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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1953-10-01, Page 15)SD, ,;(1) OBER L, 195a. News of Porter's Hifi -irk• ..-.�--t-+-±►++�+� Mr, and Mrs. Alvin Betties, -Bruce and Peggy Ann, spent the weekend in Detroit. No Sunday School There will be no Sunday School or church service at Grace Church on October 4 due to anniversary services at Taylor's Corner. How- ever, the following Sunday, Oc- tober 11., all children are urged to be out es it is "Go To Sunday School" Sunday, Grace Church WA The Women's Association of Grace Church will hold the Oc- tober meeting in the Church base- ment on Thursday afternoon, Oc- tober 8, with a pot luck lunch to be served. The ladies are remind- ed to hand in bazaar articles at this meeting and also come pre- pared to quilt. Social Evening. A social evening was held in Porter's Hill School on Friday evening last to honour Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Harris. newlyweds. The evening was spent playing progressive euchre with prizes go - mg to high lady, Mrs, Bill Har- ris; low lady, Grace Harris; high man, Bob Harris; low man, Willis Bell, Before lunch was served Harry Torrance read the address and the young couple were presented with an occasional chair and smoker stand, Ken thanked everyone for their kind gesture and lunch was served. Community Club The Porter's Hill Community Club held its regular meeting at the home of Mrs, Emma Cox, Clinton on Wednesday last. The president, Mrs. 'Phyllis Harrison, was in charge of the meeting which opened with repeating "The Lord's Prayer", followed by a sing song. Roll call was answered with giving the full name of all broth- ers and sisters. Secretary and treasurer's reports were read and adopted. It was decided to give donations to the Canadian Na- y OCTOBER 3 opens the DUCK and PARTRIDGE Season LET'S GO ! ! ! HERE ARE A FEW ITEMS WE HAVE IN USED GUNS AND RIFLES SHOTGUNS— M12 M12 W1in.chester, 20 ga., complete with 'choke $110.00 Lefever 20 ga., Double Hammerless 90.00 Stevens M124, 3 -shot, bolt action, 12 ga. 47.50 Lefever 12 ga., double, with case 75.00 .22 CAL. RIFLES -- Winchester M69 clip repeater $34.50 Savage M4C clip repeater 29.50 Savage M5 tubular repeater 35.00 Stevens 87A automatic 39.50 Remington 513S clip repeater (target sights) 89.09 "Hunting Licences Oji Sale Now" 1 Drop in and see what we have as "End -of - Season" Bargains in Fishing Tackle too. CLINTON' NEWS -RECORD PAGE F,tly'rEF•rN tional Institute for the Blind cam, Paign and also to the Hospital Auxiliary "Fun Month" in Clinton. Mrs. Mary McCowan conducted a contest with prizes going to Mrs. Marion Harris, Mrs, Phyllis Harrison, Mrs. Barbara, Betties, and Mrs. Isabel Harris, Mrs, James Lockhart, Clinton, won the mystery prize. The meeting closed with the Mizpah benediction and the host- ess served a delicious lunch. The October meeting will be at the home of Mrs. Elva Cox. Grace Anniversary Anniversary service washeld in Grace United Church on Sunday, September 27, .at 11 a.m. and 7.30 P.M. The weather was ideal and large congregations gathered for both services. The guest speaker was Rev. W. Rogers, Hensall, who preached two very helpful ser- mons. At night the minister of the church, Rev. P. Renner, con, ducted the service. The choir gave a very fine con- tribution to both services with especially prepared music and Mrs. William Cox at the organ. At the morning service Charles Wilson, Holmesville, sang two well received numbers, "The Stranger of Galilee', and` "Life's Railroad to Heaven". At night a male quartette from Goderich consisting of S. Argyle, C, Woods, C. Breckow, and H. Westlake, sang two songs, "I Love to Tell the Story" and "There's a Beautiful Land". Both these numbers were well received. At the close of the evening ser- vice, Mr. Renner thanked all who had in any way assisted in mak- ing the anniversary services so successful. C°1-CitFAST PICKUP 5-2 Q L td Y O N ONTARIO PHONE 42 CLINTON ene Lou may never meet her. But you have talked to her, heard that friendly "voice with a smile" She is always there, at your service, like the telephone itself, ready to save you time and trouble. • If you ever need help in an emergency, you know she will meet that challenge, too, Like all Bell people, she brings to her work , an understanding of how important the telephone has become in our daily lives. THE !ELL 7EL>~PHONE COMPANY OF CANADA DELUXE MODEL 151 dear, (comfortable heat without work Just light this powerhouse ... set the dial and you get dean, even heat' 24 hours a day, It uses low cost fuel oil dnd is rower in operating cost than any other type of oil -fired equipment. Easily install- ed in a few minutes. Heats 4 to 6 rooms. Heatwove Power Blower available at small extra cost. FREE r BUY NOW AND GET A riiu0AUTOMATIC � THERMOSTAT ABSOLUTELY FREE ACT NOW. This offer good FOR LIMITED TIME ONLY, ,. Clinton Electric Shop -$-* ,.