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Clinton News-Record, 1959-07-09, Page 9News of Auburn correspondents .MRS. W, liflAPNOPK Phone AOhurn 51r 14 tog Imports Seem Strange While Government Supports Local. 'Prices ethip directors, of the Poultry As- ,sociation was held in the agricul- tural office board rooms, Clinton. Allan Wedow, Hanover, zone direc- tor, raised several questions for 'discussion. Deficiency payments seemed to be a doubtful solution to the prob- lem of providing satisfactory re- turns to the producer, However, 'since details 'are lacking no defin- ite opinion could be formed. Eggs coming into Ontario from eether provinces are a problem but -with greater =Oasis on quality it was felt that this would not be too serious, The group was sur- .prised to learn that several thou- ,Flensall Community Sale Prices '(By our Hensall Correspondent) Butcher steers, up to $25.20; :medium steers, $23-$24,50; butcher heifers, $23-$24.50; fat cows, $15- '17; good cows, $18-$19.40; light vows, $21; babies, $23,50-$25.50; 'veal calves, $25-$28.50; small cal- ves, $12-$15i good bull calves, $22- $30; Holstein heifer calves, $25- $35; Durham calves, $45-$67; weanling pigs, $8.50-$9.50; chunks, "510-$13.50; feeders, $14-$21; sows, 165-$77. 850 pigs and 145 cattle were sold last week. 55 9. gullett Promotions List Grade 8 to Grade 9: Eileen Sch- neider, Raymond Hallam, Mary Kirkconnel; Grade 7 to Grade 8: Bernice Hunking, Marilyn Daer; Grade 6 to Grade 1: Linda And- rews, Ruth Schneider, Sharon Ball, Hans Bakelaar, Lois Hallam; Gr- ade 5 to Grade 6: Betty Hallam, Casey Verwey; Grade 4 to Grade 5: Billy Lapp, Shirley Hunking, Douglas Archainbault; Grade 3 to Grade 4: Wendy Schneider, Bren- da Ball, Dianne Kirkeonnell; Gr- ade 2 to Grade 3: Nancy Lapp, Brenda Archambault, Bobbie Sch- neider, Stephen Haggitt, Daryk Ball, Daryl Bell. Wilmer Erring- ton, teacher, 55 9 Picnic The school section of SS 9, Hul- lett enjoyed their annual picnic on the lovely shaded school yard, The afternoon was spent in social time for the adults while the younger members took part in the sports program arranged by the teacher, Wilmer Errington, Just before the supper hour, Mrs. George Schneider read a short ad- dress to Mrs, Maureen (Hallam) Elliott, Mrs. Roy Daer and Mrs. Stanley Ball presented her with many fine gifts to help replace those that were lost in the fire when her father's home was burn- ed this spring. Maureen thanked her friends for their kindness. Following the supper served by the ladies, a. ball game was played with the pupils and the parents. Mr. Errington expressed his thanks to the school section for coming out and taking an interest in the school activities,. The spOrt winners were: broad jump, junior, Cindy Pursley, Daryl Bail, Stephen Haggitt; intermed- iate boys, Billy Lapp, Casey Ver- wey, Douglas Archambault; girls, Ruth Schneider, Betty Hallam, Lois Hallam; senior, boys, Ray- mond Hallam; girls, Eileen Schnei- der, Linda Andrews, Marilyn Daer, High jump, junior boys, • Daryl Ball, Bobby Schneider, Daryk Ball; girls, Cindy Pursley, Wendy Sch- neider, Brenda Archambault; in- termediate boys and girls, Billy Lapp, Betty Hallam, Douglas Ar- chambault; senior girls, Eileen Schneider, Linda Andrews, Mari- lyn Daer. Running races; junior boys, Daryl Ball, Stephen Haggitt, Dar- yk Ball; girls, Cindy Pursley, Wendy Schneider, Brenda Ball; intermediate boys, Casey Verewey, Billy Lapp, Douglas Arehambault; girls, Lois Hallam, Betty Hallam, Ruth Schneider; senior, Raymond Hallam, Eileen Schneider, Linda Andrews; pre-school, Joyce Hal- lam, Kathy Schneider, Ricky Ar- chambault, Ball throw, junior girls, Dianne Kirkconnell, Brenda Ball, Wendy Schneider; boys, Bobby Schneider, Stephen Haggitt, Daryl Ball; in- termediate boys, Billy Lapp, Casey Verewey, Douglas Archambault; girls, Lois Hallam, Betty Hallam, Ruth Schneider; senior boys, Ray- mond Hallam, Rudy Synclers; girls, Mary Kirkconnell, Linda Andrews, Eileen Schneider. Young men's race, Ken