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Clinton News-Record, 1962-03-29, Page 9Watch For Contrasts Everywhere Then ,Copture. Them .0n • Order Your . . CLINTON FEED MILL 28 Huron Street CLINTON Phone HU 2-3815 UR-GAIN Fertilizer Through CLINTON FEED MILL With the SHUR-GAIN Fertilizer service plant only a few miles away — at Mitchell --- we can give you prompt delivery on your particular grade of fertilizer. • help CRIPPLED CHILDREN MAKE USE OF APPLES IN FRUIT SALADS Tart red unpared apple are excellent"- irg'.1trttit salads, "'TO prevent theni turning dark sp-. rinkle with lemon juice, says the food department of Mac- donald Institute, Guelph. Just before 'serving drain and corn- .bine with chopped celery,' nuts, Marshmallow and fruit salad Walper-Steinback KENSALL — Norma Marie Steinback, daughter of Mr. and Mrs:. Ted Steinback, Zurich, and Alan Harold Wolper, sbn, of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Walper, Park- hill, exchanged marriage vows before the Rev. W. P. Fischer, in St. Peter's Lutheran Church, Zurich, Saturday evening, March 10. • Attendants were Mr. and Mrs, James Hackett., Gait, bro- ther-in-law and sister of the, bride. A reception was held at the home of :the bride's parents on the Goshen Line. The couple left for a honeymoon to the • Southern United States. They will reside on :the groom's farm, south east' of Grand Bend: 0 POULTRY NOT COSTLY TRY NEW STUFFINGS , Poultry is relatively inexpen- sive, therefore serve it often, suggests the food department of Macdonald Institute, Guelph. This gives you a charite 'to try different :kinds of stuffings. Diced celery and pared chopped apples may be added :to the cub- ed bread for a moist dressing. LET'S BE FRANK BY YOURS TRULY • OUT SHE WAS ,' tiOf batinjiiki SHE ONLY'r NkING ,OF THE FINE 'SERVICE SHE;HIAD pEctiv,go AT CORVA1R MONZA 4-Door Sedan with sports-ear flair! CfIEYY II NOVA 400 4-Door 2-Seat station wagon . . newt ,P"-Lfte":..' lik,;a1;K: .. " .4 atentotiss1 ies to choose 601 Chevrolet delivers of what y iers more u Fourteen opportunit room o -- Want — more power --- more more features -- more comfort on the road. It's just a matter of choice -- fourteen choices and they're all right! la CHEVY its . There are 11 comfortable, new size Chevy its with responsive per formance that put joy of motor-, s the full ing at your fingertips. Eye-pleasing beauty and a ride you'd expect only from a car costing much, much more. This is the car with the cats-paw trac- tion --the one- . that corners on a ime, that leaps through the rough, tough going. But that's not alit There's style, comfort, dependability, ecortomy — and a feeling of driving something special! ...osinintoteitir ,*in.',0%.1..:.,...!:,.ari*: .....::;:,s,:::.:::•%'•xi::::::::::WW.::sisami:V.lsii:iii:itiltii v.,t§tw:4..4i,,ma.p. '1'6'''''''*':g:;:,::•Mit*::':*:;e::,:ni:i:i4::::si*i:;::,:i::::::imit:::::::M:m.::.i.:,K,.,4-....... .. > ' ..--, • w • . . . .. .•' Whitewall tires optional. at extra ,cost • • A otzs/EUAL MOttoAS VALpE Be sure to see Bonanza oil the CBC-TV network each Sunday. Check your local Habig fur eliartriel. arid time. .,, LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED , CLINTON., ONTARIO 30 Ontario Street HU 1.9321 ORDER YOUR SPR1 We have available Oats; Herta, Parkland competitive prices. Michelite, Sanilac available. SEEDS EARLY Rodney, Garry and Russell and Monfcalm Barley at and Seaway Bean Seed ... CONTRACTS . Unlimited Malting Barley Contracts Last year Malting Barley prices averaged between $1.30 and $1,87 per•buShel. Feed Oat Contracts Delivery accepted from the 'field. Bean Contracts A choice, of Michelite, Sanilac and Seaway Seed to choose from. 