Clinton News-Record, 1962-02-15, Page 10Page 10,Cliatan 'News-Record.-Thurs,, Feb, i K 1962
For Photos With 'Extra Appeal-,
Try .Framing Your Subject
YOUTHFUL FIGURES
ARE WHAT YOU GET,
WHEN YOU ASK A WOMAN
HER AGE
OLD PAL
• 6000
YOUR ARS BEST FRIEND
HAROLD'S
WHITE ROSE.
G A it AAG E
SPECIALIZING IN AUTOMATIC
TRANSMISSIONS
GE ERAL — REPAIRS
H11,1.9011 2 "v7 `431'*;„
•
• •
• •
•
•
•
0
•
• •
0
•
•
•
0
•
0 •
or,
BY DOROTHY DARKER
FARMERS
We are shipping cattle every Monday for United
Co-operative of Ontarip and solicit your patronage, We
vyill plek them up at your farm.
Please PHONE 001,1_ECT not later that SatkirdaY
nights.
Seaforth Farmers Co-operative
H. S. Hunt, Shipper
Phone 669 W 1
An Important
Announcement From
RADFORD'S
GARAGE .
Londesboro
NOW is the time to
examine your farm
machinery for those
necessary repairs.
14‘14*111S
GET THOSE NEEDED
itter""
DONE NOW
FOR SPRING!
We Carry a Full Line of Repair Parts for
OLIVER TRACTORS AND FARM
IMPLEMESITS
Also Ports for George White Implements
We Carry a Complete Line of TIRES for Cars.
orrid Farm
Tra ctors, Trucks
Implonterfis
We Invite You to Examine our Line of New
Oliver Tractors & Farm I ents
Also on hand USED TRACTORS and FARM IMPLEMENTS
ID YOU KNOW?
We Handle
ONTA R10 OATS
R.T.ri1STfPRED 17%
HILLSIDE LAY MASH
Manufactired in Our
otvn mill
REGISTERED 32%
5.ffiLiSIDE DAIRY
CONCENTRATE
BEET PULP
BRAN
SHORTS
SOYA BEAN MEAL
OIL CAKE MEAL
SALT for Livestock
as well as
WATER SOFTENER
SALT
MOLASSES
WHEY BLOCKS
Complete Line of
LIVESTOCK
MEDICATIONS
MASTER FEEDS
NATIONAL
CONCENTRATES
CIL FERTILIZER
We Deliver
H. F. WETTLAUFER
..air FEED MILL HPP4E92
To pack "punch" into your
pictures, try framing your sub-
ject.
You can take good pictures
simply by exposing a roll of
film. But add a dash of imag-
ination, and your prints will
take on an "extra something"
that commands attention.
For example, landscapes pro-
vide some excellent photo pos-
sibilities at this time of year.
You could have some reason-
ably attractive photos by mer-
ely stepping out of your car,
setting your camera and shoot-
ing from where you are at the
moment.
But, on the other hand, you,
could scout around. Perhaps
you'll find two branches which
frame a beautiful view, And you
might decide to place a model
between the branches, with his
back to the camera so that
the viewer is led into the scen-
ery. Now the photo has been
transformed from a routine sh-
ot of the countryside into some-
thing !artistic,
By framing a landscape sc-
ene, your photo takes on a
sense of depth, a "third - dim-
ensional" effect. Framing's gr-
eat •advantage is hat it pro-
vides emphasis. One feature
stands out unmistakably as the
reason for the photo. A "fram-
ed" photo has a point — it
Safe
Motoring
By LUDWIG HEIMRATII
Canadian Race Car Driving
Champion
A word to
those "peek-a-
boo" winter-
time motorists.
How often a
man comes out
from work 'to
his parking lot
to find, fresh
snow has fallen
or drifted over
his windows ?
Ludwig He is in a hur-
l-Leh-math ay to get home
so he only cleans off enough
of , his front window to get a
"peek-a-boo" view of the traf-
fic he'll face going home. Cl-
ean all windows, right around
the car and whisk some of the
snow off the roof too. That
often blows down the rear win-
dow once you get going, It is
difficult enough under winter
conditions to see properly but
don't make it worse With just
a "peek-a-boo" window. There
might be some merit, just for
the embarrassment value alone,
if a "peek-a-boo" motorist
could be pulled off the road
and' be made 'to Clean his car
windows eompletely.