Hunking, Lynn Bakelaar, Jim Schneider; married men, Joe Hunking, Leon- ard Archambault, Elliott Lapp; married ladies, Mrs. Leonard Ar- chambault, Mrs. Arthur Hallam, Mrs. Elliott Lapp; rolling pin, Miss Minnie Wagner; balloon blowing, Leonard Archambault. Walkerburn Club The Walkerburn Club met at -the home of Mrs. Elliott Lapp. Mrs. George Schneider presided. Mrs. James Jackson was at the piano. Roll call was answered by the payment of fees. The financial st- atement was given by the treas- urer, Mrs, Elliott Lapp, The lucky draw was won by Mrs, G. Schneid- er, The annual picnic will be held on July 30, Mrs. Joseph Bunking and Mrs, Lloyd McClinchey in charge of the program, Contests were con- ducted by Mrs, Henry Hunking and Mrs. Schneider. The secret sis- ter of each member was revealed, and a new sister was drawn for the coming year. The election of officers took place with Mrs, James McDougall in charge, New officers are: Pres- ident, Mrs. George Schneider; vice- president, Mrs. Joseph Verwey; secretary, Mrs. Ted Hunking; treasurer, Mrs. Elliott Leine; pian- ist, Mrs. James Jackson; assistant, pianist, Mrs. Lloyd McClinchey; corresponding secretary, Mrs. Le- onard Archambault. A delicious lunch was served by Mrs. Stewart Ament, Mrs. Stan- ley Ball, Mrs. Guy Cunningham, Mrs. Ariel Duizer, New Books New books that have been rec- ently purchased by the Auburn Public Library are: non fiction, Down the Stretch, Hewitt; To My Son, Rogers; To Live Again, Mar- shall; Roughing in the Bush, Moodie; North-West of 16, Mac- Gregor; Klondike, Berton, Fiction, Lootville, Freedman; King Tree, Taylor; Last Frontier, Maclean; Anna and Her Daught- ers, Stevenson; Love Calls the Dates For Fairs Throughout Ontario Announced Here Bayfield Sept. 23, 24 Blyth Sept. 22, 23 Brussels Oct, 1, 2 Chesley Sept. 11, 12 Drayton Sept. 19 & 21 Dundalk 15, 16 Dungannon' Oct. 9 Durham Sept, 25, 26 Elmira Sept, 4, 5, 6 Embro Sept. 21 Exeter Sept. 23, 24 Gorrie Oct. 2, 3 Hanover Oct. 2, 3 Kincardine Sept. 17, 18 Kirkton Oct. 1, 2 Listowel Sept. 28, 29 London (Western Fair) Sept. 14-19 Lucknow Sept. 23, 24 Markdale Sept. 10, 11 Meaford Sept. 18, 19 Midland Sept. 17-19 Mildmay , Sept. 15, 16 Milverton Sept. 25, 26 Mitchell Sept. 29, 30 New Hamburg Sept. 18, 19 Paisley Sept. 14, 15 Palmerston Oct. 5, 6 Parkhill Sept. 24, 25 Ripley Sept. 25, 26 St. Marys Oct. 6, 7 Seaford' Sept. 24, 25 Stratford Sept. 21-23 Tavistock Sept. 11, 12 Teeswater Oct. 6, 7 'Medford Sept. 22, 23 Tiverton (By d, Carl June 24 a meeting of the Town- sand cases of eggs had been brought in from the United States to Toronto, With the government actively supporting the price of eggs this seems unreasonable since import permits could be required immediately, In discussing the marketing plan which the Ontario executive was instructed at annual meeting to draft, the details are not yet finalized but a dutch clock system is being considered. By this means the egg grading station would place eggs on the market and they would be sold to the highest bidder, These eggs would be identified and the buyer would know from which egg grader he was buying. Thus the station put- ting out the best quality of eggs would be paid accordingly, In order to provide funds to continue in the development of the organization and to find out the support the preducers are wil- ling to give to help themselves it was decided to carry out a volun- tary membership campaign. The Ontario Poultry Producers Association have printed member- ship cards, 100 of these will be mailed to the poultry represent- ative in each township and it is left with him to contact the pro- ducer in his township for $1.00 membership fee. If there is strong support this money will be used to promote the marketing of eggs in Ontario. Sept, 23, 24 Toronto (CNE) . Aug. 25-Sept. 12 Toronto (Royal Fair) „ Nov. 13-21 Walkerton Nov. 4, 5 Wiarton Sept. 10, 11 Woodstock Aug. 27-29 ZURICH Sept. 26 & 28 International Plowing Match, Wentworth County-Dundas, October 13-16. care!" °The