Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1961-07-06, Page 9• WHEN 1 HEAR, ABOUT Ni r. WOMAN, I AM CURIOUS TO SEE. THE MAN,THAT OUTSPOKE .• HER! • • • • • • s • • • • • • aeon r•••.••••• ••• HAROLD'S WHITE ROSE GARAGE Sp!t1AMATIrTRANSMISSIONS GE ERAL- REPAIRS IIV.1'1V 3 221 C1 INfONA ST. Norris Bouillon (11 pez .Correspondent) Tb e Norris family reunion was held on July 2 at the lav- ely home of Mr. and Mrs,. Ervin �5illery,. Tuckersmith Township, RR 1, Brucefield, In the morn- in•g it rained but this didn't dampen the spirits of the Irish Clan and over 80 sat Clown to dinner in the spacious shed, Whrle the delicious dinner was served, rain pattered on the roof. >±,ven the sun had to smile at seeing so many Irish enjoy- ing themselves. In the :afternoon a full line of sports were held, ending with a tug of war. This was a real contest of Irish spirit and br- awn before one side was de- clared the winner, Siliery's tle pony was a great attraction for the younger children. After races the young people enjoyed a ball game, while the older men played horseshoe and the women prepared supper. FARMERS We are shipping cattle every Monday for United Co-operative of Ontario and solicit your patronage. We will pick them up at your farm, Please PHONE COLLECT not later than Saturday nights. Seaforth Farmers Co-operative H. 5. Hunt, Shipper Phone 773 or 669 W 3 1 Cox2z rrNT QUALITY means more milk profits Consistent quality b Mueller balk tank manufacturing assures you a high quality performance Sn the milk house Where it pays off in profits, Economical direct -expansion re. bigeration in•aoth "atmospheric" and "vacuum," models ... sizes from 90 to 2000 gallons •built• t ih controls and either remote qr self-contained condensing unit& C.I.P. cleaning is an optional choice. Whatever features you prefer, they may be found in one of the varied Mueller models ... come in and' • let us give you the complete etary. Ask about our economy model "R" aeries ROY CULLEN R.R. 2, Clinton - - Phone HU 2-7207 • 27-8-9-b People ARE Smart! LAST WEEK THE CAR KING SOLD 5 New Cars 12 Used Cars These buyers saved hundreds of dollars in taxes by buying - NOW AT PEARSON'S HOLIDAY SPECIALS '59 Studebaker Lark Limited slip rear axle, wheel discs and other extras. See this one. You'll like it. Other dealers are asking $1,6951 395 Our Price ,Y r ,...�r..�=i. I�Lrr••. r•r.r!•rorm•Yrurmn '56 Monarch Richelieu V-8 Convertible Automatic, radio, power steering, power brakes, electric windows and seats, tri -tone, whitewalls. You'll have a great summer! Other dealers are asking $1,595 Our Price $1375 Pearson Motors LTD, Pontiac -- Buick Vauxhall -- GMC M- Redford Vans PHONE 608 EXETER PHONE 78 ZURICH NEWS OF KIPPEN (Corroopondlnt, i4R$.. M, .ONG, Phan. IffiR01113 40404) Mrs. Alen McLaren is visit- ing Mr, and Mrs. Ernest Inns. Mr. and Mrs, Norman Long visited over the weekend With relatives in Owen Sound and friends at Southampton, Mr, and Mrs. Elston Dowson are spending a month's holiday in the United States, ' Mrs. Russell Brock returned home Sunday since being hos- pitalized a few days in St, Jo- seph's Hospital, London. Mr. and Mrs. Larne Schneid- er and family, Stratford, visit- ed Monday with Robert Thom- son. Sunday guests with Mr. and Mrs. Elzar Mousseau and Mr. and Mrs. Ross Faber, included Mr. and Mrs. Car -man Wood- burn, Greenway; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lamer, Peterboro. Mr. and Mrs, Frank Plumb and family, Mr. and Mrs. Ro- bert McLean spent .a few days recently at Burks Falls and the Parry Sound ,district. Miss Jean McNaughton at- tended the 4-H girls conference at OAC, Guelph on Tuesday, June 27 to 30. There were six girls from Huron County, and 204 altogether. Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Wren visited recently in Hanover at the home of their son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Wren. Mrs. Ernest Waines (Hensall Correspondent) Mrs. Erinest Waives, 68, pr- ominent resident of Cowen Sound, and mother of Mrs. Ron Mock, Hensall, passed away in South Huron Hospital, Exeter, on Sunday, July 2 wh- ere she had been admitted on Friday evening. Mrs. Waines, who has been in poor health for some months, had been staying with her son- in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs, Ron Mock since February. She was the former Lillian Cutbush .of Owen Sound and widow of the late Ernest Wain - es. Survivors are two daughters, Mrs. Ron (Kathleen) Mock, Hensall; Mrs. L. E. (Margaret) Seabrook, Waterloo; one son, Kenneth, Owen Sound; and one brother George, Owen Sound. The late Mrs. Waines rested at the Bonthron funeral chapel Hensen en Sunday and was taken on Monday to the Breck- enridge - Ashcroft funeral chap- el, Owen Sound, for •public ser vices at First United Church, Wednesday, July 5 with inter- ment in Greenwood cemetery. OUR HAPPY PHILOSOPHER -3'fiii i � •ilt '� I •) 4:* °Utz Q Y oli��osoPH I GOTA FISHERMAN FRIENQ 1 CALL MOSES,. ' BECAUSE EVERY TIME HE OPENS HIS MOUTH, THE BULL RUSHES''. r MI -ter, eV:, : "FEATURING THE ORLD FINEST TELEVISION" "'TED"RYDEC" ,4T.V.—RADIO SALES — SERVICE OPEN TILL lOP_M. HU,2.9320 CLINTON Mrs, A, van den Burg, 1-101' land, is visiting two months with her son-in-law and dough- ter, Mr, and Mrs,. A. van Leon and faarily. Mrs. +S. 1'Ynenburg and family, New Work State, were recent •v'is'atorts, Mx. ;and Mrs, Harold $hen- and and family, Toronto, visit- ed during isit-edduring the weekend with the let'ter's brother-in-law and sister, Mr, andMns. ,Tames Me - Naughton an dfamily, Jean re- turned to Toronto with them for a few weeks vacation, Tour to Niagara Pupils of T ekersmith School Area enjoyed a bus trip to Niagara Falls on Wednesday, June 28, They visited the his- toric site of Fort George, the Park and Brock's Monument, At the 'Hydro plant they were shown slides, a floral clout de- signed' esigned• and built by Hydro Workmen, consisting Of thous- ands of plants with a water garden at the base of the clock stocked with fish, They toured the hydro plant, went down the elevator with rock walls to the bottom of the cliff where the children watched the con- trol 'room and generators in, action, They also viewed the famous falls and the rainbow that hangs over the Horseshoe Falls, which is known as an omen of good luck, and the wax museum. On the way home they wat- ched boats going through the Welland canal, Wild Carrot By Any Name Spreads Rapidly Queen -Anne's Lace is known to most people as "Wild Carrot" and is spreading across the countryside at an, alarming ;rate, says J. D. Curtis of the Field Crops Branch of the Ontario Department of Agriculture. Wiled carrot is an annual or a short-lived perennial which is found in vacant lots, waste places and ,farm meadows. It can be easily identified by its. carrot -like ,odour, fine Lacey leaves and umbels of white flowers. This weed 'spreads by seeds which are very easily car- ried by the winter winds over the snow. Wild carrot is easily control- led in cultivated land because cultivation prevents the•forma- bion of the rosette which, the following year, produces flowers and seeds. Pasturing with sheep for two successive years is also a most effective remedy. It is necessary to have more sheep than you can pasture all season on the carrot field, . !because it is quite important that the field is cropped' very closely. The sheep should also be forced to. clean up the fence bottoms thus preventing any seed production. Most wild carrot can be con- trolled with 16 to 24 ozs. of either 2, 4-D or 2, 4-D/2, 4, 5-T acid per acre. It is necessary to spray this weed in early spring to kill the rosettes that will flower that year and to spray in the fall to kill rosettes which will .flower the next year. Detailed control measures are contained in Publication 75, "1961 Chemical Weed Control Guide" available from Huron County agricultural represent- ative Douglas H. Miles, Clinton. Slow, "sightseeing" driving on a crowded, 'narrow highway may be much more dangerous - for others - than speeding, says the Ontario, Safety Lea- gue. The more you slow down, the more following drivers boil up. Notice to Destroy Noxious Weeds NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to property owners in urban and sub- divided areas to destroy all Noxious Weeds as, often as necessary in each season, to prevent their going to seed. Also, after July 22, 1961, pro- ceedings will be taken to destroy Noxious Weeds in accordance with the Weed Control Act. ALEX CHESNEY Huron County Weed Inspector 1744) Down in the Salt Mine Backgrounded by a massive salt seam, the Hon. George Hees, Minister of Trade and Commerce, examines salt from the undercutter and drilling