* , GOSHEN LINE 4* -4-9*44 WMS Hollis Meeting The September meeting of the Goshen Women's Missionary So- ciety was ,held at the home of Mrs. John Armstrong, The theme of the meeting was "The Church, the Household of Faith", The meeting was opened with the hymn "All People That on Earth do Dwell", Mrs, Keith Mc- Bride, Mrs, Bert McBride and Mrs, Russell Erratt read the scrip- ture passages. Mrs,T, .J, Pitt led in prayer, Mrs. Robinson, the president, was in charge of the business. The minutes were read and 23 members answered the roll call. Mrs. Roy McBride and Mrs, Bruce Keys were chesexr as dele- gates to the' WMS sectional con- vention at M o n c r" r e f United Church on Wednesday, October 21, Mrs. Rood McBride's group took the program on "The Great New Fact", Mrs, Keith McBride, Mrs. Bert McBride and Mrs. Russell Erratt assisted Mrs. McBride, The hymn, "In Christ There is no East nor West" was sung and Mrs, McBride pronounced the benediction. Mrs. Bruqe Key's group served lunch, LANE O'PINES BEACH • 4 * .. e-*-. s 1,Vlaster Gerald Wallis spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ed. Welsh, Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. George Woods, Detroit, spent a long weekend at their cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Docken, Vivian and Bud, London, spent the weekend at their cot- tage. Mr. and Mrs. Art Docken, London, spent some time with them on Sunday, Mr. and Mrs. Harry Husband have returned to their home in London after spending the past week at their cottage. Mr, and Mrs. James Barnes returned to their home in London, Mr. Bar- nes is not in his customary good health. Mr, and Mrs. Cecil Merk- ley had as their guests on Sun- day, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hall, Wingham. Mr. and Mrs, Harold Bower are again spending a few days at their summer home. .-4-.-. GODERICH TOWNSHIP Mr: and Mrs. Fred Middleton and Mr. and •Mrs. Milton Steepe spent several days last week at Manitoulin Island, Mr. Middle- ton bought a carlot of Hereford's at the Little Current sale, .�a+-o-++•'-o-s-s-o-4-.�st a4.4-s+w-o•+r-� HOLMESVILL.E C -?-9-4-4.4-4,4-0-A-9-0.* 4-9-f-3 H -4.4"-A•. Mrs. B. MacMath is spending an extended visit with relatives and friends in Toronto and Ottawa. Bert Lobb bought the parsonage property at the well -attended auc- tion sale held on Saturday, Sep- tember 26. Mr. and Mrs. E. J. Trewartha are spending a short vacation in Florida, the guests of Rev. and Mrs, 'Stewart Miner, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Schultz and Mrs. Jack Finlay, River Rouge, Mich„ were recent guests of Miss lAdele Finlay at her home in the village, The Sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be observed in the Holmesville United Church on Sunday, October 4, and anniver- sary services will be held on Sun= day, October 11, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brown (nee Eileen Gliddon), have return- ed from their wedding trip and are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Gliddon, prior to going to their new home in Detroit, Mich. RCAF Personals Mrs, Grace Foster held a fare- well tea party on Wednesday evening, for Mrs, Margaret Row- son who shortly will be joining her husband overseas. The ladies of Adaastrai Park hope that Mrs, Shirley Henderson will soon be up and around a- gain, "We miss your cheerful personality, Shirley," Mrs, ,Barbara Miller, gave a Coffee party Tuesday evening, Guests included Mrs. p. Jessup, R. Lake, K. Endersbe, D. Fraser, G. Vezina, M. Toms, E. Robson, M. Waldron, E, Holt, M, Irwin, B. Greenway, Mrs, H. C. Ash- down, Bingo Cancelled The Bingo planned by the NCO's Wives Auxiliary for Mon- day October 5, has been cancell- ed. The next meeting of the NCO's Wives' Auxiliary will be held on Monday, October 19, if the Serg- eants' Mess is available. u Gifted Airwoman Entertains Groups On RCAF