HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1960-11-03, Page 5.e.s.egeef ...e;eate
Young Reporters Visit Printing Plant
Reporters from CDCI who are responsible for the production of the "At
the Collegiate" feature each week visited the News-Record plant briefly last
week, to gain some idea of how stories find their way from the written word
to the newspaper pages. From the left are Gary Jewitt, Dewayne Elliott, Ken
Scott, Peter Robertson, Janet Henderson and Gloria Rumball.
(News-Record Photo)
000 M EATS Ar vAEAL sAv109
— AT
CLINTON MEAT MARKET
Grant Irwin and Art Colson, Proprietors
Ready To Eat
SMOKED PICNIC SHOULDERS 0* 49( lb.
FRESH DRESSED
PICNICS — Lean Only 39( lb.
Sweet Pickle
COTTAGE ROLLS — Lean 0.1,, 59( lb.
Fresh
BEEF TONGUES and HEARTS Only 39 lb.
Phone HU 2.3834
King St. Clinton
S
PRESENTING the film
"They Looked For A City"
A story of a Jewish family and their struggle for
survival in Eastern Europe.
PLUS SPECIAL MUSIC
Clinton Legion Hall
Saturday, November 5 at 8 p.m.
FREE ADMISSION EVERYONE WELCOME
South Huron Youth For Christ
-,1••••••••
I
Kiwanis Music Festival
STRATFORD — MARCH 6-15,1961
OFFICIAL SYLLABUS Now Available
Write for Free Copy
P.O. BOX 103, STRATFORD
Take your
Best Duds to
the People who
know Cleaning!
BY DOROTHY BARKER
WESTERN ONTARIO'S MOST EXPERIENCED
TRAVEL SERVICE
ce
frf %AMISH'
TOUVIS.,4 titter.ZtRESRAIVATtONS
441..44
filEATAirillEirr. TICKET, ,."
Stan Blowes - Guy Cissac - Muriel King - Niels HanSen
Stan Blowes, formerly 13 years with anti. City Ticket
Offices, 9 years District Traffic & Sales Manager for TCA,
12 years conducting above Travel Service:
Guy Clestee, formerly of Paris, France, 10 years as
European Tour Conductor, 5 years Travel Service experience
in Canada.
Muriel King, 2 years Travel Service experience.
Niels Hansen, most recent employee, 5 years with East
Asiatic Steamship Company, Copenhagen, Denmark,
(Over 50 years combined service). Agents for all Air-
lines, Steamships, Tours, Cruises, Delve-ler-Self ears. All At
No Extra Gest, Various European languages spoken, Will
arrange time Payrnerit plans. Passports and European Pre-
nd Ca
aids arranged, US discount allowed on trips outside USA
anada.
See of call the Stan Blowes Trovei Service,
32 Wellington Street, Stratford, Phone 170
4 ilnet to servo you
Clinton Branch, No. 140 of the
Canadian Legion
Invites You To Attend The
Public erbice
of Remembrance
in the
Legion Memorial Hall, Kirk Street
Friday, November 11, 1960
at 9.45 a.m.
Chairman—REV. D. J. LANE, B.A„ Legion Chaplain
Speaker—REV. E. J. ROULSTON, B.A.,
All Legion Members and Veterans are requested to
assemble at the Clinton Public School at 9,15 am.
to parade to the Legion Hall,
After the Service—Parade to Cenotaph at Post
Office for Wreath-Laying Ceremony.
Town of Clinton Service of Remembrance under auspices
of Clinton Branch No. 140 of the Canadian Legion
and the Clinton Ministerial Association.
Legion Church Service
ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 6
at 10.45 a.m.
Legion Members and Veterans will meet at the Legion
Hall at 10.15 a.m. and parade to the church.
Black Knights Favour Union Jack
Champions of English Rights For AU
Honey at Teatime
In Baking And
For a Spread
The English, who cherish
their tea time habit, are fond
of honey with toast, muffins
or tea biscuits on, this occasion,
In this country, people are
more apt to use honey in other
ways—as a spread at break-
fast, or in 'baking.
Honey has the same sweet-
ening power as sugar but in
addition it contains moisture.
It is therefore necessary, when
replacing one cup of sugar in
a recipe by one cup of honey,
to reduce the liquid ingredients
by approximately one-quarter
of a cup. Honey is added with
'the liquid ingredients in a re-
cipe. For baked products,
liquefy honey by heating it ov-
er warm water (not over 140"
F.) before measuring. Light
greasing of the mewing
utensil prevents the honey
from sticking and being wast-
ed. Honey should net be store
ed in a refrigerator advise
Ontario Department of Agri.
culture epeciallets,
Honey makes a good sauce
for fresh fruits, fruit salads,
ice cream, pancakes or waffles,
steamei puddings and ginger-
bread, Variety may be achiev-
ed by combining honey with
lemon or lime juice, or with
nuts, fruits or cocoanut, For
a spread, honey may be mix-
ed with butter,
To use honey as a sweetener
in cold beverages or punches,
blend the honey first with, a
little hot water to make a .syr-
up. Allow a quarter-cup of
honey to one stiffly beaten egg
white in meringue topping for
cake dessert or one-crust pie.
