HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1959-11-26, Page 9AGAINST THE REVOCATION
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CLINTON, ONT
K-3600
11
.17ILIRSDAY, ViVit.D.R. 26, 1,959 (744301011-KEWSrAYXXXP
F
TOWNSHIP OF STANLEY
NOMINATIONS
NOTICE is hereby given that a Meeting of the
Elector; of the Township of Stanley in the County of
.1rivran, will he held at the Township Hall, Varna, on
FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 27th, 1959
between the hours of 1 p.m. and 2 p.m., for the purpose
of nominating fit and proper persons for the offices of
Reeve, Deputy RCM, Three Councillors, One School Area
Trustee for the year 1960, and three School Area Trus-
tees for the years 1960-1961.
NOTICE is also hereby given that if a greater
number of candidates than required to fill the said
offices, are nominated and make the required declara-
tions, polls will be opened in the said Township of Stan-
ley on
MONDAY, DECEMBER 7th, 1959
from 9 o'clock a.m. until 5 o'clOck p.m. of the same
day, of which all Electors are hereby requested to take
notice and govern themselves accordingly.
Dated at Varna, this 16th day of November, 1959,
JEAN ELLIOTT, Clerk.
46-7-b
yrs,..c.harles 'Throop
r !Moral service was conducted.
Tuesday' afternoon, November 13,
for Mrs, Charles M, Throop, by
the Rev, H, Fong% in Londesboro.
United Church, assisted by the
Rev. William Mains, Einbro.
Pallbearers were Thomas Oliver,
Clifford Adams, John Adams, Wily
icon Jcmitt, Robert Armstrong
and Edward Dongan. Flower-
hearers were Alex Wells, Charles
Vodden, Thomas Knox and Nelson
Lear.
On leaving the church a. guard
of honour Was formed by mem-
bers of Regal Chapter No. 275,
order of the Eastern Star, as
acknowledgement of °sacred ties
severed, memories tenderly .cher-
ished and sympathy for loved
ones."
Born in the village of Londes,
bar° on February 23, 1889, Mrs,
Throop was formerly Eleanor
Mains, daughter of the late Mat-thew mains and Margaret Coe137-
erline. She spent spine of her
early years in London and Toron-
to, and 1n July, 1918, was trail:-
fered by the William Wrigley Jr,
Company ito their Chicago office,
where she remained for Many
years, Paring that time she took
active interest in the work of the
Englewood Methodist Episcopal
Church, acting as woman's repre-
sentative on -the church board;
president of the Wesleyan Service
Guild and the Woman's Christian.
Union Organization, She was al-
so a valued member of the Engle-wood Woman's ,Club and the ME
Old People's Home,
On April 19, 1.930, she married
Charles .ThroOP;• who passed away
on April 3; 1951. At that time
Mrs. Throop „returned to the fam-
ily ',widened in Londesboro.
Although health did not permit
Mrs, Throop' to take an active
part, she was always interested
and ready to help with any wor-
thy cause for the welfare of hum-
anity. She ,met her own illness
with great faith and patience.
Mrs. Thittop was predeceased
by her parents, also one sister,
Miss Elizabeth Mains, and left to
mourn.their -loss is one • sister,
Margaet Jane (Jean) Wells and
brother-in-law Harvey Wells.
Mrs, Bert Atian—correspent(ent
Cordon Radford left by plane
on Sunday morn' mg for a trip to
the Southern States,
Everett Fort Erie, called
on Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Honking
last Saturday evening. Be is a
son of J1=0 1-1111, formerly of
Londesboro,
Mr. and Mrs, Louis Ruddy, Ali-
burn, were visitors with Harvey
and Mrs, ][dunking: ,on Sunday.
Miss Dorothy hate and aunt,
Mrs. Eentham, Oshawa, were
weekend visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. R. Townsend.
Mr. and Mrs, William Wells
and Douglas spent Sunday after-
noon with Mrs. Robert Youngblut
who celebrated a birthday on the
21st,
Mr, and Mrs. John Armstrong
and Howard Armstrong, Const-,
mice, visited their brother Fred,
Hamilton, on Sunday, He is a
patient in the hospital at present,
We hope soon to hear of his re-
covery,
Women's Institute
The WI will hold their next
meeting on December 3. A Christ-
mas message will be given by a
special speaker. Roll call to be
answered by a donation for the
shut-ins. Mrs. Margaret Ander-
son has kindly consented to de-
monstrate fancy cooking.
Woman's Association
The Woman's Association held
their November meeting at the
home of Mrs. Wilmer Howatt
with a good attendance, The presi-
dent took the devotional part of
the program, Several good read-
ings were given, thank-you cards
read and a motion was moved and
carried that two dozen hymnals
be bought for the church. Lunch
was served by the hostess.
Good vision is extremely impor-
tant in good driving. The Ontar-
io Safety League points out that
one driver in four needs eyeglas-
ses, or needs his present glasses
changing.
the
PIONEER RA
chain saw is good...
TOWNSHIP Of TUCKERS:MTH:
CLERKS NOTICE OF FIRST POSTING
OF VOTERS LIST
floirlpg is hereby given that I have complied with
Section 9 of The Voters' List Act and that I have joostod
up at my office at Tucitorsznith on the 14th day of
November, 1959, the list of all persons entitled to IMO
Tan the said Municipality at municipal election and that
such list remains there for inspection,
AND I hereby call upen.ail voters to take .irruned late Proceedings to have any errors or omissions ,cor-
rected according to law, the last day for appeal being 'the 28th day of November, 1959,
DATED this 14th day of November, 1959.
