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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1959-07-23, Page 3CLINTON .NEWS-RECORP BY DOROTHY BARKER Competitive Prices Pius Personal Service SPECIAL VALUES AND REMINDERS THIS WEEK 1,114,0,,..0,04,414,0•00.4.1.4.0#4.4,.."14.11.44.11IN INP044,114^41' MINUTE MAGIC NEW DEEP CLEANSER with instant action! Quick as a flash, new 2 Min- ute Magic starts cleaning Through and through...down it goes with the all-out, deep- cleaning action every skin needs for lasting loveliness. It's creamier . yet grease- less. In just 2 minutes leaves skin refreshingly clean . • with such a velvety finish you need no make-up base. Buy it today! 6 oz $1 50 by DOROTHY GRAY NININOVININIININNININ114.4.04~4.44.04,""h141,4 4.4.04,0•••••••NINO,PIa.#0.41^4,00 ININOW`04141, I.D.A. SPECIALS JULY 20-25 PAPER NAPKINS. 16 oz, For Sic IDASAL TABLETS 300-59c VACUUM BOTTLES Reg 98c-79c WHITE RAIN LOTION SHAMPOO Reg. $1.25-98c SILVIKRIN SHAMPOO 2 x 150 SACHETS With 75c Size I.D.A. SHAVE CREAM 39c EVELYN HOWARD COLD CREAM 1 lb. Jar — 69c YARDLEY DRY SKIN CLEANSING CREAM Reg. $3,50 — $1.75 AYER LIQUID LUXURIA DEEP PORE CLEANSER Reg. $2,50 — $1.50 AYER NIGHT CREAM Reg. $2.75 — $1.35 REVLON WHITE LIPSTICK 25c with purchase of $1.25 refill VITALIS WITH FREE TRIG 69c SCHICK RAZOR With 10 BLADES 79c NOXEMA SPECIAL 2 x 65c Jars — 990 UNIQUE PHOTO SERVICE F. B. PENNEBAKER 2H-U66n2te6r DRUGGIST by Trii-4;e2.6 Saritc;,-, of GENERAL FOODS KITCHENS Raspberry jam is one of the easi- est to make, as well as the most delicious, so why not try this very successful recipe? RASPBERRY JAM 4 cups prepared fruit (about 2 quarts ripe raspberries) 61/2 cups (23/4 lbs.) sugar bottle Certo fruit pectin To prepare fruit, Crush com- pletely, one layer at a time, about 2 quarts fully ripe raspberries. (If desired, sieve half of pulp to re- move some of the seeds.) Measure 4 cups into a very large saucepan. To make your jam. To the meas- ured fruit in saucepan, add 61/2 cups sugar. Mix well. Place over high heat, bring to a full rolling boil. Boil hard 1 minute, stirring constantly. Remove from heat, stir in Certo at once. Skim off foam with metal spoon, Stir and skim for 5 minutes to cool slightly, to prevent floating fruit. Ladle in- to glasses. Cover at once with la inch hot paraffin. Makes about 10 medium glasses. When we mention "pectin" many women say "I don't really under- stand what it is", Well, pectin is simply the jelling substance found in all fruits in varying amounts. Corte is pectin extracted from fruits rich in this natural sub- stance, then refined, concentrated and performance-controlled, So naturally, when you use Certo and follow the tested Certo reci- pes, your jam and jelly always sets perfectly! Preserving Pointers: It's a good idea to temper all new glass jars before using, in order to prevent breaking. Simply place the jars on a rack in a pan, cover with cold water, and then heat gradually to the boiling point. Keep canned fruits in a cool dark place. The darkness protects the color, the coolness helps pre.- serve the flavor, Keep an eye out for My neat column which will have another recipe, ay the way, if you have any problems with your jam and jetty wish you'd let me know. I may be able to help yOU, THEMORAIA PLAIN FOR Au TO GEE,, 'WHEN YOU NEED CASH SEE T.C.C: THURSDAY, .11.3.1.a.Y 23, 1.959 Lawn Clippings May Be Left Or Raked Up According To Conditions The well-worn controversy of What to do with lawn clippings cornea up every summer. And no One seems to know the answer. , Lawn specialists of the Ontario AUSTIN MORRIS MERCEDES-BENZ Sales and Service Quality USED CARS For carefree, summer vacation driving. CITIES SEAY CE GEO. MILLER'S CITIES SERVICE SEAFORTH PHONE 149 rommemetamisour BE MODERN DRIVE A CONVERTIBLE CHOOSE ONE OF THESE FIVE From The Largest Dealer In Huron '59 PONTIAC Parisienne Convertible — equipped with power steering, power brakes, radio, whitewalls, finished in cameo coral, driven a few miles by Mrs. Pearson. SAVE HUNDREDS OF DOLLARS. '59 CHEVROLET Impala Convertible — power steering, power brakes, radio, new car, finished in crown saphire, traded in on new Buick. '57 METEOR Rideau`300 Convertible—automatic drive, power eteering, custom radio, very low mileage, finished in gleaming red with black roof. Priced to sell. '55 OLDS. Storfire 98 Convertible — hydramotic drive, power steering, brakes, selectronic radio, electric windows and seats, executive driven only 33,000 miles. '53 FORD Convertible—with radio, four new tires, finish- . ed in powder blue, driven