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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1963-07-11, Page 3•Thy.!Opy, age 3 T.40 THE ~DITDR K ippen .F.45rme0. Atta,cks... Federation, Says Grain Tester 'Unnecessary 17071 e OPNESE 854)120 11011SES. IF 01111TCM OP wmpes.„, IlYTNE 9414 WT1E 20-N. 05/ -p M, 11..,111 I a FOR SUPERB FOOD 74' not-. RESTAURANT CLINTON'S FOREMOST 482.9096 CLINTON The PARK Theatre Goderich Showtime 7:30 Air-conditioned for your comfort THUR., FRI., SAT—July 11-12-13--Double Bill "JACK THE GIANT KILLER" I n Teehnicotar "INAR HUNT" Wi41011FE114*qRSEA4Q4Dand MON., TUES., WED. — July 15-16-17 — Adult Entertainment— SHIRLEY MacLAINE and ROBERT MiTcHUm Tell what happens when a Greenwich Village gal meets a slightly square lawyer from Omaha. "TWO FOR THE SEESAW" THUR., FRI., SAT. — July 18-19-20 With JOAN O'BRIEN, ZACHARY SCOTT and MAE QUESTAL. In his latest and zaniest electronic riot. "IT'S ONLY vtONEr Watch For "HATARI" — Coming Soon! JERRY LEWIS SUNSET DRIVE-IN klighway 8 — Bast of Goderich Now with the widest screen in the territory THUR., FRI., SAT. — July 11-12-13 BOB HOPE and RHONDA FLEMING "ALIAS JESSE JAMES" ALAN LADD and ERNEST BORGNINE "THE BADLANDERS" — Both In Technicolor — MON., TUES., WED. — July 15-16-17 Adult Entertainment ELVIS PRESLEY and JEAN SIMMONS "WILD IN THE COUNTRY" n Technicolor Plus Three Shorts THUR., FRI., SAT. — July 18-19-20 Adult Entertainment TOMMY SANDS, FABIAN and JAN STIRLING "LOVE OM A G LIDF5S111 El — Color KENNTH MORE and DANA WYNTER "SINK THE BISMARCK" Hon9 iKon9 „W_alf Given Opportunity Through Adoption By .Auburn man Western.Pait Get Jail Terms .For Area. Crime GODERICH—TI,vo Vancouv, -Or nien Robert Froderich Simp- son and George Paterson, Thin', -sday in magistrate's mutt here Were given jail terms on three joint ,charges of break., enter And theft. Magistrate Glenn Hays, Sentenced Simpson to four months definite and nine mon- ths indefinite in reformatory on each of two -charges involv- ing breakins at the Caridyyllie store and King's Cupboard res- taurant in Malabide Township June 10., The sentencea are con- current. Paterson was sentenced to 30 days in jail on each of the same two charges, the terms to run coneurren.tly. Both men, who had pleaded guilty to all charges June were given suspended sentences and placed on probation for two years for a hrealcin at the Farmer's Dell Custard Cup in grucefield June 12. Goods val- ued at $30 were stolen in the three breakins. USE THE NIGHT DEPOS- IT BOX AT OUR STORE 63 ALBERT STREET FOR DRY CLEANING OR LAUNDRY, DROP YOUR BUNDLE IN BETWEEN 8 A.M. AND 12 P. M. FARM EQUIPMENT JOHN BACH FARM EQUIPMENT PARTS and ACCESSORIES IH DEALER — PHONE 17 SEAFORTH 20tfb INSURANCE K. W. COLQUHOUN INSURANCE & REAL ESTATE Phones: Office HU 2-9747 Res. HU 2-7804 GARY COOPER Life 'Insurance & Annuities Representing GREAT WEST LIFE ASSURANCE CO. HU 2-7200 Clinton H. E. HARTLEY All Types of Life Term Insurance — Annuities CANADA LIFE ASSURANCE CO. Clinton, Ontario. HURON CO-OPERATIVE MEDICAL SERVICES Prepaid Health Plans at Cost th e COOP way BOARD OF DIRECTORS President, Fordyce Clark, RR 5, Goderich; Vice-Pres., Gordon Kirkland, RR 3, Lucknow; Mrs. D. G. Andersen, RR 5, Winghan1; Mrs. Lloyd Taylor, Exeter; Hugh B. Smith, RR 2, ListoWel; Lorne Bodges, RR, 1, Goderich; Roy Strong, Gorrie; Russell T. Bolton, RR 1, Seaforth; Bert Irwin, RR 2, ...Seaforth; Bert Klapp, ZUrieh; Gordon Richard- son, RR 1, Brucefield• Kenneth johns, RR 1, Wttodhiun. C. H. Magee Secretary-Manager Miss Co Eli Plunitree Assistant Secretary For information, call your hearett director or our Office hr the Credit Union bldg., 70 On- tario Street, Clinton, Telephone 14Unter 24751. Through the Poster Parents Plan, an eight-year-old Chinese girl, WPC. pug Wong, has been financially "adopted' - by Mr, Percy W. Youngblut,. B.13.