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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1952-11-20, Page 5WANTED Operators for English Rib Knitting Machines Transfer operators, and Loopers Experienced and Trainees Holeproof Hosiery Co. of Canada, Limited Goderich, Ontario BILLIE GRAHAM presents The First Christian Western ° "MR. TEXAS" REDD HARPER' CINDY WALKER BEVERLY SHEA 1000 VOICE CHOIR See This Great Film at— THE TOWN HALL, WINGRAM, NOV. 20, 8.00 p.m. EXETER HIGH SCHOOL, SATURDAY, NOV. 22, 8.00 p.m. CLINTON AREA YOUTH FOR CHRIST 47-b Genuine SUPER HEALTH Heavy Cast • Waterless COOKWARE EQUIPPED WITH HEAT RESISTING HANDLES SUTTER-PERDUE $5.30 II Quart Saucepan 2 Quart Saucepan S Quart DUtch Oven f2.75 111" Chicken Broiler $9.85 $8.05 $4.85 3 Quest Saucepan Greaseless Griddle Thirty page cookbook free with every purchase. GENUINE SUPER HEALTH cooking utensili, are never sold door to door. COMPARE OUR PRICES AND SAVE $ THE WEAR IS IN THE WEIGHT I. Used ASTRAL Refrigerator with - REBEKAH LODGE No. 306 Dance and Euchre in VARNA TOWNSHIP HALL on Wednesday, November 26 DRAW FOR HOOKED'RUG Refreshment Counter Admission 50C 47-b Look! Look! Only 28 Shopping Days Till Christmas Here are a few Gift Suggestions . Toasters Lamps Model Radios Heating Pads Electric Clocks Sea Breeze Ironers G. E. Vacuum Cleaners TV Sets Record Players and Records Christmas Tree Lights and Ornaments Now On Display Groves Electric Phone 688J Clinton Wonderful! New! PROM PERMANENT NEEDS NO NEUTRALIZER! • because Prom neutralises automatically • "Takes" every time • Waves with any plastic curlers only $1.75 DOROTHY GRAY Blustery Weather Lotion' Reg. $2.50 for $1.25 DJER—Kiss Smear Proof Lipstick 69c BRECK Shampoo with Shaker-top $1.35 UNIQUE PHOTO F. PENNEBAKER PHON E SERVICE DRUGGIST do. alia-..111,-241.--014, USED SHOT GUNS 1—Win. Model 12, 12 go. with Crandall choke, $149.95 1—Parker Brothers, 28 gauge, double barrel .... 150,00 —Win. Model 97, 12 gauge, pump 75.00 1—Remington, 12 gauge, auto. 127.50 1—Tobin, .12 gauge, double barrel— was $99.50 Now 75.00 1-12 go. Spanish Double (NEW) 99.50 1-12 ga. Ithaca Double—was $125 Now 99.50 1—Browning, 12 gauge (automatic) 125.00 REMEMBER The artificial ice plant will soon be completed in the local arena. Get Your C.C.M. Skates Early Spoting .,wart e?tiaigy (LISTON • ONTARIO PHONE 42 CLINTON 4 4 4 I.D.A. ,Specials THuR. - FRI. - SAT, CASCARA TABLETS 33c CLEANING FLUID 4 oz.-29c 10 oz.-57c FLAX SEED-29c IDAMALT 1 lb.-59e 2 lb.-89e 4 lb.----$L59 LINSEED MEAL 29e STOMACH POWDERS 4 oz,-57e 16 oz.—$1.57 I COREGA 33e - 53c - 89e WOODBURYS SOAP 4 cakes 26e CASHMERE BOUQUET SOAP 4 cakes 29e LADY ESTHER " 4 PURPOSE CREAM Reg. $1.50 for $1.19 PACQUIN HAND CREAM 25c Jar Free with 75c Size KOLYNOS TOOTH PASTE with Chlorophyll 2 tubes — 89c THURSDAY, NOVVXPER. 2O % CLINTON NEWS-RECORP PAGE Fi Literory CM" STANLEY dent, presided 'the election of arom. Houston; usaistant, Mre, officers which are: bonorary Tom propidont, mrs.. .T. RObl,Sert; Per the .1.4odies' Aid, president, ABB,AIIAM L. -CASE. .past president, Mrs. Edgar LAVVe weA Brad,necit; secretarP. president, Mrs, W. Good; treasurer Mrs. E, Lawson. (By our Hensall Correspondent) son; vice-president, id t Mrs. F 0.A re-dedication' , prea. en F.prayer was of- Private funeral service was held. MaIlveen; second vice-Preside.n.t, feted. by VIM Mcllveen, A vote on Tuesday, November 18, for Abraham L. Case, Hensall, from the Bonthron funeral home, Hen- Sail, with Rev. C. L. Langford in charge. Interment was made in Exeter Cemetery, IVIr. Case had been the CNR station agent in Hensall for 40 years until he retired in 1949. He died at his home on Sunday, Nov- ember 16, following a brief illness, Mr, Case was born south of Hensall on Highway 4, a son of the late "Mr. and Mrs. George Case, He was a vestry clerk and Member of the board of managers of St. Paul's 'Anglican Church; a member of Huron Masonic Lodge, No. 224; member of the Chamber of commerce; president of the Hensall Bowling Club. Surviving is his wife, the form- er Pearl Reid. OBITUARY This time it was a radish. Yes, and a higantie one it was, too. White in pier and look- ing like proper nouishment for an elephant-size mouse. Sure, and it Was the tastiest morsel ever to slip between the chomping Saws of mouse .47a* man, That is in the veget- able lino of food. Never was a radish that could compare to any degree of satisfaction with. a good slab of dairy cheese. But, for a radish, it was among the best. Now this radish walked into the front office last week, labeled for Peter, and the Fellows have been steering clear of it ever since. If it had been cookies, now—or can- dy—the thing would have been gone in 4 flash. But people are so queer when it comes to eating what they call rabbit food. They listen to their scientists and food experts extolling the virtues of greens, and salads, and