since new by a woman, only 40,000 original miles. A real buy! 65 Other Used Cars To Choose From! HERE ARE A FEW EXAMPLES OF OUR LOW, LOW PRICES: '56 DODGE SEDAN—Only $1,295. '55 PLYMOUTH HARDTOP—automatic, radio, etc. Only $1,395. '53 CHEVROLET SEDAN—Only $595. '50 AUSTIN—Only $99. We Have 11 Models in 1958 Sedans, Coaches, Hardtops. MAKE US AN OFFER Pearson Motors clippings, they say. Most people do leave the clip- pings on the laWn, This is correct if you follow a regular, frequent mowing schedule and. leave a few clippings each. time, However, un- der certain condition% not raking clippings might cause the grass in. Here are some eases when it will pay to cart away the clip- pings; When the grass is wet at cut- trig time. Any wet clippings gath- er in clumps and block the pass- age of light and air to the under- lying turf, which may then smoth- er and rot. When the clippings are especially heavy. When bentgrass is the main component of the lawn. When the clippings are full of crabgrass and seed heads, Remov- ing them will cheek their spread. Reasons for letting the clippings remain depend on the heat and your soil. Clippings settle down near the roots and supply a mulch which cools the soil and serves as a spongy layer for retaining water. Decaying clippings supply nut- rients during the summer. And if you live by a vacant lot, wind- blown weeds will have difficulty working through the barrier of clippings. a Goderich Preparing For Dial Telephones Plans are underway by the Bell Telephone Company of Canada to arrange for dial telephones in Goderich. The dial exchange building has been built in the coun- ty town, and workmen are now in- stalling the dial phones in homes and explaining the • workings of the new equipment. Cut-over in Goderich will be staged some time this fall, and then all long distance calls placed in Goderich will be routed through the Clinton exchange. A cable is now being laid be- tween Goderich and Clinton to carry these calls, It is an exten- sion of the link already existing between London and Clinton. The Bell plans that eventually Clinton will be centre for all dial calls throughout this part of Wes- tern Ontario. All long distance operators will work in the exchan- ge building here on Rattenbury Street West. 0 The six Ontario villages that had to be moved because of the St. Lawrence. Seaway power dams ate combined in the new towns of Ingleside and Long Sault. Maybe it was the housewife who dashed from her kitchen door wav- ing her dish towel as the Royal Train passed by, or it could have been the little girl who held her puppy on top of her head so that it too could see her Queen, that made the lump Come in my throat. I am not usually given to emo- tionalism when on assignment, but the spontaneous fealty and nation- al display of loyalty as the Royal Train passed through the little villages and towns along the way, gave me a new conception of my fellow Canadians' attitude toward Royalty, While thousands packed the streets of the built-up areas per- haps one of the most impressive displays of homage to Elizabeth Regina was the shirtless farmer who stood on the seat of his trac- tor amid a field of ripening grain and waved his sweaty cap with frantic enthusiasm. As we pro- gressed over the hundreds of miles it was not unusual to see a provin- cial policeman climb from his cruiser at a deserted level cros- sing and stand at salute until the train passed by. I was touched by the many ex- pressions of welcome home owners beside the tracks had invented, One shabby little hut had a long row of coffee cans painted bright flag blue, In each one was a single red or white petunia. On a long, thin fishing pole a tiny Union Jack fluttered in tatters. In another neat little garden patch an imaginative tenant had constructed a miniature ferris wheel. Each of the tiny seats was painted red, white and blue and in them grew a profusion of red and white flowers, But I think the bravest and, in a way, the most pathetic attempt at decora- tion was the huge factory where some worker had pasted tiny Union Jacks all over the windows on the third story. I didn't miss this patriotic gesture and I am sure the Queen didn't either, There was time to see these little human interest angles of the Royal Tour while the train was in motion, but let it pull to a stop for a few moments and bedlam broke loose in the press parlor car, Cameras were grabbed and polite regard for the feminine sex was completely ignored. It was every man for himself in the wild scramble for a vantage point. The