machine on the 1,700 -foot level of the large Sifto Salt Limited rock salt mine in Goderich. The mine now produces 3,500 to 3,800 tons daily, is rapidly expanding production to a level of 5,000 to 6,000 tons daily and hopes to export 25 to .30 percent of production. Rock salt is used largely in the chemi- cal industries and for ice and snow control on high- ways. Mr. Hees was in Goderich on June 28 to open the Eighth Annual Trade Fair sponsored by the Kinsmen Club of Goderich. Peter Bisback is vacationing with John Goddard at their summer cottage. Dr. J. C, Goddard, Mrs. God- dard, Beth, Peggy, John and Joan, are on vacation. Ken Richardson ,has taken a position on the staff of the Bank of Montreal, commencing duties Monday, July 3. Mrs. Ruth Bell has returned home from a business trip to Harrisburg, Pa„ and Washing- ton, D.C. Jerry McClinchey has ac- cepted a position on the staff of the Bank of Montreal, com- mencing his. duties on Monday, July 3. Russell Hedden, and child- ren, Karen and Kevin, St. Catharines, spent the weekend holiday with Mrs. Catherine Redden and Herb. Mrs. Lou Simpson, who has been a patient in Clinton•Pub- lic Hospital for the past four weeks, returned home Sunday. Her daughter Mrs. Gus Voth, Detroit, will stay with her mother for a while. Visitors on Sunday with Mrs. Rheta Charles were her daugh- Celebrate After 40 Years of Married Life (Hensall Correspondent) Mr. and Mrs. Herb Keroher, Hensall, who observed their 40th wed'd'ing anniversary on June 29, celebrated the occas- ion with a family dinner on Sunday, July 2 at the Dominion Hotel, Zurich. The date also marked the 12th wedding anni- versary .of their son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. S. Jef- fery. Mr .and Mrs. Kercher were married 40 years ago in Crom- arty by the late Rev. David Ritchie, and moved to their present farm in Tuckersmith, Where they have since resided. The bride was the former Myrtle Wright, They have three children, Mrs. James (Margar- et) Jordan, London; Ross, at home, and Mre. Spencer (Doris) Jeffery, Sit'affa; also three gr+andchilclrerr, Judd, Ruth and Billy Jeffery. After a delicious dinner dur- ing whish an anniversary cake was served, the family present- ed their parents with a stainless steel electric skillet and the grandchiidtren gave them a cup and saucer. The bride of 40 years wore an orchid corsage and thegreom a bouttoniere, :also gifts from the family. They also wished their parents many more years of happy married life, ters and sons-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Scott Robinson, London; Mr. and Mrs. Robert Hanra- dine and their daughter Bev- erley, Sodus. N.Y. Alex Shorthouse, St. Cathar- ines, accompanied by his neph- ew Mike Shorthouse, visited at his home here over the week- end. Miss Gwen Shorthouse returned with them for a two weeks' holiday. Mrs. J. E. McEwen, Hensall; Mrs. Valerie Armstrong, Mrs. Alvin McBride, Exeter; Mrs. Owen Norman, Woodstock, re- turned home Thursday from a six weeks guided tour during which their itinerary took them through England, Belgium, Austria, Ireland, Scotland, Italy, Paris, Montreux, Switzer- land. One of the most impressive. sights they saw during their travels was a war memorial in Edinburgh in a castle in the mountains. They flew to the continent by plane and re- turned on the SS Homeric. 0 SS 2 Tuckersmith Picnic is Enjoyable (Kippen Correspondent) SS 2 annual school picnic was held on the school grounds on Monday, June 26. About 70 people sat down to supper. The teacher, Miss Dorothy Turner was presented with a trilight lamp and a blanket. The pres- entation address was read by Billy McNichol and the gifts presented by Robert Cooper and Bob :McNaughton. Sports were directed by Miss Turner. Races were won by: pre-school, Janet Klaver, Gwen Dayman; six to eight years, girls, Joan Finkbeiner, Shirley Dayman; boys, Nicholas Klaver, Jim Cooper; nine to 11, Joan Sinclair, Karen Littleton; boys, Gary Dayman. Ray Finkbeiner; boys, 12 to 14, Bob Cooper, Bob McNaughton; Young ladies, Margaret Jean Broadfoat, Susie Mae Lostell; young men, Lloyd Lostell, David Cooper; young married ladies, Margaret Consitt, June Cooper; married .ladies, Babe McGreg- or, Bernie Finkbeiner; married men, Howard Finkbehner, Jack Cooper. Kink -the -slipper, girls, Jean Sunclair, Karen Littleton; boys, Gerald Dayman, Gary Dayman; ladies, Mrs. Klaver, Hazel Me - Naughton; men, Bob Cooper, Al Kyle; Ladies calling husbands to dinner, Grace Cooper, Mary Broadfoot; men calling cows, Laird Pinlayson, Jack Cooper, Gerald Dayman; thread the needle, JackCooper and Ruby Finlayson; Billy Charters 'and Jean nieNattghiton; balloon race, Brian ,Dayman, Billy Chanters. Well Drilling Don't put off drilling that needed well any longer . do it now! For Fast, Efficient Service and Experience CONTACT: Durham Drillers BOX 2(19' DURHAM, ONT. Photo (cgllec.t) 6-R-5 Allan Park Thursdart July a, 1961.