L FRANK
, DECAPSE H KNEW WHCRE" 44.6 WO, , AND' GET' COURTEOUS
SERVICE AT
,
REASSMOLE RATES, ,
thee
was
NEATINGOILS.GASOLINE
OtEASES,MOTORDILS
joi7.41.X,17
At The 'Library.
(IIy MISS EVELYN JcIALIG)
Means something.
Framing also draws interest
for other reasons. For example,
it gives 'the viewer a sense of
completeness, a feeling that
nothing more could' be done to
complete the picture.
Further, it focuses attention
directly on the subject and pre-
vents the viewer's attention
from wandering, And framing
makes it easier to produce a
finished print of top-notch in-
terest.
You can frame your picture
with a tree, a shrub, an out-
cropping of rock. But you don't
have to trek into the country
for a frame. All you need is a
Pardon Me:
Compared to me, Mohammed
was a piker. According to leg-
end he pleaded with the moun-
tain 'to come to him and when
it didn't budge, Mohammed, it
is related, went to the mount-
ain. In a recent column, with
one sentence I moved not only
a mountain, but an entire prov-
incial park from the mainland
of British Columbia to Van-
couver Island. Not satisfied
with this feat, I evaluated 'the
park to one of national stature.
I never do anything by halves,
I can assure you Garibaldi
Park. is still right where it
has always been, just a pleas-
ant trip from the city of Van-
couver.
I should never stop for a
cup of coffee while in the midst
of writing this column for in-
variably I pick up something
to read and my trend' of
thought is' often sidetracked
That is what happened on
that particular day. I read an.
article about Emily Sartain, a
resident of Victoria, B.C., 'who
is a well-known painter of
flowers. My flight of fancy was
off at a gallop. I conjured up
memories of all the lovely flow-
er gar I dens, had seen on Van-
couver Island, as I continued
to read about this interesting
woman,
,Travel Was Inspiration
Emily Sartain is in London,
England, where she will open
a ehoW of her Canadian alpine
water 'colors at the Royal
Horticultural Society. T h
idea of recording the flora of
British Coltenbia, the artist
said, came to her while travel-
ing across Canada by train in
1989. As she watched the moun-
tains from her compartment
window, She cane to realize
this Was h botantst'S paradise,
Lady Coundpor
Named Secretary
For MidIVODA
HENSALL — Reeve Manion
g, Jones and councillor
Minnie Noalco$ attended 141.0
general zone meeting of the.
lVficl-Western Ontario Develop-
rent Association in. Stratford
.country club on January 7.
The association is comprised
of the counties Huron, Perth,
Wellington and Waterloo. The
main purpose of the. association
is planning and development in
the area.
Chairman Howard Aitken,
Goderich, stressed the fact that
it is very important for each
member to create interest 'at a
looal level and in turn at zone
level. This association and its
activities is Advertised by mon-
thly brochures sent to places
throughout the world,
Mrs, Noakes was appointed
secretary for 1962-63.
Former Clinton Boy
Studying in Wisconsin
MADISON, Wisconsin—Ger-
ald Frerelin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. A. E. Fremlin, Dunlop
Street, Clinton, is among the
approximately 1,000 foreign
students from 75 countries and
six continents who are studying
at the University of Wisconsin
in Madison this year along with
about 19,225 American students.
India has sent the most stu-
dents to Wisconsin's University
this year, with 203. China is
second with 114, followed by
Canada, 111; Japan, 35; Egypt,
32; Korea, 31; Thailand, 30;
Hong Kong, 27; the Philippines,
24; Mexico, 21; Indonesia Re-
public and Norway, each 17;
and Venezuela, 16. Sixty-two
other nations have sent 325 stu-
dents to Wisconsin's University
this year.
doorway, a fence, a skyline, the
pilings of abridge, and you can
try 'this trick with almost any
subject.
"I decided' there and then to
make a= collection," she -said.
Miss Sartain now has some 200
and is ever mindful there are
many more specimens to find.
An enthusiaStic member of
the Thetis Park Nature Sanc-
tuary Association, a group of
persons on Vancouver Island
dedicated to 'the preservation of
native flora, Miss Sartainealso
paints lichen, fungi and the
garden flowers which abound
in her home city. From her
studio window she can see
Mount Ranier across the U.S.
border. To help preserve the
picture beauty of the Olym-
pics' in all their moods, she has
numerous colored photos she
has 'taken in these mountains
where she finds new specimens
and inspiration.