Iii cakes and cookies, replace
no more than half the sugar
with honey and make the
necessary reduction in liquid.
Honey tends to keep baked
products moist.
are not thinking of the religion
of the man beside you, but how
good a job you can do,
"We know there is a great
demand in Canada from various
groups and many prominent
individuals who say Canada
should have a distinctive flag.
This may come, but I trust when
it does the Union Jack will be
embodied in it. The Union Jack
embodies the things for which
the British nation has stood
through the years. For years,
when this country was not able
to defend itself we were under
the folds of the good old Union
Jack. Now do we want to drop
it—leave homer
Other speakers were Mrs.
Ruth Day, Hamilton, past grand
mistress of British America,
Ladies' Orange Benevolent As-
sociation; V. Wor Sir Knight
William McIlwain, Bayfield;
Rev. Grant Mills, Clinton, and
Rev. J. T. White, Londesboro.
Among head table guests were
Harry Collins, Woodstock, de-
puty grand master of Ontario
West; Borden Brown, Walton,
county master, Huron County
Orange Lodge; Harvey Jackson,
North Huron county master;,
Mr. and Mrs. William Campbell
and Mr. and Mrs. William
Crawford. Vocal numbers were
given by Sharon Strong, Clin-
ton, who also led the gathering
in familiar songs.
0
Boy Scout News
(By Steven Cooke)
Wednesday our new Scout-
master "Bud Graham" took
over the troop for the first
Mime. Several things were dis-
cussed and set straight as to
the procedure of troop meet-
ings. Several troop necessities
were purchased out of the
troop fund which has almost
depleted itself, Several badges
are now in stock so you may
expect a badge ceremony soon
similar to that of the Queen's
Scout Ceremony.
`BLOCKADE'
FATIGUE
SPONGE MAT
REG....2.98
A reversible Jeer mat mode
of see resilient spangle
rubber with sealed tapered
edges for extra sorely. "Patch
Quilt " design on one sido
and modern texture design
on reverse side. Size 18" x
30".
BALL and
MUM
IHA Hardware
Phone HU 2-9505
Every once in a while I re-
ceive a letter I like to desig-
nate as "fan mail". Far from
home and lonely as a homing
pigeon, I picked up my mail at
the hotel desk and noticed one
letter bore a Seattle postmark.
My correspondent began, "I
read your column every week."
I flipped over the envelope a-
gain. Sure enough, "Seattle"
read the postmark.
It appears this reader has a
friend in Seattle, who has a
cousin living in Piston, Ont.
This cousin sends the weekly
paper from that town, and in
turn she loans it to her friends
and neighbours. This explains
why my fan club has gained
an international alliance.
The letter was written be-
cause this particular person
said she enjoyed reading a-
bout the people I meet while
travelling and my trials and
tribulations with George, the
gardener. There was also an
invitation for me to visit these
admirers of the Vagabond wh-
ile out west.
While reading this letter, it
oceured' to me that the most
colorful and certainly the cut-
est pattern in Canada's mosaic
is the variety of native child-
ren one encounters while trav-
elling from coast to coast. For
instance, when our train pul-
led into the station at The Pas,
two inky black eyes of a tiny
papoose peered at me over his
mother's shoulder, I wrote a-
bout the Eskimo children who
giggled and laughed their way
into my heart, In Vancouver's
Chinatown I found One of the
most beloved toys of my child-
hood had come to life, She was
a mite of a Chinese doll, dres-
sed in silken robe, her black
pig toile swinging from her
shoulders to her Waist. She
'teetered On a miniature pair
of wooden shoes built on tiny
Little people of all national-
ities have winning ways, but
it is a lass with russet hair
and eyes as large and as blue
as a willow pattern saucer who
unconsciously made copy as the
dayliner tooted its Way across
the praste fields.
It always =Lime me how
very formal people are when
they first board a train. This
plump teenager tucked her bl-
ue organdy skirt in folds be-
tween us on the imitation
leather seat of the dayliner.