„ Auburn. Under the Plan, Mr.. Young- hlut contributes per month for the Child's support .for at least A year and $8 of this is received as a cash grant by the child. The rest is spent for food, new clothing, medical care, school fees and equipment and translatiOn of letters between Mr, Youngblut and Woo Fung. In these letters, a Foster Child may .describe how it feels to suddenly have shoes on his . feet, a mattress to sleep on in- stead of a dirt floor, and the comfort of a full stomach. And, he always reports on biS pro- gress at school, a service that is not free in Hong Kong. Meagre Wages ' Woo Fung's father was born in Chiu Chow, China, He was a poor farmer, uneducated, al- most illiterate, able to earn rip LUCKY NUMBER THIS WEEK IS 1735 Check Your Calendar. t f the numbers match, take the calendar to our office and claim your $3 credit. 1111101MOV INSURANCE' H. C. LAWSON. First Mortgage Money Available Lowest Current Interest Rates INSURANCE - REAL ESTATE INVESTMENTS Phones: Office HU 2-9644 Res. HU 2-9787 THE WEST WAWANOSH MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE CO. Head Office, DUNGANNON Established 1878 BOARD OF DIRECTORS President; Brown Smyth, Dungannon; Vice-Press., Herson Irwin, Belgrave; Directors, Paul "Atesar, R. 1, Dungannon; George C. Feagan, Goderich; Ross. Mc- Phee, R. 3, Auburn; Donald P. MacKay, R. 1, Ripley.; John F.' MacLennan, R. 3, Goderich; Allan Macintyre, R. 5, Lucknow; Wm, Wiggins, R. 3, Auburn. For information on your in- surance, call your nearest direc- tor who is also an agent, or the secretary, Frank F. Thompson, Dungannon. 27-tfb OPTOMETRY J. E. LONG STAFF OPTOMETRIST OPTICIAN .CLINTON MEDICAL CENTRE Mondays Only HU 2-7010 Seaforth — 791 G. B. CLANCY, 0.0, OPTOMETRIST -- For Appointment Phone JA 4-7251 GODERICH 38-tfb PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT /10Y N. BENTLEY PUBLIC ACCOUNTAN1 Otideriett, OntiatIO Telephone Sox JA 4.9521 418 Mr, Wong calla hardly hope to find any other kind of em- ployment but poorly paid, men- ial labor and so has become a coolie. 1-le earns about 31,06 a day—but, of course, there are some days when jobs are scarce and he brings home much less. The family is large and Woo Fling has three sisters and three brothers ranging in age from 19 to one, Unable, with a large family and a small baby to look after, to take an outside job, Woo Fung's mother makes the most of any spare moment she has and carries water for her neigh- bors or sometimes washes clothes. She earns about $3.50 per month. The father and mother are hardworking, kind and devoted to their children, but all their hard work and concern can- not make the meager monthly sum stretch to meet the needs of their growing family and the two eldest children have been given in adoption to other fam- ilies who could provide them with food and clothing and per- BAYFIELD — There's a fine new sign at Deer Lodge Park, one which attracts attention; also the grounds have been greatly improved. This development was orig- inally the venture of a Presby- terian minister at Varna, the late Rev. Thomas Davidson who built the cottages in 1906, in a circle cut out of the bush. In the centre, a community well was drilled from which the occupants pumped water and carried it in pails to the cot- tages. And there was also a tennis court. Since inside plumbing was unknown here then, a little building belonging to each was hidden back in the cedars. In those days "summer campers" as they were known did not require all the com- forts of home plus a few extras when they came to vacation at the lake. A good roof and walls with room partitions part way up, a wood cook stove and the necessary equipment for living was a luxury compared to a tent! And so over the years the various, owners have had to make changes to satisfy chang- ing trends of living. L. F. Owles, Goderich, sold this property to A. C. New- man and 1VI. R. grown, Lon- don, this year. Mr. Newman is a retired CNR shop worker who has Above the $10,000-a-year tax- able income level, the Canadian income tax rate starts at 35 percent on additional income. -es for them, A little son, Tiik died in August of 1.90a tint .of-his family's poverty and the news that Woo Fung has been accepted ,for help" from PLAN is like a bright new ray of hope to the Wong family. In 1954, the family was made homeless by one of Hong Kong's terrible fires and in 1955 they were resettled in a government .housing devel0P- ment. They have half a cubicle, Which measures 12' by 5' and it is furnished with a