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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1962-02-01, Page 11Wed in Zurich Church MR, AND MRS. FRITZ WALTER COOLMAN, Exeter, were married in St. Bonif ace Roman Catholic Church, Zurich, on Saturday, January 13. The bride is Marcella Monique, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julien Verlinde, RR 2, Hensall. The groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Basil Coalman, RR 2, Bear Line. (Photo by Doerr) BY DOROTHY BARKER HOW TO COOK COLUMN FOR MEN Show .the Little Lady. he " LOC Fa 11 y aecurity $251 00 LIFE iNsuRANcE (20-year reducing convertible ANNUAL PREMIUMS rance) Age 30 $59.95 Age 35 7 59 99:105 OCCIDENTAL LIFE W. C, Foster 304 Andrews St., Exeter Age 40 .„,„„ ... $111.23 Age 45 ..,,,,,,,,.. 173.23 "Term Insurance on the Best Terms" "More Peace of Mind Per Premium Dollar" Phone 317 Feb.. wing tips off the wings, erwh "be sr ill clove of garlic and put it into a bowl along with the fine chopped ginger, sugar, accent and bean sauce and leave it sit for 20 minutes. Dip each wing into the Jattea and p7a:ie in a covered casse- role that the bottom's been moistened with the oil, pour the rest of the sauce over them and put into an oven at 350'. After 15 minute's turn them over :and start on your rice, they should be finished in an- other 20 minutes, I guarantee raves, -Serve with bowls of steamy rice and sit back and wait-for compliments, •, ..004439Vfm. , 7)O T" $144$14 O)14Mg' The slush your wheels 'throw on to another car is always an irritant, and can also be a hazard, says the Ontario Safety Lie mite. ,Coa8•Iderat'on when c14.1', lying can often avoid, or mini- Mize ineonvenience to other drivers. A 'selfish, driver, speed- ing and swerving to bull his way ahead in heavy traffic will often coat the cars he Passes with an unnecessary spray of salt awl grime, What is worse, he may also spatter' the other d irews with the infection of his ill manners, •and dangerous im- patience. Special at Clinton Electric Shop BALL & MUTC HEAR YE! LOOK YE! 4-day ti -a-than' SLEEP SETS by SIMMONS ...EkeArsuofTthye famous by shouting about — Simmons' gorgeous new Countess mattresses. Because they're. such a good buy, we're offering them at these incredibly low prices ... many famous Simmons features are incorporated in. Countess: QUILT-OP SA 4legg ve 64the iviORE! for Set SieeP $99 59 °MP • air vents • gorgeous covets • durable prebuilt borders • Simmons "Auto-Lock" construction .• take advantage of this introductory price while It lash! BALL MUTC.H 1 H ardw HU 24.950$ are way Now cover the pot with the• tight lid, put it on low heat an I forget about , it for a half 'hour, If someone takes the lid off the pot to look` at it, the rice is ruined , . . so throw it out and start over, This, maybe sounds tempera- mental but, boy, do they re- .9pect you as a chef from then. on. GINGER CWCEEN WINGS Ingredients: 14 pound of chicken wings per adult, tea- spoon of mazola or olive ell, it cup of soya bean sauce (the ""in" people call it bean settee), 2 tablespoons sugar, a clove pf garlic, 2 pieces of ginger (this is sold in the stores as candied ginger and comes in a white package with purple printing at 29 cents a small box), and a couple of shakes of accent if you have it. Preparation; cut the little Hockey Star If Glenn Hall, spunky, spark- ling goalie for the Chicago Black Hawks had not learned to play hockey on an outdbor rink in the prairie town of Humboldt, Saskatchewan, he would probably have followed in his father's footsteps and become a CN engineer, Instead he submits to 60 minutes of mental torture 70 times ai year, playing target for a disc of hard rubber being hammered at him from all angles by players of other NHL teams. There must be something in the air of prairie and mountain provinces which breeds courage and a well !developed sense of sportsmanship. It cannot be the calm, flat vastness, the sloughs frozen at this time of year and fringed with a blanket of snow, the little poplars with their ruching of frost, or the big tinsel stars that seem to hang so close to earth on the hor- izon's edge. Yet hardly a week passes that some evidence of the derring - do of westerners does not make headlines in our Canadian press. Humboldt is a railroad town in the heart of Saskatchewan. It has the customary number of storage elevators for local grain crops, the camaraderie for which the west is famous arid in 'winter, outdoor rinks frozen to glacial perfection by weather that often dips alarm- ingly below zero. It was in this atmosphere that Glenn Hall found his hockey legs and developed his uncanny