She tried to let on I didn't
evert exist as she took three
comic books end a chocolate
bar from a paper bag. I blink-
eel twice when. I read the titles
of the two books out of the
cornier' of my eye, "Teenage
Love" and "Katlinfe First Love
Adele,
Dayliners are the Medern
Charles E, Asquith
(Auburn Correspondent)
A life-long resident of Aub-
urn community, Charles Eldred
Asquith passed away in.Clinton
Public Hospital on Thursday,
October 27.
He was the son of the late
Mr. and Mrs, Alfred Asquith
and was born in 1885 in Aub-
urn, He was a school teacher
for a humber of years, and
then operated the apple evap-
orator. In later years he had
a wood-working shop until ill
health forced his retirement a
year ago.
lie atteaded St. Mark's Ang-
lican Church faithfully for
many years, being a delegate
to the Synod of the Diocese of
Huron. He was also vestry
clerk of St, Mark's congrega-
tion, He was as member of the
Carlow Morning Star Lodge,
Besides •his sorrowing wife,
the former Amy Houghton, he
is survined by two sons, A,
Reginald, and C, Harold, two
daughters, Miss Mary E. and
Mrs. Donald D. (Betty) Olde
rei-ve, all of Toronto and four
grandchildren; also a sister,
Mrs. F. 0. (Gertrude) Mc-
ilyeen, Oshawa.
The funeral service was held
at St. Mark's Anglican Church
on Sunday, October 30, con-
ducted by the Rev. Robert
Meally, with interment in
Ball's Cemetery, Pallbearers
were six nephews, Frank Mc-
Ilveen, Dr. Charles Menveen
and Donald Mellveen, all of
Oshawa; Dr. Gilbert, Ajax;
Bob, Guelph, and Eric, Wood-
stock. A Masonic service was
held on Friday evening at the
J. Keith Arthur funeral home.
The funeral was largely at-
tended with friends and rela-
tives from Sault Ste. Marie,
Toronto, London, Guelph, Osh-
awa and other points in West-.
ern Ontario, Besides the beauti-
ful floral tributes, donations
were given to the Eye Bank of
the Canadian National insti-
tute for the Blind.
0
If you wish to be perfect, fol-
low the advice you give to oth-
ers,
0
Make it a habit to keep your
feet on the ground and you'll
never have far to fall.
replica of the old stage coach.
They stop at any Hamlet they
have express for and while un-
loading, the station agent and
train crew get caught up on
all the local gossip. They un-
load boxes of biscuits for the
grocer, dry goods for another
merchant, an axle for the gar-
age, or a piece of plumbing to
modernize a farm kitchen,
It was during one of these
prolonged stops that my seat
mate asked me if I would care
for a drink of water. This was
the ice breaker. From then on
her wonderful western dispos-
ition bubbled in friendly chat-
ter. She said she was thirteen
and had been minding the thr-
ee children of her brother wh-
ile he and his wife worked.
Youngest of the brood was
three months and the oldest
could only boast of three sum-
mers,
When sne told me how she
cooked all the meals, made br-
ead, washed the children and
cleaned the house I came to
the conclusion that "Kathy's
First Love Affair" couldn't
lead this young miss very far
astray. She already (mew more
about the facts of life than
grandmother's aunt.
I • told her I was bound for
Drumheller and this sent her
into an ecstatic description of
her beloved "Drum". Her fa-
ther, she said, was a miner
for years, "But of course ther-
e's hardly any coal mining in
Drum any more." She knew all
about pensions, lack of markets
for coal, how many gallons of
oil were pumped each day for
storage from the producing
wells in the area and where
the best dinosaur bones could
be found.
She was concerned about
how I was going to get my
luggage from the station acr-
oss the street to the hotel
where I had a reservation and
when we arrived pointed out
the various places of business
where I would find the men
I had come to interview.
I mention this Chiefly be-
cause this was a new variety
of teenager in my experience.
She laughed! like a child while
telling me about the chief win-
ter sport in. "dear old Dtt.11/1",
sliding down hills on the hoods
of old cars, and then sobered
up and with a serious little,
frown remarked, ",l\ty dad's al-
most an Minings pretty
hard and now that he's retired
MOM and I have to look after
him. But I guess that's all ri-
ght. Lee looked after us for a
long, long time."
A western teenager, a lovely
child and a mature woman all
rolled up in one human being.
Shell be a cateh for some
cowboy!
Mr, and Mrs. Emmerson
Hesk and Debbie were Sunday
visitors with the Durnins,
Mr. and Mrs. Hoag, Luck-
now were Saturday visitors
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Feirservice.
Mrs. David Gardiner, Crorn-
arty, spent a week recently
with her daughter, Mrs, Wil-
mer Howatt.
Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Curls,
Arkona spent Sunday with the
litter's sister, Mr. and Mrs.
Ed. Youngblut,
Cpl. D. W. Holmes of the
O.P,P., Sturgeon Falls, spent
Thursday evening and Friday
with the Durnine.