family minister of transport jokes as he lifts his young „son into the car, but he is well aware that raising a growing child is no joke. It means watching family expenses with .an eagle eye. The annual expenditures of the Minister of Transport at 'Ottawa involve millions of dollars - and his department is only one of many, This money comes through the Minister of Finance who sets it largely in taxes from Canadians such, as you. When Elie spends more than he takes in, he must borrow from you or else create new money. The creation of new money is one factor that leads to inflation - which means your dollar buys less and less. The government has been spending more than you have been paying in taxes. To narrow the gap between income and expenditures, new taxes have been imposed. You can encourage the government to live within its income by asking only for those services you are willing to pay for with taxes. Tell your M, P, at Ottawa that since you are trying to save, you expect government to do the same. You also help when you save more by means of life insurance, savings deposits, and the purchase of government bends. Your savings help to Create a SOUND dollar; and this, hi turn, helps to create job security for you and more jobs for other Canadians, A SOUND DOLLAR, MEANS A :PETTEtt rOlt YOU GIVE YOUR ACTIVE SUPPORT TO THE PIGI-/T AGAINST /NPLAT/011 L.45/ UDLIG SERVICE MESSAGE room The urt INSURANCE COMOANIa IN CANADA FROM CANADIAN NATIONAL fast modern travel by RAILINER between Guelph, Owen Sound, Southampton, Kincardine, Palmerston, Stratford, Goderich, with connections for Toronto and London. Enjoy the air-conditioned comfort, the picture windows and foam rubber seats in these brand-new self-propelled Diesel cars, sheathed in gleaming stainless steel. Forget about traffic strain, parking worries-eon, suit your local CNR agent for the convenient &Airier schedules. 131" 7 1 AIN ADIAN NATIONAL e-0.43 A BATH ROOM UP... A BATHROOM DOWN, NO JOB -YOU NAVE - WILL MAkE US FROWIP PLUMBING HEATING ELECTRICAL SERVICE 1111.2-7062 DON'S B.A. STATION VICTORIA STREET CLINTON HU 2-9088 t rolls on and it's scrubbable - ideal for your summer cottage!" says Peter Whittall (TV's "Mr. Fix-it") WALTEX rol This colour-flecked paint couldn't be better for country cottage living. It goes on breezily with a roller, dries in just two hours - then you forget about painting for years. The tough, plastic finish is 5 times as thick as paint - so hard you tan use a scrubbing brush and detergent. eeeeeeee "Frage'', ese eee eee ei• BOATS take hard sun-and-water, feet-and-seat wear for years. AM R Eaten .-zetzet 010411111tal .• • •gcomMe:Molgiikaa' FURNITURE resists chipping, cracking and countless after- meal clean-ups. :.00..ommwo.• WALLS aro proof against chil- dren, spattered insects and country weather, EQUIPMENT becomes ruSt- proofed, easy to identify and takes hard knocks, Choice of 15 deeotatomeleeted colours. Look for the red and yellow tan. Flowers; eggs, glasswarel,,,appliances-they all get a soft, gentle ride betWeenAhe aides in the functionally designed Vallisviagen'.,Anct yott carry more too! The big double side doom-pfus , rear door-swing open to 170ci,o ft. of payload space with only a 13 inch lifefrom thimyrb, .4% Efficient service coast. to coast 5-million dollar Parts= Depof.,' people who know ' re turniiig,l'o URSDAY, .111LY 9, 1959 'MOWN ..14AWS,IMMAD PAq$ Mt g. Safety Conference Lists Suggestions For Happy Summertime Driving Doctor, Seifert; Watch That Ends The Night, MacLennan; Walk Through the Valley, MeCourt; Rainbow and the Rose, Shute; Scarlet Lily, Shipley; Dragoman Pass, Williams; Mountain is Young, Suyin; Witch of Blackbird Pond, Speare; North from Rome, MacInnes; Vietorine, Keyes. Juvenile: Farm Stories, Picture Story Book, Burgess; Books and Beaux, Campbell; Little Women, Alcott; White Patch, Earle; World in Space, Marshack; World of Pooh, Milne; Dog for Davie's Hill, Bice; Children's Beale of Trees; Totem, Tipi, and Tuinpline, Fisch- er; Golden