prowess in goal. As a child he rode the rails in the cab of his father's big CN en- gine and readily admits he is- TA going to raise his son to be a goalie — maybe a railroader — such is the thread on which destinies hang. They Ohnis For Fun Twelve people undertook an- other kind of sport last spring when the urge to climb mount- ,airs turned into a feat of ac- complishment. The heading of a recent story in the Star Weekly was bait for my read- ing, "Cliff Hanging at Iihrton", it read. My memory of Hinton, Alberta, as I sped along the trans Canada mainline of the CN toward Vancouver, was a pile of wood contesting in height with nearby mountains and puffs of smoke from a pl- ant the porter described to me as the largest pulpwood mane- faetueing Cencern in the west, Strangely enough I didn't as- sociate persons with this Pro- ject, just heaps of Wood and mere Wood. But people there are in Hine ton, Among 'then twelVe rather oddly asserted folk according to the sterY, ranging frem 12 year-old boy te a gland- mother .nib less. Once having' adinitted their desire to Scale a induntaits they didn't gt, about it iS a gaol- hardy way, They engaged a Profeasional theUntain gait* to teach *on the topea. Willy Pfister& lives in the village of clasper. likes to boaat that father and grandfather of Austrian heritage guided, at one tin* in lid A104. fib adValiced train eeS gt= itiltrat *dm ,easy eloPea 2,200 foot climb of nearby Mount Morrow. This period' in their mountaineering career was called "rock school". Some of Willy's, pupils were content to rest on this conquest while others 'began climbing more dif- ficult peaks. Some finally hired Willy to continue their train- ing with a special "ice school" on perilous, creva_ss. crossed Athabasca gleeier. - Dedicated Railroader Last week, while this one grandmother's ambition to cl- imb a mountain made interest- ing copy another took to rail- roading with renewed verve. In her 87th year, Mrs. Sallie Fowler Lovelace owns her own railroad. It was a gift from her daughter and runs electrically on ' a . specially constructed table. "I took my first ride on a train when I was 'only 10 years' old and I've loved them ever since. In 1384, engines had bolls and belched thick black smoke that smelled of adven- ture", she remembered. Today the chief engineer of this miniature railway satisfies her taste for travel from an armchair, remembering the journeys she made, her imag- ination taking her to far away places aboard her gift train going around and around and around. Humboldt, Hinton, mountains and trains stirred my wander- lust. From thecupboard be- neath the old pine dry sink I rummaged out a dog - eared brochure of Jasper National Park ,and read, "When men — and women too — want 'to meet mountains, they journey to Jasper Park Lodge. One trip will tell you why For this is a mountain summer resort, ringed by the ranges of the Canadian Rockies, Every com- fort is 'at your command in this alpine retreat — built to blend with the ,beauty of theAthe- baska Valley: That's my dish! Classified Ads Bring Quick Results I Photographs Are a fatting memento of oil special occasions. WEDDING PHOTOS Our Jervis Spetiatty- i Stud 10 130 Itrioc Si. HU 2-7006 * • Andrew Qrindlay, Los Angel- es, Calif., spent last weekend with 11/4r- and Mrs, Fred Middle- ton. On leave from the staff of the University of Western Ontario, London, Mr. -Grindlay iti presently taking his doctor- ate at the University of Los Angeles, Calif., and with his wife (nee I3erbp.ra Middleton) and daughter Carol, plans to re- turn to live in, London later this year. The WoWna4en'TsoAl‘eUxiltry of S t, James Anglican Church, Mid- dleton, will meet Wednesday afternoon, February '7 in the church at 2.30 p.m, Installation of officers for 1962 will be con- ducted by the rector, the Rev, E. J, )3, Harrison. Roll call word is "honour", There will be no this A successful social evening was held in SS 9. (Tipper ery School), Gederich Township on Friday evening, January 26 by the Women's Auxiliary of St. James Anglican Church, Mid- dleton, President Mrs, RAY Wise warmly welcomed all pre- sent. Twelve euchre tables were in play and a large number of young people attended. Prizes went to: ledies, high, Mrs David Deeves; low, - Mrs. Ed Wise; men's high, John Smith, low, Alfred Hudie. Most lone hands, John H. VariNinhuys. Lunen was served' by the Ladies. Mrs. Henry (Dell). Garrett Funeral service was conduct- ed on Saturday afternoon from the Ball and Mutch funeral home, 153 High Street, Clinton, for Susan Cordelia, (Dell) Gar- rett, who passed away in North Toronto Nursing Home on Jan- uary 25. The