'FERTILIZER • • • We are selling fertilizer at new low price. Contact 'us before 'buying, E. L. MACRE & SON LIMITED Phone 103 Henson, Ont. 7tfb . • Ea • I. • Wm. Reid says . . . SEE OUR LARGE RANGE OF TOP QUALITY COVERINGS Chesterfields, Occasional Chairs, Sofas, Antiques Re-done. Choice of Quality Coverings. Pick-Up and De- livery. Estimates Given. Correctly Done. 35 Years Experience. Terms Arranged. UPHOLSTER•ING (Opposite Post Office) East St. — GODERICH — Phone JA 4-8422 •. R-EI D 48 visiting Toronto? be our honoured guest •Ty la every room 'overlooking Lake Ontario Photo, facilities ielfigtakaliest NW, Thuri,g, March 29,,, 1962,--Clinton dews-Record,Poo, 9 gs, give a little of our frPodom for wotpc1,494, ,t4P, oPPOrt144.47 to Jive in Peace and the• oppor, forlity to earn a living, is a :good bargain." Do you Want' unusual,: eye-. catching pictures? If so, search for contrasts. and capture them on film.' Ifyou wish, yon ture a simple black cat in a coal pile at midnight. But you'd cerbalinly capture little' contrast between the cat and the coal. Instead, by putting the bl- ack cat on a light floor or sheet, you'd emphasize, the .cat through contrast. Generally,• it's wise to photograph a dark sub- ject against a light background, and a light subject against a dark, background. But color presents only one means of cantrast. Subjeots themselves and 'their shapes — some of them right inside your home — can provide many a study in contrasts. In cold weather, these inside shots are a boon 'to the picture taker, ,es:- Oe.cially if your bent is nature or design. , • For example, the graceful curves of your house plant con- Canine Cuts ?Loose The Red Cap was having tr- ouble with -the dog's tail. As fast as he tucked it into the wooden crate, it would wag out and a whine of Protest animate it even faSter. "Come on Butch, settle clown," pleaded the Red Cap. "I beg your pardon but he's not Butch, she's Jamey," said a Whispy little woman in a scar- ed small voice, trying at the same time 'to help tuck the flip-flopping tail behind the crate's opening. We were all standing in line in Union Station to check our baggage When the elderly wo- man had opened the door "just to peek and see if Janey was all right." Janey was as scared as her mistress, for neither had ever travelled far from home. Both were :headed 'for a new and strange harbor, where a daugh- ter had offered a lifetime moor- ing for her elderly mother and this aging pet. This information had all tumbled out as the nervous, small passenger 'tugged at her carryall and ran the dog's leash through her fingers. Now I was trying to comfort 'her and tell her how happy she would be in residence with her daugh- ter when Janey, with a heave of her brindle body, slipped through the crate's door and started down the full length of the station's foyer looking like a yelping, tail-wagging bundle of fur about to orbit 'any pl- ace but back in the crate. Red Caps, passengers, bag- gage employees and gatemen all tented in an effort to capture Janey. They had one thing in their favour. The inclement weather had! closed all station doors and it was just a matter of cornering the fractious an- imal, The more we all grabbed for her as she ran by, the more Finally her mistress regained her composure. She , "Janey, heels" in a commanding voice much' too big for her small frame. The little dog crawled on, her belly until she was at the:heels of her -mistress who picked 'her up and without any further nonsense or coax- ing, pushed heriiato. .the and "battened F down the hat- ches". These lovely marine terms were all hers. 'She had been the wife of, a lake cap- tain, she told me, and when disaster faced her •and the one she laved, she took command. I shan't worry about hoW these two fared when they reached their deStination. I am SUM' the captain's wife will know boys' to take charge if the going gets rough. A Boy and His Dog Because it is fast drawing Close to that time of the year which beleaguers town councils, when the problem of dog cen- tral aggravates citizens' and feeds the linotypes of 'the na- tion with copy, I on.1 repeating the advice a weekly editor, Foy Evans, of the Warner Robins Sup in a Georgia town, gave one of his, small readers who wrote this note to 'him. Dear Mr. Editor: I am nine years old. I •have a dog. 