bunk, some old suitcases, a rattan table, a chair, two stools and some cooking utensils. Under the ceiling is the "cock loft", where the children sleep —one of Hong Kong's answers to the overcrowding and the housing problem. Woo Fung is a cute little girl with a short black bob and a pert snub nose, She is a friendly and appealing young- ster who talks easily and an- swerss questions spontaneously and with a sometimes amusing vivacity. She is in the second grade of primary school and is very proud of what she has already learned, r. owned a cottage at Blue Water Beach for some time. Mr. Brown is superintendent for John Hayman and Son Construction, London, and bad previously vacationed in Bay- field. Mr. and Mrs. Newman and Mr. and Mrs. M.R. Brown have been at Deer Lodge Park al- most continuously since the first of . March. They have done a great deal of renovating to the cottages and brightened them up with paint—"42 gallons of it". Mrs. Brown in talking to the writer said that she enjoys it so much up here that she does- n't like, going back to London now. They plan to spend seven months at the Park. "And the nice part of it is that relatives of Mr. Davidson have been to visit us and are bringing other friends. And the former owners are all so in- terested and coming to see us," said Mrs. Brown. They are looking forward to a good season. Zondag.,Crawford A former I3aYfield man t .Jac oh ZOndegt son of Mr. and Mrs. Garrett gondag,. PAYfield, exchanged wedding vows with .Carrot' Jean Crawford in, Three Alberta, on Wednesday,' June ,n The bride Is. the. daughter crf Mr. and Mrs, Charles C. .Craw- fOrd, Three gills, and the yoting• coupie are both graduates of the Prairie Bible Institute. Rev. A. C. Strom officiated at the .0°01e-ring ceremony and the bride was given in marriage by her father. Her gown was White. chiffon over lustrous bridal taffeta with a fitted bodice, full shirt, square neckline tapering to a. V in the back and lily point sleeves. The chapel length veil fell from a tiara of pearls and the bride's only jewellery was a single strand of pearls, a gift of the groom. She carried a nosegay of American Beauty roses with trailing rosebuds, The maid of honor was 'Miss Joey Olson, Calgary, and the bridesmaid was Miss Sharon Crawford', a sister of the bride. They were gowned alike in peacoch blue dresses and car- ried a half crescent of peacock tinted carnations, The groom's attendants were Glen and John Crawford and the ushers were Chester David- son and Ronald Wilson. Traditional wedding music was played by the church pian- ist, Miss Nova Schimke, and a vocal solo was sung •by Miss Myrne Koch and a violin solo was played by Merton Baptist. The reception was held in the Prairie Bible Institute dining room and the bride's mother received guests wearing a two- piece green linen suit with white accessories and a corsage of pink sweetheart roses. She was assisted by the groom's mother who wore a navy suit with white accessor- ies and carried a. similar cor- sage. For a wedding trip to Van- couver, the bride donned an ice pink suit with matching pink hat and white accessories and a corsage of white gardenia. The couple will make their home in Deadwood, Alberta, where the groom is minister at the Canadian. Sunday School Mission Church. 0 Mrs. C. Thompson Following an illness of close to a year, Mrs. Clarissa Thompson, Clinton, passed away in Clinton Public Hospi- tal on Friday, July 5. Born in Goderich Township, the daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Elliott, she was married to Robert G. Thompson in 1914 and was pre- deceased by him. She resided in Clinton for the past 11 years and passed away in her 84th year. A member of St. Paul's Angli- can Church, she is survived by one son, Robert B., Goderich Township; daughters, Mrs. Or- ville (Ruth) Workman, Kip- pen; Mrs. Robert (Mary) Ald- winckle ,Ottawa; brother, S. B e n so n Elliott, Brewster, Washington; 'sister, Mrs. Isa- dore Harrison, Huronview. The funeral was held on Sun- day from the Beattie funeral home with interment in Clinton cemetery. The service was conducted by Rev. P. L. Dymond and Rev, E. J. B. Harrison and the pall- bearers were Carman