One of the most interesting
comments in the article was a
statement Miss. Sartain made.
She said wherever she goes,
traveling is working for her.
This past fall, while on her
way to England, she stopped
to paint the eastern maples in
all their •autemn glory.
Interestingly- enough, h e r
career began, when in 1932,
Queen Mary purchased her first
exhibited painting at the Soc-
iety of Women Artists in Lon-
don. It was a study of delp'hin-
hens and antirrhinums. She
has by medals awarded 'to
by the Royal. Horticultural
Society for flower paintings' as
Well as a number of other
awards and honorS.
An Ardent Conservationist
Miss Sartain is a sonstant
proponent of conservation'. She
realizes that green belts must
be preterved.. This is not only
peculiar to VancouVer
where horticultural enthusiasts
used to be able to study speci-
mens •almost at their doorstep
and must now travel miles to
Tee Canadian Identity
(W, L. Morton)
Professor Morten has gather-
ed 'the material he used in three
lectures ..at the University. of
Wisconsin and added the lec-
ture that he delivered before
the Canadian Historical Awe-
laden at Queen's University in
1960. Not so much by •exPlara-
tion but by treaty and statute
did the lend mass, known as
Canada, come into being. -Tills
land mass has small. areas of
good arable sail and vast stret,
cites of hinterland, all in' the
arctic or sub arctic regions.
Canada became the •eountrY
with the northern economy.
In the second chapter Morton
relates the processes by which
Canada achieved self-govern-
ment, a form; of government
distinctly Canadian and unique
among the democratic forms
established in other nations,
This reform of government was
achieved without revolution and
therefore was suspect by the
people of the United States,
who sincerely believed that no
true democratic form of gov-
ernment could be established
$300 Damages Result
From Truck-Car Crash
GODERICH (Staff) — Three
hundred dollars damages res-
ulted from a truck-car collis-
ion on county read 27 Feb. 5.
Police said a truck owned by
Wilfred E. Pentland, 47, of
Dungannon was stopped at the
bottom of a hill to let off a
passenger, when a ear belong-
ing to Edward' Bake, 44, of RR
1, 'Dungannon drove over the
slippery hill and collided with
'the truck. No charges will be
laid said OPP constable W. R.
Roadknight.
o -
In 1896, "Dorothy Dix"—Mrs.
Elizabeth M. Gilmer — began
her column of personal advice'
in a daily newspaper. It was
the first popular "advice to the
lovelorn" featured in newspap-
ers. Today, most newspapers
offer helpful and informative
features 'on personal problems.
do so, but is relative to all
this burgeoning country.
We have a swamp on our
property which to date has not
been claimed a green belt. On
numerous occasions we have
been offered a goodly sum by
persons who would dump' fill
and build' on the reclaimed
land. It is a temptation in
some respects, for 'breathes
there a person who is not at,,
traoted by a large sum of
money. But we cannot easily
forget the marsh marigolds
that push through the dead
and tangled grass early each
spring to gild the landScape
before tall bulrushes thrust
their green spikes above the
golden buttercup petals. Our
swamp is a bird sanctuary, a
haven for 'bull frogs and mea-
dow larks, a pathway for a
gurgling brook on the banks
of which watercress clings.
without revOltition, After •estab-
l!ishing a woricing form Of SW,
governMeOt the next step was'
to confirm Canada as an associ,.
ato and equal nation, first in
the Bmpire, 'then in the Com,
monwealth and finally among
the nations of the world.
Canada and its' relations with
the United States is the subject
of the third chapter, For years
the Americans were firmly con-
vinced 'that Canada would join
them. That a nation could grow
from colony to nationhood by
the practice of self-government
went contrary to their eaner-
lence, Also, the fact that
Britain and Canada appeared to
show sympathy to the South
during the Civil War 'tended
to slow the process of Irecogni,
tion of the British North
America Act of 1867. Americ-
ans continued to he sceptical of
the status of .Canada. The 150
years of undefended borders
may be a thing of song and
story and after-dinner speeches
,but many disputes and disagree-
ments raised their ugly headS,
The Alaska boundary dispute
left Canada on its own in the
matter of regulating its exter-
nal affairs, In 1909 the Fisher-
ies dispute was settled in fav-
our of Canada at The Hague
Tribunal.