Rev. Clifford G. Park, Wesley-Willis United Church officiated. Pall-bearers were Harold. Lawson, Harry Ball, Joseph Sil- cox, Harold Swan, Herb Bridle and Bill Mutch. Interment was in Clinton cemetery. Born on June 19, 1876 at Clinton, she was the daughter of Henry William Cook and Permilla Mitchell. She married. Dr. Henry Garrett. They liv- ed at Winnipeg, Manitoba; Hamilton and Clinton and for the past six years, in Toronto. Mrs. Garrett had been for about three years. Surviving are one daughter, Miss Lillian Garrett; one bro- thers, J. E. "Cap" Cook, Clin- ton; five sisters, Mrs. J. T. (Lyda) Ross; Mrs. W. A. (Et- ta) Pridham; Mrs. W. J. (Lot- tie) Dyment; Mrs. G. (Minnie) Boyer, Mrs. R. (Ruby) Dick- son,' all of Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Wilmer Mc- Manus, (nee Helen Cook) Windsor were among those ate tending the funeral. Also at- tending were three sisters, Mrs. Boyer, Mrs. Pridham and Mrs. Dyment. Savings !accounts in Canadian chartered banks 'totalled $7.6 billion in August, 1961, an in- crease of 5.4 percent from Aug- ust, 1960, 11 3. I >iI4 STEVENS. Let's face facts men , . . we have always been better cooks than the little woman . . we might dirty more pots and dish- es 'along the way, but we turn out much better eoolcing! If you're going to set your- self up as the chef around the block de it right, pick out one dish and specialize! During the rest of the win- ter, until spring and charcoal barbeque season rolls around, I'll give you same of my secret Chinese recipes. Before we get to the meat of the recipe, (a pun) let's Jobless Service Comes To Clinton GOD -P.111CH (Staff)—Clinton and district residents will soon be able to apply for jobs and have UIC enquiries completed locally, said national employ- ment service manager J. D. McLeod Thersday. Miss Fraeces Armstrong, ern, ployment officer of the Gode- rich NES will be at the Clinton town hall the first and third Thursday of every month, starting in February. She will answer any inquiries and take applications from local persons seeking employment. Unemployment ins ur an ce claims will still be looked after 'by the main office in Goderich, manager McLeod said. PORTER'S HILL MRS. DONALD HARRIS Phone HU 2-3162 The annual congregational meeting at Grace United Chur- ch was well attended. Rev. W. C. Sreith was chairman and Argyle Lockhart secretary. The following officers were appoint, ed; John Torrance, Ray Cox, Argyle Lockhart, members of 'the session; Elgin. Cox, William Cox, Keith Cox, Donald Harris, Austin Harris, board of stew- ards; Ray Cox Keith Cox, Al- len Betties, trustees; Mrs. Ais. thur Bell, Mr. and Mrs. Argyle Lockhart, Thomas Sowerby, parsonage 'hoard; Austin Harris Argyle Lockhart, fires commit- tee. Mrs, William. Cox, organist; Mrs. Austin Harris, assistant organist; Mrs. Mary' Manning, Sunday School superintendent; Mrs. Elgin Cox, assistant sup- erintendent; Allen Betties, aud- itor; Keith Cox, clerk of con- gregation; Donald Harris, ch- urch treasurer; William Cox, M and M treasurer. The session reported 40 resi- dent members and 17 non-resi- dent members. The financial reports of the church treasurer and of the various' organiza- tions All Showed increased re- ceipts in 1961 as compared to 1960. Model WS-2 CUSHIONED- ACTION WASHER with Automatic Pump learn one of 'the ,proper to cook rice. IIOW. TO COOK RICE. The :list thing is to select the right kind ()ii rice ask your grocer for long grained rice . , „ that's not too hard is it? You must remember and you'll see as we go along that take the easy and short way of cooking Oh yes, I buy a rice called "super patina" in 25 pound sacks. Me secret . . wash it! Wash the rice and wash it until the wash water runs clear, Find a pot with a tight fitting lid and leave enough water in the pot so that when you. put your hand 'in, flat on. top of the rieee the level of the water comes to your second, knuckle, Maybe putting your hand in the pot gives the rice that cer- tain flavor . . , I've alWays had good results. MIDDLETON Big 9 lb, capacity porcelain tub--washes large or small loads . Cushioned-Actibn gyrator, moulded from smooth Stain-free Bakelite--treats dainty fabrics gently, yet washes thoroughly . Autornatie Non-C109 Pump empties vvather in just 90 seconds . safe wringer control autoniati- caily locks wringer in position e Adjustable' pressure for heavy or tight fabrics Chrome plated feed beardS . Safety release—a slight touch UP instantly releases pressure . Pive year Warranty—five year parts Warranty on main transmission. Clinton Electric Shop D We Cornish, Proprietor HU 2.6646 Clinton WHITE SALE SPECIAL PRICE 109.95