Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1963-03-14, Page 11• istrict BRADNOCK—Correspondent--Phone 526-7595 I CHSS Juniors Lose Title By Single Basket The CHSS junior boys lost the Huron-Perthex conference series in a heart-breaking series that ended up with SHDHS posting a slim 95-93 series win, bouncing back from a 12,paint deficit from their game in Clinton, Members of the local junior squad are, back row, left to right: Doug Fremlin, Brad Dutot, Jim Livermore, Robert Shaddick, Charles Switzer, Ken Clynick, coach, Fred Lawson, Doug Proctor, Elwin Kingswell. Front row: Bob Doboo, Richard Shaddick, Gordon Logan, Clare Magee, Harry Cummings, Keith Ashton. (News-Record Photo) NEWS OF LONDESBORO cerrespondent. PAW A14!4P+1 Ple.209. 01,vtl! AI r,0 Mrs. Alex Wells spent A few days last week with Mrs.. Simp- son McCall in Stratford. IvIlss Seth Thompson braved the weather to spend the week.' end with her parents, Beth. teaches in the Brace Peninsula, Master Scott Kennedy, Sea, forth, spent the weekend with Slate Lyle Adams, Londesboro, We Nantes -The March meeting of the WI was held last Thursday with a good attendance .and a. number of ,visitors were intro- duced in answer to the roil' call. Mrs, Tom Allen gave a re- port on the Hospital . Auxiliary. It was decided /to ask fora cart for the ball in exchange for Canada Packer labels. The Londesboro UCW will cater for the Sunshine Sister banquet on April 2 at .6:45 o'clock and the social -committee will sponsor a Hair Styling Demonstrated To Auburn Angels AUl3URN--The fifth meeting of the Anburn Angels 4-H Club was held in the board room Of the Auburn Community Mernore ial Hall with a good attendance and some visitors, The meeting was opened by the president, Lynda Andrews and all repeat- ed the 4-H Pledge; The minutes evere read by Rase Marie Haggitt and the roll call was answered by each naming one thing she had learn- ed about a pattern. The highlight of the meeting was a demonstration on hair styling by Mrs. Donald Camp- bell, a hairdresser, Goderich. She spoke to the girls on the care of hair and told them how to shampoo it and then did two comb-outs on Narda Campbell, her niece, and Cynthia Camp- bell, her daughter, She outlined to the girls how to place the rollers for the dif- ferent styles and then rolled up Sharon Ball's hair in the style she wished. Later she demonstrated how to cut hair and Laura Deer was her model. The girls enjoyed a few mm- utes of exercises and twisting to music played by Baabata MacKay. 0 Unusual Flower Requires Support AUBURN — Mrs, Charles Straughan has had an unusual amaryllis bulb this winter and is now enjoying the last of the fourteen blooms. Given to her as a Christmas gift, the bulb started producing bloom early *January and since has prov- ed very interesting to watch. The bell-shaped blooms have been of a deep orange-red and all have measured seven and a half inches in diameter on stems over three feet high. The first. cluster of five blooms proved too top heavy and while a neighbor, Mrs. Nor- man McDowell was viewing the plant it fell over off the table and the stem broke off. Mrs. Straughan immediately Placed it in a vase of vermicu- lite and water and the blooms kept well for several days. When the second stem ap- peared and produced five more blooms, Mrs, Straughan, weight- ed the pot so no accident would become the blooms this time. The stem which came up last week produced four more blooms as large as the others had been. A Charter member of Auburn Horticultural Society, receiving her 10-year service diploma a few years ago, Mrs. Straughan is a great lover of flowers and this brown bulb has indeed brightened many of the past cloudy winter days. SC N'S 'Firestone 238 ALBERT STREET — CLINTON Complete Stock f Firestone TIRES & AUTO ACCESSOMES Our N6vi Quarters Feature The Largest Stock of Fireston'e Tires in this part of Western Ontario CONTACT US FOR SHOP -- ROAD — OR ON THE FARM TIRE SERVICE SCRUTOWS FIRESTONE Phone HU 2J681 it the former Hanover Transport Building PLAY IT SAFE! SEE US . . for every electric and refrigeration service. Tom Darling, Clinton You know exactly what you pay -'.