then prom- ptly go forth wad revel in steak and kidney tpie, or some such rich ulcer builder. They've left this radish to me, and ordinarily we would thank them for it. But the size is sort of discouraging. E:3 Have you ever seen a two- year-old boy sit down to a plate heaped with delicacies at Christmas time? And his mother says, "Now, Johnnie, eat up all the good things and we'll have pudding, and pie, Mrs. Walter Moffat is visiting her mother, Mrs. Fisher, at Gray- enhurst, this week. .fames Bremner, Pasqua, Sask., called at the home of George Baird last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. B. Woods; Miss Charlotte Johnson; Mr.cand Mrs. Lorne Woods and Donna, visited Mr. and Mrs. Victor Taylor last Sunday. and then you can have some of the caridies Santa brought." Why, the poor young one tak- es one look at the heaping plate, and bursts into tears. He knows right"well that he'll be unable to clean the plate off, and the pretty candies he has in the living room will not get eaten at all. M !El So the radish is the few nibbles shorter at one end, that my wee stomach could hold; the people are determined that it is mine, and therefore make no move to- ward it; and the warm weather of the past few days is rapidly dwindling the poor big thing down to a. wizened caricature of its former self. However, we do thank Mr. Diehl, of the Hayfield Agricultural Society for this con- tribution from his garden. It's a Giant Nerima Radish, folks, says so right on the label. And the thing is all of 16 inches long, reaching to 3% inches diameter at its widest part. 1:1- 0 0 We must not let the week go without some answer to that impertinent fellow who writes in First Column. We regret that it is necessary to mention felines again„so soon, but really paying cats to catch mice is just the last straw: Do mice receive con- sideration? Are there stud- ied pension plans for the rod- ents who escape destruction until they reach a ripe old age of say,, seventy days? Is there any thought given to the old age of the mice who, staying at home are deprived of their breadwinner by an unwieldy trap or an overzealous cat? Well, then, we do not think it is at all fair, and as a rapid- ly dwindling minority, we in- tend to do something about it. So there. The following article was writ- ten as a human interest story by a CDCI Grade XIII student from Goclerieh Townships Poes it in- terest you? An Old Hat Every Saturday morning at the RCMP "Depot” division in Regina, it is the duty of one of the re- cruits in training, to clean and care for, the many exhibits that are on display within the museum. It was while I was employed at this task, that I came upon an old battered, blood-stained stetson, which related the following tale: "0, woe is me, I have no life. I'll see no more of joy or strife; just spend my days in misery, never more to roam. "This story, though, I will re- late, not tog jovial, yet not great, the story of one now resting in state, the story of one I loved,. "He was a man, not one like I, who cares very little for sun or sky; a man who was both brave and true, who wore the scarlet and the blue, a rider of the plains. "Together, we ventured forth one night, to enforce our motto, "Maintain the Right," or give the life which God had given, and now has taken away. "We trusted a foolish boy that eve, (which I hope you'll never do), for he delivered the blow, which ceased all for us two. "Now he lies in a graveyard, and I in a dusty case, to expound to all the treachery, and fallacy of the human race." 0 Among the patients admitted to. Canadian sanatoria last year some 15,000 were between the ages of 20 and 50, a figure which represents hardship in thousands of homes caused by the absence of one parent or a broken, home because both father and mother have bad to go to the sanatorium. The unhappiness involved is not more easily borne because it could have been prevented if tuberculosis had been prevented. The Christmas Seal Sale is car- ried on to obtain funds for TB prevention, Tuberculosis is no longer first cause of death in Canada but it is first as cause of death in the age group 15 to 45 from which the working force of the nation is mainly recruited. This disease keeps thousands of workers in enfo':ced idlencsc, Ed av es, aecre aryatrea,sa urer, Mrs.. J'aelc Hallam; assistant Mrs. Fred Ross; Home Helpers' secretary, Miss Minnie Wagner, Mrs. Roy Daer; welcome and welfare secretary, Mrs. Edgar Lawson; glad tidings secretary, Mrs. Gordon Dobie; literature and library secretary, Mrs. John Houston; supply secretaries, Herb qavier, Mrs. J. W, Graham; Flower committee, Mrs. MU, 'rem, Mrs. F. Ross; pianist, Mrs. of thanks was extended to all the officers for the splendid Work accomplished 'during the year. The meeting closed with a hymn and prayer by Mrs. R. MO. Whinney. The hostess served re- freshillents, Federal