Stations A 29 -year-old airwoman in the Royal Canadian Air Force is rapidly making a name for herself in the RCAF as an enter- tainer. Along with her two friends, who joined the .service with her a year ago last July, LAW D. E. (Danny) Marshall, 29, Vancouver and Ottawa, is busy exercising her talents to the enjoyment of the thousands of Air Force per- sonnel and civilians who attend her various shows. Co-starring with LAW Mar- shall in a recent show sponsored by the Air Force Association in Ottawa were Sergeant Eleanor Graver, 29, and Airwoman Ethel Kong, 21, both of Vancouver. All three women are recreation spec- ialists in the RCAF and enter- tain in the various shows as a sideline. Producer of the Ottawa show was LAW Marshall who was backed by a troupe of more than Seven Air Force entertainers. LAW Marshall is no stranger to show business and boasts a degree earned at the Toronto Conser- vatory of Music at the age of 15. Two years later during the Sec- ond World War, she joined the Canadian, Army Show and tour- ed the United Kingdom and the Continent for three years. Play- ing the violin, she is now the head producer of most RCAF shows she plays in. Discharged in 1946, the veteran entertainer spent two years with the Vancouver Symphony Orch- estra before teaming up with Sgt. Graver and Airwoman Kong. In charge of the dancing sect- ion of the show is Sgt. Graver who is also a veteran of the sec- ond World War. Following the end of hostilities Sgt. Graver re- turned to school and studied for three years at the Vancouver School of .Art before going to England for advanced art train- ing. Airwoman Ethel Kong, a Can- adian -born Chinese, started train ing as an acrobat with an eight - member family troupe when she was four years old. After tour- ing Canada and the U.S.A., both with her family and as a solo singing act, she joined the RCAF with her two partners. Among those assisting Sgt. Graver in the musical review act in Ottawa were Leading Airwoman Anne Renessy, 19 of Burns Lake, 13. C., and Airwo- man Marline Wambolt, 19, of Vancouver. Both girls are stat- ioned at the RCAF Photo Estab- lishment at Roekcliffe, near Ot- tawa. L AND DRAW EXETER ARENA Friday, October 2 12 Regular Games for $54) each 3 Special Games for $150 each 1 Special for a 1953 Studebaker Custom 2 -Door Also Draw for 5 TV Sets 1 RCA Victor 21 inch Screen -4 RCA Victors 17 inch Screen ADMISSION: $1.00 Extra and Special Cards 25c--5 for $1.00 ---- Car Special $L00 GAMES START AT 9 P.M. SHARP PROCEEDS IN AID OF THE ARENA FLOOR Huron District Scout Group Plans Big Rally In Zurich October 17 At the fall :meeting of the Hu- ere and group committeemen. a.t- ron District Scout Association tended the meeting from Clinton, held in Wesley -Willis United Zurich, Centralia, Clinton RCAF, Church, Clinton, Tuesday, Sept- Goderich Troop No, 3, Grand ember 16, a Scout and Cub rally Bend, Luean and Seaforth, was planned for 'October 17 in A welcome was extended by L. Zurich, James Reid, Zurich scout- G. Winter, Clinton, chairman of master, was named to organize the Scouts and Cubs committee of the rally. the Clinton Liens Club, The rally will Commence at. 1.30 Scoutmaster and assistant scout- p,m. and will consist of •a parade master for the town of Clinton and program of examinations, scout troop are W. McKenzie and sports and competitions. H. G. J. Mitchell, and Cubmaster is Firth, field commissioner for Frank Ling, Scoutmaster and WAestern Obronze ntario, will becourse is present. Cubmaster at RCAF Station, Clin- arrowhead ton, are Pat English and Ory scheduled to be held in Clinton Johnson, later in the fall. Plans were dis- Members of the Ladies' Auxin, cussed for Apple Day in October. iary to the Clinton boy scouts, President of the district, Glen served coffee and cake at the coir Lodge, Goderich, presided, and elusion of the meeting, under the secretary was W. MacLaren, direction of president Mrs. James Grand Bend, Twenty-four scout- IVfacLaren. TNE4al:VEit SPORTS COLUMN E'efiter 7efteiratut Tt is inevitable when the super -stars of hockey meet in the annual all-star game, that there will be thrills and drama.' For Here . is the cream of the crop; players who represent literally millions of dollars spent in recruit- ing; developing and drilling them into the polished finesse that major hockey requires. But, though the all-star game is• now an annual affair, we doubt if it will