HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1953-09-17, Page 14mog aroplroxN
CLATI'ON N=EWS -RECORD
'THURSDAY, S7EPTEMBE
953
Nuys of Bayfieid
1epresentative;
ISS L1CJCY It, WOODS
Mr, and Mrs. Donald Kingsbury
are holidaying at Bruce Beach,
Mrs. R. W. Bristol visited Miss
B. Ward, .Clinton, over the week-
end.
Mrs. J. A. Ferguson, Goderich,
called on friends in the village .on
Friday,
Pr. and Mrs. A. C. Chapman,
Detroit, are at their cottage :on
Louisa Street,
Mrs. A, Woodward and Mrs. D.
Barnett, Detroit, are the guests of
Miss L. C. Morley.
Mr, and Mrs. James P. Ferg-
uson, London, were at their cot-
tage over the weekend.
Gordon Heard, who is working
in the Orillia district, was in the
Village .over the weekend.
l'ri s, Peter Renner left on Sat-
urday for Sudbury, to care for
her. sister-in-law who is ill.
Mrs, J. H. Lambert returned to
Detroit on Sunday after having
spent a week at The Little Inn.
Miss Theresa. Bauer, Toronto,
visited her parents, Mr. and Mrs,
E. J. Bauer, over the weekend.
Mrs. 3. M. Stewart went to Lon-
don on .Sunday for a few days visit
with her .sister, Mrs. G, Holman.
Mrs. W. J. Hall returned to To-
ledq torday after being at her
home in the village since Satur-
dax, ... -
Bobby Brandon is -staying with
his sister, Mrs. Gordon Heard,
'while attending collegiate in Lon-
don.
Mr, and Mrs. J. • Burns, Wind -
stir, game on Friday to spend a
week with Mr. and Mrs, A. W.
Reid,
Billy Parker, London, was with
his parents, Mr, and Mrs. William
E, Parker, from Thursday until
Saturday,
Mrs. S. Adams returned to De-
troit on Sunday after having been
Phone B43Tr li b» 45r3
40r¢ qR 4-4 r44
the guest of Miss L, C. Morley
last week,
Mr. and Mrs. 3, A, Orr and
John, Stratford, were at the family
cottage on Bayfield Terrace over
the weekend.
Mr, and Mrs. William L. Metcalf
left on Monday to Motor to their
home in Vancouver after having
spent a vacation here.
Mr. and Mrs. 'aro]d Atwood
and Mrs. Harold King, Sarnia, vis-
ited the latter's mother, Mrs, C.
W. Parker, on Sunday,
Mr, and Mrs. W. G. Morley,
Birmingham, Mich,, spent the week
end with the former's sister, Miss
L. C. Morley, "Birche1iff".
Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Rehn,
Grosse Points Farms, Mich., were
with the latter's mother, Mrs.
David Detvar, over the weekend.
Dr. and Mrs, Ralph Nicholls
have returned to London after
having spent three weeks with the
latter's mother, Mrs. F. W. Mc-
Ewen.
Mr, and Mrs. James Dewar and
Janice left on Sunday for their
Thome in Kingston after having
spent a week with the former's
mother.
Miss Agnes Savage, who has
spent the summer at her cottage
on Main Street, returned to De-
troit on Sunday with Miss Jessie
Metcalf.
P.C. Lloyd Westlake, EIora, is,
spending three weeks vacation
with his wife at the home of her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm
Toms.
Misses M. and R, Kruite return-
ed to their home. in Dearborn,
Mich., on Sunday after having
closed The Village Guild for the
season.
Arlington Atwood, Petroit, has
been calling on relatives and,
friends in the village while visiting
MURPHY BROS.
CHRYSLER - PLYMOUTH -- FARGO TRUCKS
Phone 465 CLINTON Heron St.
(
Sedee-eke,
OUR
ST
FORCE
TION
his daughter, Mrs. Alvin Dutot,
Goderich Township,
Miss Janet MacLeod, London,
and Flying .Officer A. Toma, RCAF
Station, Clinton, spent the week-
end with the former's parents, Mr.
and Mrs. L. H. MacLeod,.
Mr. and Mrs. George Willitts
and family have returned to their
home in Pleasant Ridge, Mich.,
after having occupied their cottage
at The Highlands for the summer.
Mrs. A. Suppnick and Miss Hol-
ley Louise Suppnick, Detroit, were
at their cottage, "Holley Lodge:',
over the weekend. Their guests
included Miss Peatline- and Miss
Newell.
Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Parker left
on Wednesday on a motor trip
with Mr, and Mrs, Keith Pruss
south through Kentucky, Tennes-
see and Mississippi States to New
Orleans,
Mr. and Mrs, Glen“McKnight re-
turned to Exeter last week after
a very successful season at Lloyd's
Cabins, During the season they
have improved the property con-
siderably.
Mr. and Mrs. Mac. Dougall and
Jim, Exeter;; Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Tate, Peterborough, and Mr. and
Mrs, Glen Tate and baby Cheryl,
London, were the guests of Miss
Ann Tate on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. G. Fellows and
children, Riverside, were at their
cottage over the weekend. Mrs.
Fellows' parents, Mr. and Mrs. G.
Fraser, who have been spending a
vacation at the cottage, accompan-
ied them on their return, to the
city.
Mr, and Mrs. E. J. Martin and
three children spent Sunday with
Mrs. Martin's sister, Mrs. Reg.
Francis and family. On their re-
turn to Thamesford they were ac-
companied by Master Lloyd Fran-
cis who is spending two weeks with
his grandmother, Mrs. J. McMillan,
George and Ronald Castle and
Bobby Orr, who left August 21 for
the West Coast, have arrived saf-
ely in Vancouver, after a good
trip, their respective parents have
heard. The boys travelled through
Northern Ontario and the Trans-
Canada Highway in a jeep with a
tent -covered trailer for sleeping.
Mr, and Mrs. William F. Buchan
returned to Dunnville on Monday
after having spent the weekend
with the former's sister, Mrs. N.
W. Woods, and Miss Lucy Woods.
Also present at a family gathering
at "The Hut” on Sunday were Mr,
and Mrs. R. H. Middleton and
Bobby, Hensall, who with W. Ew-
ing and J. Lauder Buchan were all
together with Mrs, Woods for the
first time in seven years.
69 Pupils
School re -opened on September
8 in Bayfield with Miss Grace
Pepper, principal, and Mrs. Wil-
liam E. Parker, assistant. There
is an enrolment of 30 in the senior
room and 39. in the junior rooni.
For elevenlittle ones of the vil-
lage a new chapter opened in, their
lives when they started to school.
They are: Douglas Telford, Gayle
Turner, Mary Elizabeth Ervine,
Shirley Darnborough, Patricia
Sider, Douglas Kingsbury, Susan
Adams, Myrna Scott, Sandra Mid-
dleton, Garfield Merner, u Murray
Blackie.
14 Willing Workers
The Willing Workers of St.
Andrew's United Church met at
the home of Mrs. Reg. Francis on
Wednesday afternoon of last week
with 14 members present. Mrs.
John Lindsay presided over the
business session and chose for her
topic: "Faith if it has no works
is dead." The meeting closed with
the singing of the National Anth-
em after which lunch was served.
In the storm on Sunday, two
pleasure boats tied up in the har-
bour broke loose. Reg. Francis'
speed boat was overturned by the
wind and waves and O. Priestap's
boat drifted up the river,
Final Touches For Plowmen's Trophy
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.. ,.:;,}�Ccacwuyo'�f..'h:Y"•.�c+\tC`�n. .i�'W°%:.
Canada's first national tractor plowing champion will be chosen from cotn-
peting provincial champions at the Ontario Plowmen's Association Inter-
national Match at Cobourg, Ont., October 6 to 9. Above, Emmanuel Hahn,
the internationally -famous Canadian sculptor, who has designed many of
Canada's stamps and coins, is putting the finishing touches to the clay model
of the winner's trophy, the ]3sso Silver Plow, In addition to the trophy, the
Canadian champion and the runner-up will travel .each year as guests of
Imperial Oil to the world plowing match where they will,compete on behalf
of Canada. The first world match is being held at. Cobourg; the sero id, next
year in the Republic of Ireland.
News of Holmesville
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Yea and fam-
ily were weekend guests of Mrs. E.
A. Yea, in Weston.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Yeo and
family spent a few days in Toron-
to, -,attending the Canadian Na-
tional Exhibition.
Mrs, G. M. Elliott and family
and Mr. and Mrs. G. Porter, List-
owel, were recent guests of Mr.
and Mrs, E. J. Trewartha.
Mr, and Mrs. Frank Lawson,
London, were home for the week-
end. Mrs. Lawson was matron of
honour in the Brown-Gliddon wed-
ding party and Mr. Lawson was an
usher.
Recent visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Frank McCullough were Mr.
Lawrence Bezeau and son Donald,
Kitchener; Mrs. J. W. Smith, God-
erich; Mrs. M. Smith, Mrs. R.