agricultural authorit, ies at Morden, Man., are testing what is believed to be the hardiest known raspberry variety. It 12 a cross between Chief and Indian Summer. PETER, :of the BACK SHOP DRUG STORES MARTIN O'DONNELL Funeral service was conducted from. the Lockhart funeral home, Mitchell, formerly of Clinton. Rev. George Lamont officiated. Inter- ment was made in the Presbyter- ian Cemetery, Mitchell. Born in Clinton in 18912 Martin O'Donnell was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Martin O'Donnell, He was employed with the Public Utilities Commission in Mitchell, until an illness of six months dur- ation' forced his retirement. He was a veteran of World War 1 and a member of the Canadian Legion, Mitchell Branch, No. 128. He was a member of Knox Pres- byterian Church, Mitchell. Surviving besides his wife, the former Christian Smith, are three sons, Lewis, Bruce and Norman, all of Mitchell; four daughters, (Katherine) Mrs. Clifford Nor- man; (Peggy) Mrs. Everett Wal- kom, both of Michell, and Carol and Shiela at home; one brother, Michael, South Dakota, and a sis- ter, Mrs. W. W. Brown, Stratford, SAMUEL MERNER Samuel Merner, highly esteem- ed resident of Hensall, who cele- brated his 91st birthday on Wed- nesday, November 5, died in Vic- toria Hospital, London, Saturday, November 8, He had been a pat- ient of the hospital for the past five weeks and had undergone an operation two weeks ago. Born in Hay Township, Mr. Merner, with his wife and family, moved to Hensall in February of 1914. He was a thresher by trade and was also engaged in butcher- ing. In 1947 Mr. and Mrs. Mern- er celebrated their diamond wed- ding anniversary. Mrs. Merner passed away June 1951. Mr Merner was a member of the Un- ited Church, Surviving are one daughter, Mrs. Flossie Brock, Hensall, one son Roy Merner, Zurich; two brothers, Wesley, Zurich, and Jake Detroit, Mich; six grandchildren and nine great-grandchildren. Private funeral services were held from the Bonthron funeral •home, Hensall, on Monday, Nov- ember 10, conducted by Rev, W. J. Rogers. Interment was in Bronson Line Cemetery, AUBURN • Visitors with Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Stoltz on Sunday were Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stoltz and Mr. and Mrs. ,George Gillespie and family, Ayr. Dr. B. C. Weir, Edgar Lawson, Hugh Hill and J. J. Robertson attended the funeral of Russell Shaw, Alvinston, on Friday. Mr. Shaw had been station agent at Auburn some years ago. Special United Church Service Knox United Church Sunday Sehnol held a special service on Sunday evening when Rev. Geo- rge Watt, B.A., Dungannon, was guest speaker. A male chorus from Zurich with Mrs. M. Oesch accompanist, sang three numbers, Charles Scott, Sunday School superintend- ent, was in charge of the service, Mrs. R. D. Munro presided at the organ and Miss Margaret A.. Jackson at the piano. C. M, Robertson, Goderich, pronounced the benediction. Baptist Church Annual The annual meeting of the Baptist Church was held Thurs- day evening. Supper was served and the members enjoyed a so- cial time, followed by a devo- tional period. The business part of the meet- ing was in the charge of the pastor, Rev. John Ostrom The officers were all re-elected for the coming year. Encouraging reports showed a substantial bal- ance in, all departments of the church, especially the missionary report which was doubled from former years. A hearty vote of thanks Was extended to Rev. and Mrs. Ost- rom for their splendid work dur- ing the year. The meeting was dismissed with prayer by Rev. Ostrom. Presbyterian WMS Officers Mrs. Wellington Good presided at the November meeting of the Women's Missionery Society of gnox Presbyterian Church held at the home of Mrs. Fred Rosa on Thursday. Mrs. Don. Haines pre- sided at the piano. The meeting opened by repeating the Lord's Prayer ih unison. The devotional period was in charge of Mrs. John Houston. Scripture passages were read by Miss Minnie Wagner, Mrs, Rby Daer, Mrs. ,Keith Meehan and Mrs. Herb Govier. Mrs, Houston gave meditation on the passages, and also read a letter from Rev. John Elder, missionary in British Guiana and offered prayer. 'the roll tall was answered by repeating a "Beatitude", Mrs. Roy Deer contributed a reading, Mrs. Wes Bradnock reviewed the last chapter of the study book on "Our Work in British Guiana." IVrts. Mallyeeri, first Vice.6presi- Remember Mother Give iter a box of red berried Holly, All gift wrapped for Christina& For DOtails Write THE 0,• Di MORRIS NTIRSIERY ROX 5, DORM*/ PARK, 40.1-g-5-4-5A04 • • • No Reasonable Offer or Deal Refused We have to offer 20 Inspected Cars ranging from '33 to '51 models priced to suit your pocket book. IT PAYS TO SHOP See these ears, drive them and price them — Located — THE HEART OF HENSALL, next to C.N.R. 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