Phoenix, Barbeau; Lit- tle House on Wheels, Hayes. Garden Club The Sow and Hoe 4-H Club met at the home of Margaret Haines with the leader, Mrs. Keith Mchan in charge. The president, Barb- ara Baechler opened the meeting with the 4-H pledge. The minutes were read by secretary Carolyn Clark, Roll call was answered by each member naming a vegetable in her garden that needed thinn- ing. A discussion took place about the record book covers, and it was decided to have black lettering on a yellow background. The next meeting will be held at the home of the assistant leader, Mrs, Ed Davies, on July 29, Mrs. Meehan gave an instructive talk on garden weeds and insects and how to control them. Mrs. Davies spoke on the food values of the vegetables and how to pre- pare and serve them. She told the members how they could improve the surroundings of their homes, cutting grass, trimming, painting the mail box and garden furniture and planting flowers, Each member reported her gard- en in good shape, and a demonstra- tion took place in the garden by Carolyn Clark and Margaret Clark showing the proper way of thinn- ing and transplanting. Lunch was served by Shirley Brown, Bernice McDougall and Carolyn Clark. Canadians Are Most Boat.Minded Folk Known In World One in 20, or 900,000 Canadians, today own boats valued at from $50 to $25,000 each. This makes Canada the most boat-minded nat- ion in the world, This year, factories will turn out 40,000 new boats, and 60,000 out- board motors. For do-it-yourself- ers, more than a dozen Canadian companies put out boat kits. These range in size from a $50 six-foot "pram" that holds one person, to a. sleek 21-foot cabin cruiser for $1,000. Pieces are precut and num- bered. Outboard motorboats are the most popular with Canadians. A few prefer the two-tone effects of newer models. These include "hardtops" and "convertibles" and "landaus". They have key-start- ing, power steering, moulded wind- shields, electric windshield wipers, tailfins, and speeds that reach 50 mph, The built-in buoyancy in tail- fins keeps the boat from overturn- ing if it swamps. All but the smallest crafts have remote steering wheels, forward- neutral-reverse gears, motorized bailing and electric starting but- tons. They're sold on easy payment plans, and you can get sail-now- pay-later credit cards for buying gasoline, oil and groceries. One Winnipeg boating enthus- iast spent a recent winter building a 16-foot runabout in his base- ment. In the spring he realized it was much too big to get out the door. He hired a wrecking company who dug up the founda- tion, knocked out the rear wall of his house, and removed the boat. The following winter, the foun- dation still hadn't been repaired. The boater had been too busy on Lake Winnipeg all summer. Rubber Stamps and Maring Devices of every description Also Stamp Pads Soh! by Clinton News Record WE SERVICE WHAT WE sal CLINTON The nation is paying too high a price for its annual summer vac- ation, claims S. W, Arch Bryce, general manager of the Canadian Highway Safety Conference, Recalling that about 1,000 per- sons were killed and 23,000 in- jured - many of them maimed for life - on Canadian Highways during last year's summer months, the safety official stressed that "the toll would never have been so high if the involved drivers had been able to stop in time." Mr. Bryce makes the following suggestions to motorists who want to stay alive and let others live wArrgx ralliFLECK5 tivium ,isoM1 eAmto ,o0 throughout the summer; 1, Leave plenty of space - one full ear length per ten miles 0 speed - between the front bunk+ per of your car and the car in front. 2. Stop driving if you feel sleepy or simply worried. 3. On long trips, stay alert, stop for relaxation and coffee every two hours or so. 4, Be patient in traffic jams, be courteous towards other drivers and pedestrians. Under all circumstances Make sure you can stop in time, Mr. Bryce strongly advised. 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