Tebbutt, Leslie Pearson, Fred Lobb, Clarence Brenner, Don Forbes and Charles Wilson. Bruce Holland, Joe Silcox, Dean AldWinkle and Arthur Huck were flower-bearers. CLASSIFIED ADS BRING QUICK RESULTS Pear .Sir: In recent issues of _some local papers reporting on a Huron County Federation of Agricul- ture meeting, it was stated that they were pressing for a grain testing station in Huron. County. Do these farmers doubt the accuracy of the tests they are receiving? They said that some farmers from this area had tat, en samples to three mills and received three different grad- bigs as to the moisture content on the same seed, 11/fr. Editor, I doubt that the same seed was tested at all three' mills — possibly three samples from the same int For more than 15 years, we have owned a moisture tester on our farm and find it very useful. We have found that there is a considerable varia- tion in moisture content in even a small quantity of grain, have made as many as four tests on less than half a bushel of grain and found differences in each test. The best way, it would seem to me, is for a farmer to own his own tester and use it. One can be bought for less than a TV set. Then you have a good idea of the moisture content of the grain whether you sell it or store it yourself. There is no doubt in my mind that farmers are getting a squ- are deal, as to moisture test from any of the three mills in Hensall. For years I kept a close test on all our grain sold to any of these elevators and to other private enterprise mills in the area and found them honest in their testing. Sometimes their tests would be slightly higher or slightly lower than mine but always reasonably close. It seems typical of the Fed- eration of Agriculture to try to arouse suspicion and distrust between farm producers and any private enterprise. If some farmers are dissatisfied with private mills, there is still their 'co-ops' to patronize. Why put the whole popula- tion to the unnecessary expense of opening and operating a tes- ting station to satisfy a min- ority group? The Federation of Agricul- ture claims to speak for the vast majority of farmers. I. wonder if it had to operate on membership dues (as do most organizations) without grants, how great a membership they could claim. The Federation Supports com- pulsory hog marketing, derstanct too, that it supports. the recent vicious legislation on tobacco growing, What is to prevent similar legislation from being applied to any farm product when the time comes that certain people may think it desirable? As far as I can see, nothing. I wonder what is the uitina, ate goal of the Federation of Agriculture. Thank yon, Mr. Editor; for the privilege of using your pa- per and .allowing me to take advantage .of this remaining freedom, to express one's views, Sincerely, Ronald MacGregor, I'M 3, Kippen Also, Let Us Do ALL Your Laundry or Use Our Modern Uptown Laundry Business and Professional Directory iA. M. HARPER & CO. CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS S5-57 SOUTH ST., TELEPHONE GObblICH, ONT. JA 4-7562 More than a hare" living for the baps arrange suitable .rnarriag, family. Zn 1'.74.8 he .tr,td his wife left tile old. life behind them and brought their children to. Hong Kong. Fors k er Ver yman Developed Park, thriving Today With 'Modern Trends° Woo Fung Wong Adopted By Auburn Man Smorgasbord Dinners Every Wednesday Evening From 5.30 to 8.00 O'clock AND Every Sunday Evening From 5.00 to 700 O'clock HOTEL (LINTON Phone HU 24011 for Reservations Permanent Life insurance provides pensions that have a lifetime guarantee When you own permanent Life Insurance you can plan on retire- ment with absolute certainty that the income promised in your policy will be paid. Permanent Life Insurance values are guaran- teed. All the amounts are carefully set out right there in your policy. The amount of protection is there, the Cash Values are listed—clearly stating the monetary worth of your savings invest- ment for years to come. There is no guesswork, no speculation. These are safeguards no other long-term savings plan can offer. t. TEL Ltrt INSURANCE COMPANIES IN CANADA We Cater to Dinner Parties and Wedding ftedetititIns