ever produce such throat - catching draina as developed in the very' first of such spectacles. It 'was on a February night of 1934, in Toronto's Maple Leaf Gardens, the night of the Ace Bailey benefit game and the first time, we believe, there ever was an all-star hockey battle. A few weeks before, the Leafs had played in Boston. What was just another game had suddenly belched forth grim and sinister tragedy; conjured up the chill black spectre of death in the evening, death in a hockey game. Eddie Shore, powerful star of the Boston Bruins, most - idolized in Boston, most -hated elsewhere, had, from behind, roughly hurled his brawn into Bailey, a slim, fast -skating, hard - shooting right-winger, as Bailey turned from an abortive play, and was moving back. Shore never asked, never gave,. any quarter in hockey. He played hockey as Dempsey fought, with alt inborn savagery, a burning lust for victory. So, in his own rugged fashion, Shore plunged into Bailey, to shoulder him out of the way. Bailey, off-balance, pitched for- ward on his face, his head struck the ice with fearful impact, he lay there in a suddenly nerveless, inert heap. You can usually tell these major crashes in hockey, and the crowd, the players, instantly sensed that here was injury and damage beyond the ordinary. His skull was fractured. For days, it was a toss-up whether Bailey lived or died. The sports world turned bitterly against Shore. He was suspended by League edict, while the mob clamored that he should be barred for life. Others suggested he be jailed and tried for assault—perhaps for murder. The anti -Shore feeling was tremendous. But Bailey recovered. And when it was decided to stage an all-star game for his benefit, Shore was one of those selected to face Maple Leafs. Before the game Bailey stood in mid -ice, shaking hands one by one with the players who were to perform in las behalf. Finally, it came the turn of Shore, the man whose cheek, good or bad, had caused all this, the roan who had just missed plunging, a fellow -player to death. A great crowd sat silent, hushed suddenly by the sheer gripping drama of the situation. You might have thought Shores head would drop a bit, that he would have faltered or Hesitated or glanced about. But he did none of those things. Chin up, eyes clear, he wheel- ed up to Bailey, stuck out his hand. Bailey shook it firmly. And a sudden. roar of pent-up emotion, that burst with the sudden force of the Johnstown flood, shook the great building to the very rafters. That was drama. We doubt if any other all-star game will ever produce its equal. Your comments and suggestions for this column will he welcomed by Elmer Ferguson, c/a Calvert House, 431 Yonge 5t., Toronto. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHERSTBURO, ONTARIO ....Before You Buy! AUTOMATIC CONTROL Nothing like it In heating history. Not only an entirely new conception of Tempera. tore Control, but also pares up to 5096 on your fuel bills. The World': Best 00 Heater for 1953 in smart styling and harmonizing colors. The Pot- ented Monogram Power Air Burner produced the highest known operating efficiency, Clinton- Plumbing and Heating ]E, J. "Mike" Reynolds, Proprietor PHONE 577R CLINTON e CcwooCi cl 1D2 P(loa p d( t`'C C iraianb - By Roe Forms Service Dept. , Sill ;-. _ „ ' / i \ ,a�'"t1 I SAD ISN'T IT, ' ITS HER FIRST EGGS ON 1DEAR . (WAS S PROUD 0 MY BEAUTIFUL EGG;"SHELLS AND HE WALKED OFF W)TH IT. DON'T WORRY, YOU'RE SO YOUNG, PLENTY MORE, JUST WAIT AND SEE, ; EAT UP' BIDDY "- THIS y `_ E6G MASH REALLY OUT EGGS. ROEVITALAY GOSH,ROEVITALAY 1S EGG MASH HAS WONDE.RFOL.MY BOSS GIVEN I•IER A NEW TOP E66 , �oau ria�v ~rep PiQOf/Tai pµM MI! ean:, �\`^ i�x� 'I Wi��'I>' l�� <. } .,, rrNNC y b„ 11e1 '��� �"" `�:. ti '1 '� �M~, fT$' s yJi h 4 .tl sr.n ,�. n� Ft ' .,°, a4 ''.).1 -s dlr41.:, f _ �_',1-.. , 4 n ij ;�� .:7 s` IN.r`+�»1' ;�':r C_o 1 �, - v ,,. �% Pr 1_,* �"--.-- 73 vt ' '`�` a, ,� IIA DONT FEEL. LIKErtiR G.; MY POOR LOST EGG 1 W -E -L L I, O LL A �7l: SOME. SAYS I'M BECOMING LEASE. ON LIFE.SHE THE BEST LAYER. IN LAYS SO MANY SHE THE FLOCK. i;AS FORGOTTEN ALL ABOUT HE.RFI EG � FIRST G. a, � itikk,M Wk 14: ���r • �� il' l," .,r � ,� �// .. li! � ; ,.. �'( r N ��� � p 'y �fi' M. i ' '�, k ly �,.,^ .r a�' / THE Mint T I FELTJUST SAMEWITH N MY FIRST, •i IL:LL, HER I i>~ FACTS OF LIFE.. \ � �� �"~ _.- ' 1 , .. 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