- to the last ,6 cent —'With a termpiati loan. No hidden Charges, No "extras", And very likely tt lot less than you may be asked to pay elsewhere. So when yen borrow to pay for that new washer, or a car. at doctote bills, at Vacation expenses fat arty reasonable purpOse .. Come set us about tomplati loam Any amount up to $1,600..i Clniton Br0nth 0, L. eldelstad, Manager up to months to pay. Simple. businesslike. Goderich 13rarth G, Spring, Manager Lite.inatirocit, Just talk ta any Royal Sank aamager, or ask tot Our terinplan. roma. ROYAL BANK Order Your ... SHUR-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. CLINTON FEED MILL 28 Huron Street — CLINTON — Phone HU 2-3815 WHY SHUR-GAIN SELECTED-GRANULATED FERTILIZER IS BETTER Shur-Gain Selected-Granulated Fertilizers are made by carefully blending the different fertilizer materials then granulating and drying the mixture. Then it is carefully screened to remove dust and fine particles, to select the particles for uniformity of size. Shur-Gain Fertilizer is the most selectively screened fertilizer in Ontario, and it gives you even crop feeding, better uptake of all phosphorous content, even drilling, no bridging in the drill, and far less dust. • 3 Selected-Granulated Quality is only one of the many benefits offered by Shur-Gain Fertilizer. Others are — • 111 SHUR-GAIN FERTILIZER IN BULK. The fast, modern way to handle feetilizer, delivered in bulk right to you or you can haul your own from our plants for even greater savings. it PROVINCE-WIGS SERVICE, A network of plants and wetehouseS aestire you of getting the analyses you need just when you need them. K BULK SPREADING SERVICE. If you are not equipped to spread your own, Shur- Gain's Spreading Service costs little more than bagged goods, saves you time and labour, rw LELY SPREADERS. They spread. a 4O swath and can be had. from Shur-Gain plants for a nominal rental fee. For complete SHUR-GAIN Fertilizer Service call your local SHUR.GAIN Agent or SHURaGAIN FERTILIZERS MITCHELL phone 348.4012 VRT11.12ER SERVICE1 Mrs. Herbert Mogridge is visiting at Brampton with her daughter, Mrs. GormerlY Thompson and Mr. Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Harry Watson arrived home last weekend from a month's vacation in Florida. Master Ronald Arthur had the misfortune to have his left arm fractured during a hockey game last Saturday evening. The Librarian of the Auburn Public Library requests all county library books to be in by Saturday, March 16. Miss Betty Marsh, Hamilton, spent last weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Bert Marsh. Mr. Charles Scott arrived home last Friday from Clinton hospital but is now confined to bed with the flu. Mrs, Warner Andrews, Mrs. Keith Meehan and Tracy and Mrs. John Seers visited one day last week with Mrs. Sam Brown and family, Dungannon, Misses Jean Houston and Jern Jamieson, Toronto, visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Hous- ton and Miss Olive young. Mr. and. Mrs. Marshall Stone- house, Belgrave, visited last week with Mr. and Mrs. Charles Scott. Mr, and Mrs. Harry Worsen and Terry, Goderich, were re- cent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Maitland Allen and Mr. Har- vey McGee. Mrs, Gordon