'Why can anybody tell me what I must do with my dog? He only barks at people. He doesn't bite. My friends have dogs too. Our teacher can't tell us. Our parents don't tell us. Can you? Replied the editor: ". . . It is not within my rights, Jimmy, to tell you what you must do with your dog. However, the organized' society in Which we live does halve the right — and the responsi- bility — to :adapt rules of con- duct for people, as well as their pets, which are designed to best serve •the majority of the peo- ple ,. . . "These rules actually deprive you of certain freedoms, but they create an organized society Whileh people P*Pee' beef, to follOW "the same `roles‘ It makes it Pessible for YOlarr father to drive through an in- tersection when' the traffic light is green without fearing he be struck by pan automobile frern, another direction. "When the rnies are broken the vi.olator is Penalize. That Is another of the ruleS We live by- if we did not have rules, if everYbody could de as he pleas- ed . . we would have anarchty'. Under such disorder you and Your family could net .SleeP seundaY at night for fear of :raid from a jealous or greedy neighbour . . . ". . . a neighbour who did not like your dog which barks at people could kill Your clog and there would he no law to PuniSh him. "So Jimmy, you see, when your city tells you what you should do aboUt your dog, it actually is looking after you, SMITI4-CORONA CASH REGISTERS compplAroli ADDIP ,MACHINE at CASH REGISTER FEATURES KEVIOPERATING BASE COLOR STYLING Here's Canada's best, Cash Register Value. Tops in pro- tection of cash ... tops in per- ofrmance ... tops an features. Designed and priced for busi- nesses large and small. See the 2-total model now — find out how to keep track of. sales tax the easy way, Clinton News-Record 56 Albert Street Clinton trast with its support, a wire mesh screen. Or your little fox terrier looks lost in that big tub in which you bathe him. Remember that situations such as these-can provide oppontun- ities to create dramatic pic- tures. , P2'o,W4Pg yo4; ,gPa nQt oils- treating YOU . or.depriving YPI.1 Of an inalienable right. It is not possible, to live. in an Organized seciey withoot giv ing something in rooro. for What yen -.'ecei:Ve. "WP. each of . You can produce this type .of photo with virtually any .caan.. era... Just work ,in •close - Sometimes, :you- may want 'to focus down to three .,.or four feet; if your camera doesn't provilde for this, try slipping an inexpens'iv'e close-tip, attachment over the regular lens. There are . many still -life contrasts' :around . any house for example, patterns of brick that compose ,a .fireplace, a flight' :Of 'stairs and a landing, or :a collection of .assorted pipes. But it's .also possible to create your own 'contrasts. Start' by arranging a.• simple • background Which won't detract from the subject. If you choose a sheet,• wily she became in eluding us. try to carry it in 'an unbroken line Jip ,the wall behind. This gives a pleasing feeling of "unending background". Then -it's just a matter of ch- o-osing, arranging and lighting your subject to achieve a pleas. ing, coinposition.: Real or arti- fielal,flowers, bowls of fruit and nuts, groups otplates and vases almost anything can be grist for the mill, When you've found a subject that has possibilities, study it. from various angles. Sometimes a straight-on, eye-level view looks best. At other times, you'll get • more interesting photos by shooting up or down. But whatever angle you choose, compose the picture 'so that the subject completely fills the picture :area. Remember that patterns and contrasts are eye-catchers. They are pleasing and lend thein- selves to forceful compositions. And they add variety to your snapshot .album.