CORA CH ESN EY, Acting Clerk,
Township of Tuckersrnith.
ANNOUNCING
The Opening Of
Russ' Service Slap
RADIO AND TELEVISION REPAIRS
TO ALL MAKES AND MODELS
RUSSELL FABER, Prop.
Graduate of Radio Electronic Television Schools
PHONE 66501 SEAFORTH
47b
TO HURON VOTERS
REMEMBER . . .
The only SURE way to keep out the BEVERAGE ROOM
it to retain the C.T.A.
HEAR
JOHN E. MOONS
.Chairman
Huron Citizens
Le9al Control
Committee .
FRIDAY 11:25 P.M.
CKNX — TV
Voting on the petition to the Governor General
requesting the revocation of the Order in Council
which brought into force Part H of the .Canada
Temperance Act In the County of Huron.
FOR THE REVOCATION
10 Mr
THE C.T.A.
,PLACE YOU R "X"
HERE
LONDESBORO
46-743
HERE'S Cori/air BY CHEVROLET'
WITH ENGINE IN THE REAR
WHERE IT BELONGS
IN A COMPACT CAR
We knew Corvair's engine had to
go in the rear if we wanted a com-
pact car with big car ride, big car
room, big car performance — and
,maximum efficiency. And that
,called for the most drastic revolu-
lion in auto design and manufac-
luring Canada has ever seen. What
.does a rear engine mean to you as
.driver or passenger?
.MORE SPACE The floor is virtually
flat. The short "opposed six" engine
lakes up less space, leaves more for
passengers.
.FAR BETTER RIDE-Every wheel can
• sop up a hump without affecting any
other. So the ride is far softer-and
the wheels cling to the pavement
better.
.GREATER TRACTION-Try a Corvair
on mud, or snow, you'll be astounded
by the difference in road-grip and
control,
. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE
BETTER BRAKING — Corvair is de-
signed to put an almost equal brake
load on every wheel; the rear end
maintains solid, sure traction for
smooth, straightline stops in-virtu-
ally any situation.
LESS NOISE, LESS HEAT - Engine
noise, heat, fumes are behind the
passengers; carried away by the wind
stream as you drive.
LESS MAINTENANCE-Corvair's air-
cooled engine never needs antifreeze,
never boils in the hottest weather. It
warms up quicker in cold weather, so
there's much less cold-start wear.
BETTER HANDLING-Corvair's "flat"
engine and lower floor gets the centre
of gravity 'way down; it rides rock-
solid through the tightest turns. Steer-
ing is light as a feather, will never
need power assistance.
LESS NEEDLESS WEIGHT - Corvair's
power plant is mostly aluminum.
And it's air-cooled no need for a
radiator, water pump, hoses or even
the weight of the water itself. And
there's an added plus here; we de-
signed a gas-fired car heater* that
gives warmth almost instantly.
Engine, transmission, and rear axle
are all bolted together into one solid
power unit. We save literally hun-
dreds of pounds, and that makes a
whopping big difference in perform-
ance and in gasoline economy.
THE RIGHT ANSWER - It took a
terrific amount of engineering and
Chevrolet's tremendous resources to
design, test and set up production on
a precedent-shattering car like Cor-
vair, But the first time you get behind
the wheel-you'll agree it was worth
every penny and every hour!
*Optional at extra cost.
BUT
the all-new
PlOINIEE
GOO,
BETTE
Brilliant Pioneer engineering
has produced a better saw for
the professional woodsman,
Faster cutting than the RA—lighter
than the EA.—better than the
RA... that's the kind of saw
you need if you make your
living with a chain saw.
Sold By
ROBERT GLEN
R.R. 5, Clinton, Ont.
Phone: HU 2-9909, Clinton
FUEL.
HOUSEHOLD
BILLS,
Vote AGAINST Revocation
To RURAL VOTERS: If you lose the C.T.A. you will
have no further opportunity of voting on the BEV-
ERAGE ROOM or other outlets in your town or vil-
lage.
Vote AGAINST Revocation
If C.T.A. is lost—We can get—
In municipalities that were not under Local Option
before C.T.A.
Liquor Stores, Beer Warehouses, Wine Shops,
and application for Club Licenses, without
further vote.
In municipalities that were under Local Option
before C.T.A.
No legal outlets can be put in without a vote.
Vote -AGAINST Revocation
Bootlegging flourishes in counties under the L.C.A.
Changing the Act will make no difference to boot-
legging.
Vote AGAINST Revocation
If voters of Huron choose to retain the C.T.A. strong
representation will be made to the dominion govern-
ment at once to improve the present Act by amend-
ments.
Vote AGAINST Revocation
F. R. HOWSON, Chairman,
Huron C.T.A. Committee.
• SALES
BUSINESS •
FINANCING
Huron Citizens Legal control Committee
JOHN E. HUCKINS, Chairman
Corvair
BY CHEVROLET
the happiest driving compact car
WHEN PILED-UP BILLS
SAY "GET A LOAN
CALL T.C.C.
ON THE TELEPHONE
CAR
WRAIRS
WINTER
HOLIDAYS
Thare's nothing 1110 a now car ... and no compact oat
1110 the de luxe Corvalr 700. Loans from $160. to $2,500. or more.
Take up to 30 months to repay on a wide selection of
loan plans.
Prompt, dignified service.
148 THE SQUARE, PHONE 797
GODERICH, ONT.
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