B., was groomsman, and the .ush-
ers were Mr. Clifford Kimberley,
•of Peterborough, 'brother of the
bride: Mr. Douglas Jones, of Brock-
ville; Mr. Alan -Smith, of Bowman-
ville; and Mr. Gary Shore, of Ot-
tawa, cousins of the groom. -
The young couple left on a motor
trip to the southern United States.
Ono, their return, Mr. and Mrs.
Buchanan will reside in Cornwall,
Ontario. -
,10 refresh yo4 FART/
BING
Godericii Pavilion
EVERY
WEDNESDAY
.AT 8.30 P.M.
Sponsored by Goderich Lions
Club for welfare.
ADMISSION, $1.00
SHARE THE WEALTH
PRIZES OVER $300
-42tf
1
EVERY HOME NEEDS
RELIANCE
.‘quemimiow
BLUE FLAME
1 HEATING OIL
Phone 819 or 1447J
EON :GLAZIER, GODERICH
43-5x
m
OUT ON A LIMB
WITH BILL SMILEY
1f people paid any heed to the
warnings, dire predictions, and ap.
palling statistics with ' which they
are assailed' on every hand,the'
entire race would be made up' of
drivelling cowards, cringing under
-their respective`Tbeds.
* *
Reach for a coffin nail wjth your
morning paper and coffee, and a
headline jumps at you:.SMOKIN•G
AND LUNG -CANCER LINKED,
TESTS PROVE. Turn on your car
radio as you drive to work, and a
news announcer -tolls you, triumph:
antly, that. week -end fatalities hit
72, bettering last year's 'record by 8.
* * *
Just look as though you feelllike
a beer, and somebody will start
reeling off figures on alcoholism.
Dream' 'of--going"-hunting, -and you
have to read columns of "safety
rules," obviously . drawn up for a
group of maniacs with murder on
their minds.
* 4
Start putting away something for
your old age, and some cheerful
vulture will inform you with ill -
concealed satisfaction that the hu-
man race will be obliterated by the
H-Boirib within 10 years. Put in
an honest, 'hard day's' work, and
some magazine article confronts
.you with the news that you're head-
ing for a coronary.
Besides these fairly deadly fore-
casts, we are subjected to a con-
tinual barrage of minor threats and
insults, mostly of a personal•nature.
The advertisements leave nothing
sacred. They shout that we have
body, odor, loose, scaly dandruff;
unpleasant breath, slipping den-
tures, treacherous kidneys; acid
stomachs, and are badly in need
of a new .truss for that old hernia.
They imply that if we don't rush
right over to our friendly neighbor-
hood drugstore and do something
about it, life i' scarcely worth
living.
* a= * .
Fortunately, there is a wonderful
cluelessness, a deliberate obtuse-
ness, in human nature, that makes
us go blithely on our way, reeking
nought of the Cassandras in ou.r,.
midst. And a good. thing, too, Of
life would be indeed 'not only
frightening but frightful.
* * *
There is something gallant and•
dashing about the two-packs-a;aday
man who readsthe lung cancer
story, pales, then lights a fag and
blows out the smoke with the devil-
may-care smile, the. quizzically lift-
ed eyebrow, of the condemned spy
facing the firing squad.
*: * ,k
There is something heroic in the
man who hears the week -end fatal-
ity figures -while driving, to work,
and merely sets his jaw, tramps on
the gas pedal arid bulls through the
traffic, with all the skill, enthusiasm
and disregard for danger of a Ben
Hur at the reins of a chariot. -
x: *
You,can'•t help admiring the cool
unconcern of the heavy' drinker as
he glances over the article ,on alco-
holics, while getting through bis
fourth rye and water. "Trouble is
a lotta these people are) weak, and
they get too fonda the stuff and
they can't hannel it," he muses as
lie. reaches_ _for the qu.art_:.,a,ud ocics
the lamp off the end ta.ble In the
process.
There should be a medal for the
fellow who goes hunting, knowing
full, well that the stilly woods
around him are filled with trigger-
happy types who will pot him if he
doesn't get them first. Perhaps we
could give him .a . D.N.M..•. (Distin-
guished Nervous Medal).
* e• *
It is difficult to withhold applause
at the spectacle of the steely -nerved
type who ignores the imminence
of sudden and universal disintegra-
tion by H -Bomb, while he figures
out, angles to diddle .the govern.
ment out of death duties on his
estate.
And surely one cannot refrain
from cheering on the man with the
bum ticker, who, retired after thirty
years in a sedentary jots, immedi-
ately starts working tike a navy,'
building, tearing down, fetching
and carrying, shovelling snow and
cutting grass and generally, show-
bria ne'seerrt4#e*li '
old age.
fi * #
It must be exasperating to scient-
ists, traffic authorities, tempetance
1�
people, tax "collectors and doctors,
but there's something unbeatable
in human nature. It's a sort of
massive, charming stupidity and
recklessness that has made people
ignore all warnings,' and still keep
rolling through all sorts of misad-
ventures and disasters, ever since
the day Eve was warned not to fool
around with that apple.
