HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1959-05-28, Page 12TlitIRSTitAYt MAY 28, 190$4
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SUMMER DANCING
BAYFIELD PAVILION
EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
20,14)
IAN WILBE.E'S
ORCHESTRA
(VOCALS by
DONNA WAGNER.)
Prairie Bible Team at .Bayfield.
For Mortgagemlurning Ceremony
NEED
HELP!
Lush, spring pastures boost Milk Production with their high Protein and Vitamin
content, —But not for long. They are low in Carbohydrates, the energy giving
nutrient, And Energy is the most important single need for Dairy Cows.
A sudden boost in Milk Production is not enough. An increase in yield must be
maintained all through their lactation. Balance those lush pastures and maintain
full body weight and maximum production.
SHUR-GAIN 14% Pasture Dairy Ration's high in Carbohydrates providing the en
ergy, missing from the grass.
Check with us and see just how little you need to feed to supplement the early
pastures and keep your herd fit for profitable production.
SHUR-GAIN 14% Pasture Dairy Ration
CANADA
PACKERS
LIMITED
Phone HU 2-381S
CLINTON
BALANCED
FEEDING
HEADQUARTERS FEED 5E9VICE
• .•
No wonder more people are buying Chevrolets than any other car!
CHECK YOUR CAR
CHECK ACCIDENTS
your lord authorited Chevrolet deolor, see how touch wore Chevy has to
LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD.
BEST ECONOMY
No doubt about this: two
Chevrolet Sixes won their
class in the famous Mobilgas
Economy Run, got the best
mileage of any full-size car.
BEST
RIDE
You'll be able to tell this
yourself, instantly. But
MOTOR TREND maga-
zine expresses it this way:
4! . the smoothest, most
quiet, softest riding car in
its price class".
• .i••••• ..... •••• 4. •
Lawrence E. Stotesbury-Leeson,
Huron College, was the guest of
Miss Margaret Howard over the
weekend.
Mrs. F. Hendrick, Birmingham,
Mich., was the guest of Mrs. C. W.
Brown, from Wednesday to Fri-
day, while opening her cottage
"Westwind" for the season,
Miss Doris Chuter, accompanied
by her parents, Preston, were at
their cottage for the weekend.
Mr. and Mrs, J. M. Stewart, Mrs.
Percy Weston, Mrs. R. J. Larson,
Mrs. R, H. F. Gairdner, Mrs. J.
B. Higgins, Mrs. Eramerson Heard
and Rev. E. J, B, Harrison, were
in Exeter on Thursday last for the
annual meeting of the Deanery of
Huron, in Trivett Memorial Chur-
ch.
Mr 4nd Mrs. Earl Dyke, Cay-
uga, Mr!,:, Harry Johnson and dau-
ghter Jane, Burlington, visited
their cousin, Mrs, Bruce Menerey
over the weekend.
The Rt. Rev, William A. Town-
Boy Scouts Prepare
For Parents' Night
Boy Scouts on May 20 dealt
mainly with the preparation for
a parents' night at Camp Chippa-
Vva on May 27. Each Scout was
asked to relate one thing he had
learned while on camp over the
long weekend.
On Friday night, the Scouts and
Cubs distributed pamphlets for the
Clinton Lions Clul7 regarding the
eyeglass collection,
The Scouts have also begun to
deliver Simpson-Sears' hand-bills
in order to raise funds for camp-
ing equipment,
shend, D.P., F.C,I,S„ Mrs. Town-
shend and son Bob, London, came
to their cottage on Friday, return-
ing home on Monday. Bishop
Townshend and his son motored
to Clarksburg on Sunday for a
confirmation service. Misses Peggy
and Nancy Townshend, London,
spent Sunday here with their mo-
ther.
Mrs, R, H, F. Gairdner left on
Friday to visit her sisters in Evan-
ston and River Forest, Ill.
"She's somebody's mother, boys,
he said," The stranger paid trib-
ute to a mother. Perhaps her own
son had grown up, forgotten the
arms which cradled him and set
him on his feet. Perhaps he re-
membered to send her a gift or
write her a line on or around her
birthday. Or a daughter, grown
rich in this world's goods, filled
with her own importance, thought
merely of her mother and home
town as being out of date. Per-
haps, for a few years, after she
left home, she did remember an-
niversary dates. But gradually,
she assumed that she had attain-
ed her position by her own efforts,
Had the children really grown
up? Was this not immature think-
ing?