Thompson and daughter Kathie,
Wyandotte, Mich.; and Miss May
Jardine, Goderich.
Wedding Bells
Wedding bells rang in the village
on Saturday evening, when Eileen
Gliddon became the bride of Nel-
son Brown, Detroit, Mich. The
best wishes of all in the community
go with the young couple in their
life together.
Mission Band
The September meeting of the
Wilhelmine Mission Band was held
in the school with Mary Helen Yeo
in charge. The meeting opened
with the hymn "Little Drops of
Water", and repeating the Mission
Band purpose. The prayer was
taken by Frances McCullough, and
Betty Wilson read Psalm 23.
The hymn "God Sees the Little
Sparrow Fall" was sung, and a
News of Brucefield
Mrs: W. Kornega left last week
for a visit in England,
Mr. J. Cairns is a patient in
Scott Memorial Hospital, Seaforth.
Rally Day services will be ob-
Served next Sunday at the morn-
ing service,
Alton Johnston has been able to
return home from hospital where
he has been a patient for some
tune.
Mr. and Mrs. George Griffiths,
Becky and Danny, Stratford, visit-
ed on the weekend, With Mrs. H.
F. Berry.
Mrs. H. F. Berry has returned
from a trip to the West Coach,
where she visited friends at Seat-
tle, Wash.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Scott visited
their son-in-law and daughter, Mr.
SANTA SAYS . .
that vital link in each of
your friendships"
hoose from the BIGGEST most
BEAUTIFUL and VARIED display
of Christmas cards we've shown
in many ayear!
The design shown is by National
and is part of a selection
that sparkles with spirited
originality and traditional warmth,
and Mrs. Leon Rushcall, Montreal,
last weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Wilson and
Mr. and Mrs. George Henderson
have returned from a trip to Nor-
thern Ontario and the United
States.
WIS
The regular meeting of the Wo-
men's Missionary Society was held
recently in the school room of the
Brucefield United Church. In the
absence of the president, Mrs. N.
Walker took charge of the busi-
ness part of the meeting.
The worship service, with the
theme, "Tire Church—The Hotise-
hold of Faith", was in the charge
of Mrs. T. B. Baird, who read the
meditation and several short scrip-
ture readings. Mrs. W. J. Maines
led in prayer, Plans were made
for entertaining the members of
the Baby Band in October. Set-
ting of the date for Thankoffering
service was held over till the next
meeting.
The program was in the form of
a skit and was the introduction
of the new book, "Where E'er the
Sun". Mrs. H. 'Dalrymple, and Mrs.
N. Walker were in charge with
Mrs. Bill Fotheringham, Miss Ed-
ith Bowey, Mrs. S. Keyes and
Mrs. Abe Zapfe.. assisting. The
story was based on the theme,
"The Life and Task of the church
around. the World". A hymn and
prayer closed the meeting,
Porter's Hill
Anniversary Planned
Anniversary services of Grace
United Church will be held on Sun-
day, September 27 at 11 a.m. and
7.30 p.m. (standard time), The
guest speaker will be Rev. W. Rog-
ers, Hensali. Special ttiusio is be-
ing prepared for the services.
quilting by WA
The Woman's Association of
Grace United Church held its reg.
ular meeting last Thursday in the
church basement, The president,
Mrs. Donald Barris, was in charge
of the meeting which opened by
singing "Work, for the ]Night is
Coming" told Mrs. Sowerbv led in
prayer. Scripture lesson was read
by Mrs. William Townshchd and
roll call answered with an ex-
change of aar of pickles.
A crib quilt was quilted during
the afternoon, There was a long-
thy business discussion wheii it
was decided that the buying coni•
twitter should purchase anti electric
range for the church,
Mrs. A. Lockhart Conducted a
contest arid the sweeting elosed
with the Mfzpalt beiiediotioti. A
potluck lunch %VAS served,
News' of Hem"!
Miss Jean Armstrong, London,
spent the weekend at her home
here.
Miss lleanor Cook returned to
London to resume her studies at
the University of Western Ontario.
Mr. and Mrs, Hugh McEwan
and Malcolm have returned from a
vacation spent with relatives in
Sault Ste, Marie.
Mrs. Ferringo, New York (nee
Helen Munn), Hensall, who has
been spending the summer with
her mother, Mrs, Robert Munn, is
in Victoria Hospital, London, isola-
tion ward, suffering from polio.
Damage was $600 when a station
wagon driven by Dr, Bruce Eck-.