John Armstrong, Wilmer
Howatt and George Carter re-
turned last Tuesday evening
from their cattle buying trip
to the West,
Mrs. Jennie Lyon who has
spent the past few weeks with
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gaunt re-
turned on Sunday to her dau-
ghter's home tin Hamilton for
the winter months.
Mrs. Edna Holmes, Mr. and
Mrs. Jack Hooper, Barbara and
Barry, all of Dresden visited
with the former's sister, Mrs.
Durnin and Harry on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Durnin
Stratford, spent the weekend
under the parental roof,
Anniversary
Anniversary services of the
United Church were observed
on Sunday, October 30 with
Rev. Henry Flange opening the
service. Rev. R. McKay, M.A.,
13.D., Rosedale, Toronto, was
the guest speaker, giving two
very inspiring messages,
He chose "The Dimension's
of the Church of Jesus Christ"
for the morning discourse fol-
lowed by "The Nature of the
Church " at the evening sere
vice, The male quartet of Blyth
sang two splendid numbers,
"Lord I Adore Thee" and "My
Shepherd is Leading Me Home"
accompanied by Miss Margaret
Jackson. The choir also favored
with a fine anthem "I Was So
Glad", Mrs. Tom Allen offic-
iated at the organ.
At the evening service Harry
Lear contributed the beautiful
solo "The Stranger of Galilee",
the choir gave the anthem
"Angel of Hope". The fine
music, two splendid sermons,
and a large congregation to-
gether with 'beautiful sunny
weather contributed to the
success of the anniversary
services.
R. Wor, Sir Knight Harold
A. Watson, London, grandmas-
ter of the Grand Black Chapter
of Ontario West, Royal Black
Knights, was guest of honor Fri-
day night at a reception and
banquet sponsored by Huron
County chapter in Ontario St-
reet United Church hall, Clin-
ton, The gathering of 'about
125 included at the head table,
many senior officers of the Or-
ange Order, Black Institution
and L.O.B.A.
Max Switzer, Woodham, coun-
ty master of Huron Black Ch-
apter, presided over the pro-
gram and welcomed the guests.
Oliver Jacques, Exeter, past
county master, and Walter Sc-
ott, Blyth, spoke in high praise
of the work of Grand Master
Watson.
"We feel that the Sir Knight
at the head of our Order is one
of the mainstays who have help-
ed to build it up through the
years and uphold our tradit-
ions," said Mr. Jacques.
After the grand master's re-
sponse, he was presented by Mr.
Jacques with a brief case and
pen and pencil set.
The grand master called upon
members of primary lodges to
accept duties when called upon
and not offer excuses. In ser-
vice clubs, he said, "It doesn't
matter whether you are a bank
manager, business manager or
clerk, you don't say no, you just
do your job.
"We thank you all for what
you have done in the past—
and we have a very good record
—but we are living in modern
times. People will say to you
that the relief of Derry and
the battle of the Boyne were
more than 200 years ago, and
ask, "What are you doing to-
day?" No person wishes to join
unless he knows we are doing
something for mankind.
"We believe in equal rights
for all, special privilege to none;
we stand for one school, one
language, one flag and that the
Union Jack. We are in favor of
the public school, where all re-
ceive equal education and train-
ing.
"I see children going one way
on the street to public school
and others going the opposite
way, to separate school, but
they play together in the play-
grounds. In our armed forces
Protestants and Catholics sold-
ier together. In industry you
Thursday, Noy, 3, 1909 Clinton Nows,Racard Page
News of Londesboro
Correapoiedeni, MRS, .014134
Phone Myth 37 r
LUCKY NUMBER THIS
WEEK IS '1328
Check Your Calendar. If
the numbers match take the
calendar to our office and
claim your $3.00 credit.
Don't trust
to luck with
second best
care. Trust us
Mrs. Rose Longford
Mrs. Rose A. Langford, 86,
Clinton, died Monday at the
Clinton Public Hospital. She
had been ill since suffering a
stroke in 1956.
Born in Hullett Township,
she was a daughter of the late
Mr. and Mrs. William Vodden,
and was a life-long resident of
Clinton. She was a member of
St. Andrew's Presbyterian Ch-
urch.
Her husband, Wilbert (Bert)
Langford, died in March, 1956.
Surveying- is one son, Harold,
Cooksville; •one daughter, Miss
Larene, Clinton, and one broth-
er, Albert Vodden, Clinton.
Private funeral service from
the residence, 9 Rattenbury
Street, East, Clinton was held
Wednesday afternoon by the
Rev. D. J. Lane, St. Andrew's
Presbyterian Church. Interment
was in Clinton Cemetery.