- -Clinton Noes -Record P o 9 Changes in find Expropriation Law Asked For By Federation Brief (By J. Carl Hemingway) Zone 2 of the Federation of Agriculture comprising Bruce, Grey, Huron, Perth, Welling - 101, anal Waterloo was asked to present .a brief on Land E'x- prepriation to the Select Com mittee of the Ontario Govern- meat on Monday, June 26 at Kitchener, To co-ordinate their ideas a meeting was :held i n Harriaton on ,Tune 20. Here are some of 'the recommendations with some comment. That there be a trial of -"pub- ha pub- ile necessity" before a project be allowed, (One county repor- ted that the only reason given for rebuilding A. curve on a highway was to 'the effect that the provincial government had made this. amount of money a- vail.abie to this county and if they didn't spend it some :other county would get it, Whether there was need or not had little bearing on the question,) A complaint that was com- mon to all counties was the fact that the compenaation to the owner resulted in the buy- er trylilntg to buy :as cheaply as possible and the owner trying to get as much as possible with little regard for a fair settle- ment for ,all. Municipalities in many cases, are very careless in recording changes in deeds at the registry office. (An example was given where the municipality had paid for the same strip of land three .times and was in the process of 'negotiating for it a fourth time, all because the previous purchase had not been properly registered.) Another unanimous complaint was the fact that some 'of these acquiring agencies simply start work and bargain after- wards. (The most recent exam- ple: a Hydro gang arrived at the farm and informed the ownerthat the line was to be moved from the road to his fields and proceeded to set stakes and cut trees for this purpose. Unless you get the shotgun or the police, ,he job will be done and you can want for settlement at the leisure of the acquiring party.) These are a few of the most glaring ;problems that face an ever -,increasing numiber of far- mers and' it is hoped that they can; be solved. At the present time a farm writer could hardily avoid the temptation to comment .ojnl .the recent "Budget". The drop in the value of the Canadian dollar seems to be of parbteul'ar interest It should have a definite bearing in in- creasing the cost of imports and in most cases it will mean a corresponding Increase in the domestic price. It should also make our products of the farm easier to sell abroad. This, too, should bring about an increase in price at home. But will it? is private enter - Classified Ads Bring Quick Results prise going to. export enough pa'odugt to increase domestic Price substantially" This would be an opportune time for Co -Operatives to get• meta the -processing field 4n or- der Ito take advantage of the favourable trading Position, At time of writing there has been no increase in the cattle prices yet the stock market xe- acted immediately, It would seem ;to mean 'that present sell- ing agencies of beef are not interested in fncreasing the price to the producer through export channels. FOR BARNS re ,. .•a • t!; HOWARD FLO.R BAIT FLY KILLER e..rl.. WNI, M.I.IM.. 4)11 FARM BUILDING 4. • or • Kills Flies Fast! • 95% kills in 4 hours • Kills all resistent flies • Contains malathion andD.D.V.P. • in 24 oz., 5 Ib. and 25 Ib. cans For a Fly Free Farm For Sale at H. F. Wettlaufer's FEED MILL MARY STREET — CLINTON HEY KIDS OF ALL AGES .. . LOOK WHO'S COMING GODERICH FAIR GROUNDS WEDNESDAY JULY 12 Starting 8.30 p.m. ti ONE SHOW ONLY #OUd'$ Of , q /TOMOT/V "WY WE USE EXCLUSIVELY FINA GASOLINE DUNLOP TIRES Presented Through the Courtesy of Your Dealer 6OD,ERIH MOTORS LTD. FORD - MQ,NARCI -- FALCGN -- 'THUNDERBIRD South St. abliERICH, ONT. JA 44308