Scouts Net $297
Theire was a net of about
$297.00 from the Boy Scout
Apple Day • in Goderich, A
house to house canvass was
made on Friday evening and
then apples were sold on Sat-
urday. Some 100 boys took
part and 30 bushelsof apples
were sold. Any others who
wish to contribute. to- the 'fin-
ancing of the activities of the
Scouts, Rovers and Cubs may
send a cheque to J. F. Cory,
P.O. Box 40; Goderich. The
donations .were mostly nickels
and dimes and there were over
1600 pennies to roll.
His Trucks Broke
Law,.17 Times
'In Four. Years
"It's ,far • too much," said Magis-
trate D: E. Holmes when he learn-
ed that trucks owned by William
B. 'Price, 36, of Elmira, had been
involved in 16 violations of the law
in four years.
Price was fined $100 and costs,
or WV -Weeks in jail, for the seven-
teenth offence—pemitting a ve-
hicle to be operated without a
proper commercia lrrcle plater
being attached to it. He pleaded
guilty. `
Price told the court -he owns
four tractor -trailers, two dump
trucks and one stake truck. IIis
vehicles haul grain, • livestock,
cement, ete.
Re' admitted that fines totalling
close to $500 have been 'assessed
against his vehicles—mostly for
overloading and not .having proper
licenses — during the past four
yours. Ile claimed that two l'CV
licenses in his townaren't being,
used but the board won't grant .hits
additional • licenses. •
David Lindsay, of -London, was
fined •$15 and costs. for operating
an unsafe car. Provincial Con-
stable Morley Groves, who followed
the car on highway 21 on October
4, said that the auto had inadequate
_brakes and the steering was not
very good. .
Warns those Who
Ignore Suspension
Risk Jail Term
"If this driving while under sus-
pension, continues, I'm going to
eliminate fines and there are going
to be jail sentences," warned Magis-
trate D. E. Holmes.
He observed in court here Thurs-
day that fines don't seem to deter
some people from driving while
their licenses are under suspension.
"I don't know how I'm going to
stop it unless I -start imposing jail
sentences," said the magistrate.
Ronald' M. Hamilton, of Goderich,
was fined $50 and costs, or two,
weeks in jail, When -he PBoded
guilty to driving .while prohibited
For speeding 'at 70 mph on high-
way 8, he was fined $15 and costs
or five days.
For' permitting an unlicensed
driver to drive his car, Harry Kerr,
18, was fined $15 and costs or five
day$.
• Provincial Constable „ D. West-
over clocked the speeding car on
highway 8, just east of the drive-in
theatre, in G'oderich Township, at
7:15 p.m. on October 11, the court
was told.
"I was tired and 1 thought he had
his license back," said Mr. Kerr,
who owned the car which his
friend was driving.
The two men were "most co -1
operative," the constable said on
their behalf.
Bruce Thompson, of R.R. 6,.Luck-
now, .was fined $10 and costs or
three days for failing to stop at a
stop sign.
Thompson's car was damaged to
the extent of about $500 when. it
was involved in an accident on
September 27, said William ,Prest,.
-acting crown ca-M-Sel-Ttre`x'ccic1ent
happened just west of Nile. The
driver told police ,he., ws's unfam-,I
filar with the road.
Provincial Constable J. B. John- 1
ston investigated. ,
1
Nursing Home
Pleasant surroundings.
Operated by Reg. Nurse
Properly 'balanced home
cooked meals.
Tray service.
Mrs. H. Earnshaw
PHONE 1593
53 NORTH STREET
34 tf.
Bather Beauty Salon
ANNOUNCES
THE ADDITION TO ITS STAFF OF ,
MRS GERALD (Louise) PITRE
3 YEARS' EXPERIENCE IN ALL LINES OF
, BEAUTY 'CULTURE.
Formerly -of Emerson Beauty Salon, Windsor, Ont.
,For Appointment, Phone 74
-40.4
Borrow confidentlyat HIT
Household Finance is backed
by 80 'years' experience in
making prompt'.1'oans. At
i-IVG you may borrow up to
$1000 for any good purpose.
Borrow in privacy with repay-
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Over 800,600 Canadians Morro'* from HFC every year
HOUSE LD FINANCE
35A West Street 'Telephone 1501
GODERICH
.1
NOTICE
POSTING OF SIGNS ON
TREES, ETG_.:......._.....
Under provisions of local By-laws no person shall
post up any bilis, advertisements or signs of any kind on
(a) Trees on Town boulevards or in Parks.
(b) Hydro poles or poles -of. any kind which are
-the-property—of -tire Goderich ;WPublio �Ttiiities—Commis-
"slam
(c) On any building or structure owned -by the
Town.
These By-laws provide a maximum penalty of Ffty
Dollars ($50.00).-
43
The Huron County Council -will' meet in the Council:.
Chambers, Court House, Goderich, on
!ednesday, Nov. 12
1958, at 10 a.m.
All deputations, communications and accounts must
be in the handsof the Clerk before noon, ' November,
8th, 1958.
JOHN G. BERRY,
Clerk,
County of Huron.
43-4
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Sample Return Fares
Goderich - Calgary $114.40
Goderich - Toronto 8.7S
ro-
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