R. Taylor, Mr, ad Mrs. J. J Robertson and Mr. Tom Johnston. attended the funeral last week of Mr. Walt- er Hamilton at Lucknow. Mr. and. Mrs. Guy Cunning- ham attended the funeral at Seaforth last Thursday of her sister, Mrs. Dexter, Kinburn, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Toll and Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth McDougall also attended. Mr. and Mrs, Wes Bradnock, Peter MacDonald and Gary Nicholson, of Seaforth, attend- ed the convention of the Water- loo Coin Society at the Walper Hotel, Kitchenete last Sunday. Mr, and Mrs. William J. Craig, Mrs. Betty Wilkin, Rob- ert, Mary and Patsy attended the Masonic banquet in Gode- rich last week. Robert played several bagpipe numbers and Patsy and Mary did some Scot- tish dancing. William Gow, RR 2, Auburn, an enthusiastic member of the Huron County Holstein Breed- ers Association received ,a letter last week of which he is justly proud, from Court Carmichael, RR 1, Ilderton, Ont., who pur- chased a heifer calf from Mr. Gow at Shore's 4-H Club sale in April, 1961. This calf named Goburn Nancy Anne was the grand champion Holstein heif- er at the Middlesex 4-H cham- pionship show in the fall of 1961 in a class of 83 calves. Mrs. Arthur Grange arrived home last weekend from Moose Factory where she had been several weeks with her hus- band who had an accident and was a patient in the hospital there. His many friends will be pleased to know that Art was able to come to London where he went to Westminster Hospital for further treatment on his hands. CGISC Meet Marjorie Youngblut, vice-pre- sident of the Auburn CGIT group, was in charge of the meeting in the absence of the Mrs. Emma Vollmershausen AUBURN—Word was receiv- ed here last week of the death of Mrs. Emma Vollmershausen, Woodstock, who passed away in the Woodstock General Hospi- tal in her 77th year. Born in the Auburn district she was the daughter of the late Mr. ' and Mrs. Werner Youngblut. She is survived by one daugh- ter, Mrs. Margaret Huart, Woodstock, and four sons, Carl, Norman and Kenneth, all of Woodstock and Glen, Eastwood; four sisters, Mrs. Margaret Ar- thur, Auburn; Mrs. Marian Beadle, Huronview; Mrs. Kate Mutch, Clinton and Mrs. Wil liam Riddell,La Riviere, Man. The funeral was held at the Bethany Lutheran Church, Woodstock, with burial taking place at the Woodstock mauso- leum. Relatives from here attend- ing the funeral were: Mrs: 'oliernas Haggitt, Robert Ar- thur, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Wall, Langside; Mrs. Clarence Walden, Seaforth; and Miss Inez Youngblut, Zurich. Mrs. John Arthur, Mrs. Wil- liam Riddell and Keith Arthur visited relatives the day prior to the funeral, Walter C. Penman AUBURN — Funeral service was held on TueSday for Wal- ter C, Pettman at the J. Keith Arthur funeral home. He pass- ed away in the Goderich hospi- tal after a week's illness in his 80th year. Born at Wiarton he was the son of the late Mr. and Mrs. James Pettman. For many years he operated a general store at the Nile and later as an insurance agent until he retired a few years ago and moved to Goderich. He was a member of the United Church. He is survived by his wife, the former Loletta Spragge, one son, Walter, Goderich; three daughters, Mrs. Frank (Eva) Mcllwain, Goderich; Mrs. John (Cora) Wilson, RR 2, Auburn and Mrs, Keith (Verna) Arthur, Auburn; also nine grandchildren and two great grandchildren. - • The service was conducted by Rev, W. J. ten Hoopen with burial taking place in the Col- borne cemetery. Pallbearers were Messers. Clarence Forbes, Frank Forb- es, Waldron Pettman, Ross Shaw, Lloyd Etue and Kenneth E tue, president, Judy Arthur. The Minutes were adopted as