MIDDLETON
The Women's Association of St.
James ,Church, Middleton, will
meet Wednesday afternoon, June
10, at the home of the past presir;
dent, Mrs, Bert Rowden, Clinton.
The roll call Word is "faith", Note
change of date,
Mrs, Milton Steepe, Mrs, Oliver
Cole, Mrs, Deeves, Mrs, Charles
Cooper, Mrs. Fred Middleton, Mrs.
Alfred Hudie, Mrs. C. McCullough
and Mrs. Stewart Middleton at-
tended the Huron Deanery meet-
ing in Trivett Memorial Church,
Bxeter, last Thursday, The Rt.
Rev. • Thomas Greenwood, Lord
Bishop of the Yukon was the spec-
ial guest speaker, and presented
most interesting pictures of his
Diocese,
Canada is a nation today, taking
her place in the world. She is
highly regarded in the United
Nations where her statesmen have
made notable contributions in at-
tempting to settle world problems
amicably. But is the thinking of
those who planned to celebrate
the 24th of May on the 18th,
mature thinking? Aren't, they try-
ing very hard to forget their roots
after some years of independence?
Do we not owe our rich inheri-
tance in Canada to the ground-
work laid down for us of British
justice and freedom? And who
represents that better than Queen
Victoria, the Good, who reigned
over 60 years, during which the
British Empire flourished the
Empire which graduated into the
Commonwealth of Nations.
• Her birthday, the 24th of May
became Victoria, and later, Empire
Day., It was too old-fashioned to
remember it as the Good Queen's
Birthday. Then for some queer
reason 'Empire" seemed to smack
too much of allegiance to the
British Crown to some who would
deny Canada's origin. 'And so it
became "Commonwealth" Day.
flow many school children know
why they had a holiday on May
18? What an' opportunity for
teaching history in school is missed
by not celebrating on the anni-
versary date! What child wants
to have a birthday cake and cand-
les a week ahead of his or her
birthday?
Why have all our holidays on
the Monday before or after our
anniversaries? For that matter
why use the term "holiday" at all,
when it really means holy day?
Why not just a 'Monday off" if
the day is to have no more sign-
ificance than that?
One does not see United States
citizens celebrating George Wash-
ington's birthday on a Monday to
make a long weekend, nor setting
off firecrackers for the Fourth of
July on June 29!
Like the boy in the poem who
paused to pay deference to a mo-
ther, so in Detroit on Victoria
Day, Sunday, May 24, 1959, a
Commonwealth Parade was held.
And at night, the Reverend Doctor
Robert Rayson, Principal of Cant-
erbury College, Windsor, was the
guest preacher at an Empire Day
service in St. Paul's Cathedral in
that city.
flOPSOWS GREENHOUSE
Bayfield — Ontario
BOX PLANTS — TOMATOES — CABBAGE — ASTERS
SNAPDRAGONS — ZINNEAS — Etc.,
Cemetery Baskets Made Up'
The Horticultural
Society
Will Hold A Meeting•In
THE COUNCIL. CHAMBER
THURSDAY, MAY 28
AT 8.15 P.M.
— IMPORTANT BUSINESS
REPORT OF ONTARIO CONVENTION
- BEAUTIFICATI N FIL IN COLOR
— DOOR PRIZE
KEEP THIS DATE AND ENJOY' THIS MEETING
EVERY INTERESTED CITIZEN WELCOME
21-b
PAW' gX0HT.
CWITP14 NEWS-RNCORP
AiMill.0.1.1.11111.1111.1!
News of Bayfield
Dy MISS, LUCY R. WQODS
PHONE BAMELD 45 r 3
A gospel team from the Prairie
Bible Institute, Three Hills, Al-
berta, will be at Bayfield, on June
4, at 8 p.m., under the auspices of
the Bayfield Baptist Church. Rev.
Vern Granger heads this team as
speaker, and team members, Dom-
ald Enns, Kurt Imback, Stuart
Imback, Lloyd Lindstrom, and
Robert Snyder provide an inter-
esting variety of sacred music.