Mier, Exeter dentist, struck loose
gravel and rolled over on the
Bronson Line, a quarter mile west
of Zurich. Dr, Eckmier, alone in
the station wagon, escaped injury,
Provincial Constable Elmer Zim-
merman investigated,
Fishing For Pike
Mrs. George Hess, while fishing
in the old river in the Pinery,
south of Grand Bend, landed a 26 -
inch pike, 13 inches around, Mrs,
Hess had an ordinary pole and
temperance reading was given by
Barbara Yeo and a peace reading
was given by Bobby Grigg.
Bonny Williams played a piano
solo, and the study period was tak-
en by Miss Ann Shaddock, with
the juniors, and Mrs, Jack Yeo
with the seniors. The meeting
closed with the hymn, "Jesus, Ten-
der Shepherd, Hear Me", and the
Mizpah benediction.
WMS and WA
The September meeting of the
Woman's Missionary Society and
Woman's Association of Holmes-
ville United Church was held at
the home of Mrs. Charlie Wilson
with Mrs. W. Yeo as leader. The
theme of the meeting, "Church—
the Household of Faith", and the
call to worship, was given by the
leader.
The hymn "All People That on
Earth do Dwell" was sung, fol-
lowed by The Lord's Prayer re-
peated in unison. Mrs. H. Yeo
gave a reading "The Household of
Faith", and also led in prayer. The
scripture readings were taken by
Mrs. Harry Cudmore with a short
interpretation given by Mrs., Yeo.
Mrs. Lloyd Bond read an article
on "Human Emotions" and Mrs.
Eldon Yea gave a temperance
item. Following the hymn "The
Morning Light is Breaking," Mrs.
Elmer Potter gave a summary of
the chapter "African Church" from
the study book. To close the meet-
ing, Mrs. W. Yeo read "Corona-
tion Echoes", and the hymn, "Blest
Be the Tie That Binds" was sung.
Following the WMS rineeting,
Mrs. Harry Cudmore, president of
the WA took charge and the
meeting opened with the theme
song and repeating the creed. The
roll call was answered with dona-
tions to the fancy work booth for
the October bazaar,
It was decided that members
would sell Christmas cards again
this year, with Mrs. Harry Wil-
liams in charge of the sales. Plans
were made for the coming bazaar.
The meeting closed with the
hymn, "0 Master, Let Me Walk
With Thee" and prayer by Mrs.
Cudmore, A delicious lunch was
served by the hostesses, Mrs, C.
Wilson and Mrs, H. Cudmore.
had difficulty landing the fish, felt
with the help of her husband they
landed him safely in the boat.
Legion Bingos
Hensall Branch of the Canadtari
Legion held its .September meeting
Ori Monday in the Legion Hall with
the president, Don Daman, in the
chair, Plans were discussed for a,
monster bingo to be held in the
community centre September 22
when $2,500 will be given away to
prizes,
$25 was donated to the recrea-
tional director at Westminster
Hospital, London, to be used for
prizes for cribbage, . euchre, etc.
$25 was donated to the Hensall
School Fair Board,'.
'At the next meeting an offxeer
from the filter centre of the
Ground Observer Corps, London,
will address the meeting and will
outline the work of the Ground
Observer Corps.
Wins $1400
Mrs. T. C, Coates, Hensall, was
the lucky winner of $1,000 at the
Seaforth bingo held in the com-
munity centre on Monday, Sep. .
tember 14.
Monster Bingo
Community Centre; HensalL
Tuesday,' September` 22
9 p,m,
$2,500.00 II :
12 Regular Games for $75
3 Specials for $200.00
1 Extra Special for $1,000.0)0
Ali Prizes l'.lfust Go
ADMISSION: $1.00; Specials, 25c, 5 for $1:.00
Everybody Welcome
Sponsored by Hensel] Legion and Ladies' Atudliaiy.
A 16% Hog Grower under
$2.65 Per Hundred? Sure.
Money may not grow an trees but it sure wows on
hogs if you use your own grains plays
our Hog Concentrate.
How To Make Your Own Grains
Pay
Mix 5 Bags of Grain $ 10.25
1 Bag of Hog Concentrate 5.25
10 lbs. Mineral .50
Cost to you $ 16.00
Feed Your Stock The Fresh -Mix
Way
S. Riddick and Sons
Phone 114 Clinton
Lawson Insurance
PHONE 251W
CLINTON
fr10,00, .x9a i
AIR FORCE
DAY
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VISIT YOUR
NEAREST
AIR FORCE
STATION
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DAY -
SA '. SEPT. '19
MODERN MEAT
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0. J", Stanley, Prop.
name of Fresh akId Cured Meats
Phone 16 Clinton
VISIT YOUR. NEAREST
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144444*