HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Bayfield Bulletin, 1964-07-08, Page 2COMBINATION
ALUMINUM
Screen
Doors
and
Windows
Let Us Repair Your
Broken Windows
And Screens
RUSSELL
JERVIS
63 Albert St. — Clinton
Phone 482-9390
Alexander and
Chapman
GENERAL INSURANCI-
REAL ESTATE
Property Manageemnt
Canadian Imperial Bank of
Commerce Building
Goderich
Dial 524-9662
KUM 0 CF
know why you loved
your mother's cooking . .
it didn't cost you money!'
R. W. BELL
OPTOMETRIST
Goderich
The Square 524-7661
FERAL
Goderich
524-8504
AMBULANCE
S TILES
ERAL HOME
G. B. CLANCY, O.D.
— OPTOMETRIST —
For Appointment
Phone 524-7251
GODERICH
AMBULANCE G E
SERVICE
GODERICH 425-7401
Oxygen, First Aid Equipment
VOLKSWAGEN
DRIVE A
•
TRY A DEMONSTRATOR DRIVE TODAY
— NO OBLIGATION -
-Combine Comfort with Economy
—Up To 40 Miles Per Gallon
SEE
Aberhart's Garage
GODERICH
NEW AND USED VOLKSWAGENS
SELECT USED CARS —
6., Your Headquarters for
.••••• ""' so. GENUINE • •
McARTHUR & REILLY LTD.
Paints -- Wallpaper
136 West St. — GODERICH — Dial 524-8532
ONE-STOP SERVICE
Let us keep your car or truck in tip-top shape.
Prompt, courteous service with top quality
Sunoco products and Goodyear tires.
11 C
WESTLAKE'S GARAGE
JACK MERNER, Proprietor
Highway 21 BAYFIELD 50-R-2
Page 2—Bayfield Bulletin—Wednesday, July 8, 1964
EDITORIAL
By ART ELLIOTT
Job Never Had It So Bad
The Biblical character of whom we think, had
a rough time, it must be admitted. But that was
long before the days of weekly newspapers. Boils
and ja77 like that he endured unflinchingly, but
how would the good man stand up under the
pressure of putting out an eight-page sheet in Bay-
f ield?
Would he crack if put on the receiving end of
three letters in six days from a woman whose
paper was inadvertently missed on the mailing list?
Would he have persevered on being confronted with
the revelation that one of his best advertisers had
not received his paper for two weeks? Would he
have quailed or flinched on discovering a typo-
graphical error in the ad of his largest single space-
buyer?
How would the old gentleman have coped with
arriving at the post office with the week's issue
five minutes after closing time? How many of those
gummed labels could he pass over his tongue with-
out gagging, having nothing else to moisten them
on in such a dry climate?
How could he face a social editor who prefaces
every greeting with "I've got a bone to pick with
you"?
Job lived long before the "slings and arrows
of outrageous fortune" and much longer before the
vicissitudes of those poor wretches who tap a type-
writer for their cakes and ale.
Job was one of the lucky ones.
* * *
Gobbledegookese
Russell Baker did a piece in the New York
Times a few years ago on double talk that tickles
us every time we hark back to it. One of the blights
on the language of Shakespeare, Milton and Shaw
is the curious patois of the American (and Cana-
dian) bureaucrat, adman and psychiatrist, "those
masters of the fluent cliche ,the deceptive euphem-
ism, the meaningless polysylabic, and pompous
argot" to quote the National Society for the Pre-
servation of the English Language to Say What
You Mean. Baker translates or defines some of the
words as follows:
IMPLEMENT, v. (bureaucratese) what you do
to carry out a decision, policy or program when you
are doing nothing.
FINALIZE, v. (bureaucratese) signifying for-
mal adoption of a decision, policy or program with
tacit agreement that it will be given a quiet burial,
or "Implemented".
CONFORMIST, n. Anyone who does not take
exception to the same things you do.
JUVENILE DELINQUENT, n. (1) youth head-
ed for an Elvis Presley concert with a WO bail
bond; (2) your neighbor's child.
AN IMPORTANT ANNOUNCEMENT — (ad-
vertising phrase) euphemism for sales talk read into
forty million deserted living rooms while folks out
in Televisionland put fresh heads on beer.
Letter To Editor
Dear Sir:
Congi crtulations on your fine
paper. We wish to subscribe
and enclose $1.00 for 10 weeks.
Please send to:
R. Hartman,
General Delivery.
Bayfield.
July 4, 1964. _
Dinner Parties Held
For Bride and Groom
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. McLaugh-
lin and son Jeffrey. Mrs. Eun-
ice E. McLaughlin. Calgary, Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Parke and child-
ren, Winnipeg, Fletcher Mc-
Laughlin and Jerry Kendall,
Welland, were guests at The
Little Inn for several days prior
to the Chuff-McLaughlin wed-
ding.
Mr. and Mrs. A. F. McLaugh-
lin entertained the wedding
party and out of town guests
at The Little Inn for a rehear-
sal dinner on Friday evening.
Mrs. Eunice E. McLaughlin
Sr., gave a dinner party at The
Little Inn on Saturday even-
ing for out of town guests who
had attended her grandson's
wedding.
o--
Bayfield Briefs
Mr. and Mrs. Curtis Jacob-
son, North Dakota, were guests
of Mrs. Harold King last week
and visited relatives in the
district. They are moving to
Spokane, Wash.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Leonard,
and children, of Willowdale,
spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. E. A.
Featherston.
Staying with Mrs. David De-
war were her son, David of To-
ronto and her grandson and his
wife, Mr. and Mrs. George De-
war, St. Catharines.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Smith,
Christine and Janice, spent
Sunday, June 28 with his par-
ents. Mrs. L. B. Smith ac-
companied them on their return
to London for a few days.
Mrs. Harold King spent Mon-
day and Tuesday in London.
Mr. and Mrs. Poulter and
their son, Monty, of Ottawa,
were weekend guests of Mr. and
Mrs. G. N. Rivers.
Walter Robinson of Toronto
was the weekend guest of his
mother, Mrs. W. H. Robinson.
Mr. and Mrs. David Manness,
London, were Dominion Day
guests of Mr. Manness' grand-
mother, Mrs. W. E. Ma.ruiess.
Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Ford of
London are at Miss Wool fenden's
cottage for the season.
Mr. and Mrs. John Scotchmer
and Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scot-
chmer have left for Toronto to
attend the Lions International
convention.
The Right Rev. William A.
Townshend and Mrs. Town-
shend, and members of their
family spent the weekend at
their village home.
Mr. and Mrs. R. D. Johnston
and children, Port Credit, are
spending a fortnight at the
Willock cottage. c~ Ike Vagfirth iguitrtitt
Published Every Wednesday at
Bayfield, Ontario
by
ART ELLIOTT
Editor and Publisher
DWIGHT ALDHAM AUDREY BELLCHAMBER
Associate Editor Social Editor
Subscription Rates:
Canada U.S.A.
$1.00 per Quarter $1.50 per Quarter
Advertising Rates on Request
P.O. Box 94
Phone 96
Your Headquarters for
BEDDING — MATTRESSES
WIDE SELECTION OF COTTAGE FURNITURE
BLACKSTONE FURNITURE
West St. — GODERICH — 524-7741