The Prairie Bible Institute (be-
ginning in 1922 with an enrollment
of eight students) now has a Bib-
le School and High School atten-
dance of over 1,000. The found-
ing of an interdenominational
Bible Institute is -unique among
Christian schools. Prairie is lo-
cated in a small farming commun-
ity on the wide, sparsely settled
Prairies of Western Canada,
Prairie Bible Institute is a mis-
sionary training school; over 1,000
former students are serving Christ
on foreign mission fields, and hun-
dreds are engaged in pastoral and
other Christian service in Canada
and the United States.
The Principal of the Institute,
L. E. Maxwell, is well known as a
Bible teacher, editor, of the Prair-,
ie Overcomer, and author of three
inspiring. books, Born Crucified,
Crowded to Christ, and Abandon-
ed to Christ.
With his family, Mr. Granger
left their home in Pontiac, Mich-
igan, in 1951, to come to Prairie
Bible Institute. During his' years
of training here he held a pastor-
ate, and, directed children and
youth camps under the Canadian
Sunday School Mission. Mr. Gran-
ger joined the Prairie Bible Insti-
tute faculty in 1957.
Mr. Enns, Saskatchewan, is a
junior in Bible School, as are
Stuart and Kurt Imback, whose
parents are serving on the Institu-
te staff. Mr. Lindstrom, Illinois,
is a 1959 graduate, and Mr. Sny-
der, team pianist, is a staff mem-
ber.
Read The Classifieds
INFORMATION MEETING on
Deficiency Payments on Hogs
TUESDAY JUNE 2 at 8.30 P.M.
Holmesville Public School
Goderich Township Hog Producers
Caritelon's Service Station
Corner Mary and King Streets
Phone HU 2-9032
Clinton
has been purchased by
Eugene Garrow
who will take possession on June 8
US
Central Cities Service
HANDLING:
B. F. GOODRICH TIRES and
CITIES SERVICE PRODUCTS
Gold Bond Stamps Also Will Be Given
Until that time Mr. Garrow would appreciate
it if customers continue to give Cantelon Bros.
their business.
Not Mature Way of Thinking
To Make 24th on May 18
(By our Bayfield Correspondent)
Take it from the experts-.
CHEVY GIVES YOU 1 BIO-BESTS1
Take it, not from us, but from the published opinions of outside,
independent experts and from on-the'-iecorfd facts and figuresf
Chevrolet gives you these 7 big bests over any other car in its field!
PASTURES- _.
• •
• •
,,
BEST BRAKES In direct com-
petitive tests of
repealed stops from highway speeds, con-
ducted by NASCAR*, Chevy was rated
best in its class—and why not? Chevy brakes
are larger for up to 66% longer lining life.
*National Association for Stock Car Advancement and
Research.
BEST
STYLE
As summed up in POPULAR SCIENCE
MAGAZINE: "The fact is, in its price class
the Chevy establishes a new high in daring
styling ..." It's the car that's unmistakably
'59 in every modern line.
•1.
em =- BEST ENGINE gazing ha
o
s
tor
given
Chevy's V8's unstinted praise. As SPORTS
CAR ILLUSTRATED puts itt "Indeed,
othri jscod,!e, vice is surely the most wonderfully
responsive engine available today at any
un
TRADE-IN
pthrs in its field . . . bring you more money at trade-
BEST
more economical engines, rugged transmissions and
Chevrolet's quality Fisher Body construction, smooth,
sleek modern design hold resale value higher than
NN
Official figures on all car dimen-
sions make this clear. For example,
Chevy front seat hiproom is un-
surpassed . . . almost six inches
wider than one of its competitors.
•
PLUS THESE
TREMENDOUS TRIFLES;
Who'd want to do without Chevrolet's
extra luxuries/ Like the protection of
full wraparound bumpers, crank-oper- •
ated ventipanes, the convenience of
single-key locking, a real overhead
curved windshield, oil-hushed hydraulic •
valve lifters in every standard engine
for quieter running, a bigger luggage
compartment with full side-wall lining,
robei sio•
t.
is
I
•
Ontario Street Pone HU 2-93211
Clinton