read by the secretary, Betty Moss and the roll call was answered by each member quot- ing the third Beatitude. The scripture lesson was read by Brenda Ball and the offer- ing was received by Petra Tie- chert and dedicated with pray- er by Joyce Leatherland, Plans were made to hold the next meeting on Friday even- ing, March 22, when tile blocks of the quilt will be given out for the girls to work, More names were handed in for the autograph quilt which is the group's project for this year, The story of Helen Keller was told by the leader, Mrs. Wes Bradnock and a discus- sion period followed. ' birthday party for the residents of..1-i.uronview on April An interesting half hour was Pent with Bill Batten, ,editor of the News-Record as guest .speaker in which he gave an informative talk of his exper- ience M newspaper work and also ways in which parents .and teachers can give timely advice to students in deciding a career. lYfrs. Anderson demonstrated a dainty dessert and Mrs,. Wel:, son Reid furnished a sample and recipe for a tasty cold meat relish. The WI's little adopted girl will be remembered with a birthday box and a motion to buy five dozen cups for the hall was approved . The program "consisted of a contest, which Mrs. Les Raid conducted and Barbara Burns gave a number of fine selec- tions on her accordion, The result of the tally for the year's attendance was given with Mrs. Stan Lyon's side win- ning by two. The following is the slate of ()fame for 1963-64, brought in by Mrs, Edwin Wood and Mrs. Tom Allen: Past president, Mrs, Tom Al- len; president, Mrs. Dave And- erson; first vice-president, Mrs, Glen Carter; second vice-presi- dent, Mrs. Lorne Lawson; sec- retary-treasurer, Mrs, Clif f A dam s ; assistant secretary- , treasurer, Mrs, Reg Lawson; press reporter, Mrs. Bert Alien; district director, Mrs. Tom Al- len; :alternate director, Mrs, Ed- win Wood, Pianist, Mrs. Tom Allen; as- sistant pianist, Mrs. John Arm- strong; flower and card conven- er, Mrs, Weldon Tyndall; audi- tors, Mrs, Arthur Clark, Mrs. Joe Shaddick, Conveners of standing com- mittees; agriculture and Cana- dian industries, Mrs. Len Cald- well, Mrs. Joe Shaddick, Mrs. W. Tyndall; citizenship and ed- ucation, Mrs. Clare Vincent, Mrs. Bert Shobbrook, Mrs. Ed- win Wood; home economics and health, Mrs, Jim Howatt, Mrs. Clarence Crawford, Mrs. Lloyd Pipe. Historical research and cur- rent events, Mrs. Harvey Tay- lor, Mrs, Watson Reid, Mrs. Buchanan; public relations, Mrs. Reg Lawson; resolutions, Mrs. Cliff Adams. T Mqrch.14,1903 Clinton .14.pw,s7 Page 11. AUCTION $AL; .PERFORMANCE TESTED BULL WESTERN PHTAR30 AORick4:11/RAI, $c_11,021, RippgTOWN FRIDAY'„ MARCH 2Z 2:00 (Stontbrd Time) BULL .PREMIUM. POLICY APPLIES For 5qle cotolo9ties Apply To B. A, STARK, , Porlioment Buildings, Toronto 11-2-b HERB'S FOOD Market SPECIALS Effective ,March 14-20 Inclusive YORK PEANUT BUTTER.,. 1.6-oz. Ice box jar MAPLE LEAF- DETERGENT, New 24-oz. plastic .69; DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE GRAPEFRUIT JUICE, 48-oz, tin 39c DELMAR MARGARINE, 4 tb. pkgs. 09c BALLET TISSUES, Colored, 4 roll .pkg, 45c ROBIN HOOP EASY -CAKE M1XE$ 2 pkgs. 29c LYON'S TEA BAGS, 100-2-cup size 69c ARROW PEACHES OR PEARS, 20-oz. tins 5 for $1 NEW!: PO$T'S MINUTE ONIONS pkg. 35c Weston's Old-Fashioned OATMEAL COOKIES 12-oz. Pkgs, — Reg. 29c 2 for 45c LENTEN SUGGESTIONS POST'S MINUTE RICE, Family Size Pkg, 79c KRAFT MACARONI DINNER 2 pkgs. 29c KRAFT CHEESE WHIZ, 16-oz. jar 65c THEDFORD POTATOES 10 lbs. 39c — 75 lb. bag $2.39 Free Delivery Phone HU 2-3445 SAVE BLACK DIAMOND STAMPS o 47.1 $"4 SM t"nlir ORIFF‘r termplan supplies cash for big purchases at low cost Is your washer all washed up?