During the reciprocity talks
American speakers freely im-
plied that reciprocity was the
first step in the absorption of
Canada into the United States..
This released intense anti-
American feeling latent since
the dispute over the Alaskan
boundary. The beneficial result
was that Americans realized'
that Canada did intend' to he
counted among the nations,
Most Canadians' regretted
that the United States (after
the leadership shown in the last
year of the war, 1914-1918)
failed to join the League of
Nations, As a member of that
League Canada, entered th.e
community of nations and later
in the United Nations is able
to pursue an, nIdepc1.0.01.t,
course in world' affairs,
Canada must work out, its
own -.destiny but what is that
destiny? It i difficult to de,
fine, Fart of it is this, 'that
Canada is an independent
nation in America—the national
life is built on a OW thgeTal
economy—it's political life is
monarchical and parllamest.a y
democracy, .Canada's member-
ship in the Commonwealth. off, •
sets the eontinentalisro Which
is a result of its position 'in the
American • continent,.
Canada's northern economy
came about from vastly differ,
ent sources than those which
resulted in the United States.
The Vikings and others from
northern ,Europe were seeking
new homesteads, or bases for
the fisheries. With a very small
portion of its area considered
arable and vast stretches of
hinterland, Canada has always
740.4'
A decal-el Motors Value
been forced to pui-Thw. sup,
plies from beyond its borders
With the surplus Of US own
perodUOt,s.
Canada has, th.1"0:4301.1t, its
history, been a dependent
nation, economically, strategic-
ally and politically, and can
never be entirely self,sufficient.
The northern, or Canadian, aP-
p.oach, in arts and letters is
OOn5ldered 'briefly by P;
lVfo.ton,
That Canadians are so 41orn choice has helped them to be
more adaptable to the norl4ern
way of life, 'to work out a
destiny in a vast area of land,
grim but challenging, All stu-
dents of history will enjoy this
clear ,analysis of Canadian his,
tory.
0
E
AMINO EASE THAT'S EXCEPTIONAL
Chevrolet has the smooth, easy
handling you've been looking for.
Due in part to its Ball-Race steering
gear that almost eliminates friction.
E XCITING NEW PERFORMANCE. Pick
your economy — pick your power!
Chevrolet offers a tremendous
choice: six engines that range from
a 135 hp gas miser 6 to an all-out
V8 performer that boasts 409 horses!
VALUE NO OTHER CAR CAN MATCH.
Automotive value has two cate-
gories: Chevrolet and all others.
Your best buy bar none in the show-
room, and your best sale bar none
at trade-in time.
R IDE THAT'S "JET-SMOOTIMFour big
coil springs level bumps to mole-
hill size -- and then vibration is
dampened at 725 insulating and
cushioning points, What's left?
Just a Jet-smooth ride!
PEN SPACES FOR COMFORT AND
CONVENIENCE. if you're high,, wide
and handsome ... and even if you
have five friends along, Chevrolet
pampers you— with Space to spare.
UXORIOUSLY APPOINTED, Other cars may be es
L
as Cher/6:kt— but Only if they tint much,
much more. That's a benefit of leadership: more
ChevroletS made Irti mote opportunity to give
you more for your money.
C LASSICAL STYLE. There's bright-eyed eagerness
— and a dash of regal distinction in Chevrolet's
rich new style for '62, A wonderful blend for a
remarkable car.
XTRAS THAT ARE STANDARD EQUIPMENT.- Every model
Of Chevrolet comes complete With such quality extras
as electric windshield wiper's, deluXe Steering wheel,
fowl.' cushioned front seat, front armrests, dual sun
visors, cigarette lighter, glove box lock and crank-
operated vehtipahes at no extra Cost!
..........................
Your requirements will be OUR MOTTO:
given immediate attention. "Satisfaction Guaranteed"
Repairs done by experienced Let us assist you with all
mechanics. machinery repairs.
RADFORD'S GAR.
Your OLIVER Dealer --® LONDESBORO
Phones: Clinton HU 2-9221 — Blyth 44 R 5
6-7-8-b
ateaisteivatar.
Be sure to tee flortake oh the CBO41/ network each StindaY. Check your local listing for channel and OMB.
LORNE BROWN MOTORS LTD• 30 Ontario Street HU 2.9321
CLINTON, ONTARIO