lucky ones were those who left the train first or those who could run the fastest. During the pull through central Ontario, taxi bills mounted like the national debt. One after an- other of the reporters, intent on getting a new angle, missed the train and had to pick it up at the next station after a wild ride in a cab. Fortunately Her Majesty had requested a slow ride between stations in order that she might wave to her subjects who lined every country road. Otherwise there might have been a great gap in coverage for some of the papers represented by those sprin- ting, sweating, swearing newsmen. During one of these scheduled stops a tall, gangling bleached blonde put her swollen feet on an empty seat beside her and announced she intended to "sit this one out". She was hardly the movie director's idea of a woman reporter out to get a scoop or die in the attempt. After all, she rea- soned, the Queen wore the same dress all day, said practically the same thing to each mayor in each town, accepted a bouquet of flow- ers from a small child, waved to her subjects as she drove by in a fast-moving car and returned to the' train. Why should she waste her breath and subject her swollen feet to another presenta- tion of a municipal council and their wives. When a little more than the scheduled time had elapsed for the stop she woke with a start from her fitful dozing. "What's happened, where's the Queen, why isn't she back on the train?" roll- ed from her tongue in quick suc- cession. She grabbed the porter by the shoulders, shook him sound- ly and demanded "What's the de- lay? My G , the Queen of Eng- land may have broken her leg or some Red may have taken a pot shot at her and I'm not there to get the facts." Just as she had about convinced herself that an atomic attack had happened while she slept on the job, the train began to roll again. Such is the nervous, sometimes almost hysterical condition news- hounds of the daily papers whip themselves into in an effort to bring a report of the tour to their readers. Perhaps, if some of them have been overly imaginative, sometimes almost cruelly critical, stress can be blamed. I was glad mine was a feature writing job with no daily deadline to make. I could sit back and relax. in the handsomely appointed car, relish the superb meals and enjoy the scenery that greeted the Queen's eyes too, fifteen cars behind ours, "IIMMINNE0000.1•001•••1111••••.- CHAPMAN'S Barber & Beauty Shop CLOSED from Monday, July 27 to Monday, Aug. 10 28-9-p VAGH THE= cerned the bank's proposal to. build the branch fronting close to the edge of Highway 4 and a Department of Highways regula- tion that the bank must be built 17 feet back from the highway. Contract for the '55 by 36 foot structure of steel frame, with block, brick and stone walls, was awarded last month to Toten Con- struction Company Limited and work was to have started irameta, lately, Department of Agricultural admit that a firm rule does net exist. It is the actual condition of the lawn at cutting-time that tells. just what is to be done with the Limited "HURON COUNTY'S LARGEST DEALER" " ZURICH — EXETER ((( tai TRANS CANADA CREDIT 7584 11111NO..0...„ OH WOE TO MY POOR HOME'S DISGRAC E, BUT WHERE'S THE CASH TO FI,X THE PLACE? Clinton Memorial/Shop T. PRYDE and SON CLINTON — EXETER — SEAFORTH Thomas Steep, Clinton Representative Phones — Bus., HU 2-6606 - - Res., HU 2-3869 11, reserve ahead... '.:'IrwitptrAak'FAsTy, r • AIMMIVNINWOMenefitibtak CHEER UP, GOOD FRI ENP AND HAPPY BE IT'S TIME TO VIM T.C.C. TRANS CANADA CREDIT OF1PORATION LIMITED 148 THE SQUARE, PHONE 797 GODERICH, ONT, WELLTHAT WAS QUICK AND PLEASANT TOO, THE HOUSE WILL GOON BE GOOD AS NEW I Do You Need Cash for Home Repairs? Trans Canada Credit's all-Canadian loan service stands ready to help you whenever a loan will relieve a problern, borrow from $150. to $2,500, or even more. tip to,20 Months on some plans, up to N months on others. New Bank Branch Delayed at Hensail Construction start on the new Bank of Montreal branch in Hen- Sall has been delayed over a dis, Pate between bank officials and the Department of Highways on the location of the bank, Reeve John Henderson, Hen- sail, said the disagreement eon- VISIT THE Real Living Santa June 19 to Thanksgiving Fun For All The Family CHILDREN TO 14 YEARS FREE 9.30 a.m. to 6.00 p.m. Sunday: 1.00 to 6.00 p.m. SANTA'S VILLAGE Bracebridge, Ont. 24to30b FOR YOUR PAINTING & DECORATING INTERIOR & EXTERIOR ESTIMATES ON REQUEST V. M. BRUNSDON Phone HU 2-9949 or Blyth 37r19 28-tfb Everyone Reads The Classifieds