HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1965-10-28, Page 10ATTENTION KNITTERS
THIS IS THE TIME TO START ,
KNITTING FOR CHRISTMAS
10% off all our Knitting Wool
from October 14 until November 1
We have more than 50 different colours to
choose from,
Bring your old pattern with you, and we will
give you advice' as to quantity of wool and size of
needles. We also have.lots of patterns and needles.
Just arrived — BEAUTIFUL BABY GIFTS
from Holland and Belgium.
USE OUR LAY-A-WAY PLAN
COME FIRST TO
CLINTON'S KNITTING CENTRE
at
Amsings Import
55 ALBERT STREET
MEET
John
fe er
LEADER OF THE PROGRESSIVE
CONSERVATIVE PARTY OF CANADA
ACCOMPANIED BY
Hon. C. S. MacNaughton
MINISTER OF HIGHWAYS FOR ONTARIO
WHEN THEY VISIT HURON COUNTY- ON BEHALF OF
"Bob" McKinley
PROGRESSIVE CONSERVATIVE CANDIDATE FOR HURON
Tuesday, November 2
SEAFORTH CLINTON
CNR STATION CNR STATION
12:59 P.M. 1:17 P.M.
GODERICH EXETER
CNR STATION CNR STATION
1:45. P.M. 5:30 P.M.
Mr. Diefenbaker will also speak at the Harbourilte Inn,
Goderich at 2:00 p.m.
See Bob McKinley on Television Sunday, October 31, 13.12:30 p.m.
on CFPL-TV Channel 10; Sad p.m. on CKNX-TV Channel B.
HURON moGa5ssive CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION
JOHN G. DIEFENBAKER
FOR FUN and .:FXERCISE
:Would You
Like. To
Cud?
THE SEASON 1$ NEAR AND
ARRANGEMENTS ARE
NOW BEING MADE
BEGINNERS WELCOMED
FOR PARTICULARS AND
COMPLETE. INFORMATION
CONTACT
• ROYCE MACAULAY
WM.' G. MacARTHUR
WILLARD AIKEN
41-2-3b
One hundred and thirty-three
Lions Club members and their
wives from Ontario have just
returned from a month long
tour of the United Kingdom
and Europe.
Bayfield residents Mr. and
Mrs. Charlie Scatehmer, Mr.
and Mrs. Lloyd Scotchmer and
1931 Model "A" Passes Safety Check
Doug ROzell, Mary Street, Clinton, a stationary engineer at RCAF Station
Clinton, is shown here having his 1931 .Ford safety checked at the RCAF
Safety Check lane earlier this week. Doug still uses the 34-year-old car for
transportation to work. Nearly 700' vehicles went through the supervised
safety cheek.. (RCAF Photo)
Bayfield Quintette Tours Europe
With Group Of Ontario' Lions
Page 19,04. 20,, 1905,
Clinton :NewpRecord.
Goshen Ladies
Will Donate
To Rest Home
The October mooting of Goe
,Shen United' Church Women
WAS held on '714.4r$4.ay, .00?1.14.
21 at the .horne of Ws, Ray
XP134:10.
Mrs. F4rtier :ikVIt'qtr was 'in
charge of the meeting in the
abscnco of, Ws. John, Robinson,
Mrs. Walter Eckel read the
scrilpini and! • .offered „prayer-,
Rev., MPOrisell 'presented a
few .11h:oughts on ThenXsgiyhug,
Reports of the Regional meet-
ing held at Winthrop on Thum:-
day, October 21 were given by
Mrs:, Robert E. McKinley and
Mrs, Bob Peck, A report on
.SteWandship and Recruiting
was gIVen by Mrs. Elmer Hay-
ter.
Mrs. Bob Peck presided for
the business, Minutely' were
read by Mrs, Bert McBride end
about eighteen answered _ the
roll cull. •
Cards were received, from
jirn. Keys, and Mrs, Johnny
McBride and baby Thomas.
It was decided to . have the
"Upper f Room" brought to the
meeting 'for members to per,
chase.
The ladies will operate a
booth at Elmore ,Keys farm
sale on October 26. Five dozen
cups are to be purchased to
match the dishes at the church.
A donation requested by the
Bluewater Rest Home commit-
tee toWard8 a supper for the
canvassers will be given.
Lunch was served by Mrs.
George Simons and her group.
The next meeting Will be in
charge of Mrs. Simons with
,Mrs. Floyd Armstrong and her
group providing lunch.
Classified Ads.
Bring Results
couples once took advantage of
the Scatish. law where a couple
became man and wife by 4
sample declaration before wit-
nesses; Stirling, "the gateway
to take north" on the River
Forth . marks the boundary be-
tween the Lowlands and the
HighlandS.
The castle here was the
home of many early Scottish
Kings. Mary Queen of Scots,
was crowned here 'at .theage of
nine months.
"At Aberfoyle, we visited
the woollen weaving mills, Near
Kilian we Saw "Scottish 'Gyp-
sies" Who camp along the road'-
Side the year round.
"Braemar, our most northern
stop was interesting with its
Balmoral Castle, the Queen's
Scottish residence, which is
built of Cr,athie granite. We
also visited Crlathie Church
which is attended by the Royal
family when they are in resi-
dence at Balmoral.
"Edinburgh, with its castle
which clbminates. the city from
a height of 445 feet and its
Royal Mile along which you see
St. Giles. Church dating from
1120; Parliament House, now
the Courts of Justice; Canon-
gate Tolboofth (1591) with its
projecting clock; the courtyard
of 'the famous. White Horse
Inn dating 'back to 1623.
"Holyroad Palace 'is the chief
royal palace, in' Scotland; the
city of Melrose has its famous
abbey founded in 1136.
"After we left Doncaster, we
entered the famous Sherwood
forest which is associated with
the legend of Robin Hood. The
last place we lunched before
returning to London was the
village of Stilton with its an-
cient Church and several old
coaching inns. It gives the
name to the famous Stilton
cheese,
"Belgium and Germany with
their beautifttl flowering high-
ways are hard to describe. We
saw Austria with its herds of
sheep end cow's and their tink-
ling bells on. the mountain
sides; the stores and snow cap-
ped mountains in Switzerland;
beautiful flowers again in It-
aly.
"Crossing into France 'the
land levelled off and farming
was quite prominent. One could
hardly imagine that once those
fields flied been torn by war.
We found Paris to be an over-
populated, over-commercialized
city but with many interesting
monuments end sites to visit.
"Upon arrival 'back at Dover
and Folkestone, one could fnot
help but marvel at the White
Cliffs aping the Channel. When
you stopped to look at the
flowers on Remembrance
Hills where thousands of sold-
iers had marched to the bents,
you coned not help but give a
prayer of thanks for the free-
dom they fought fOr and: our
priVilege 'to see these lovely
slights.
a
Squash Can Be
Made Into Exciting
New Dishes
Continued from page three)
Stuffing
6 tablespoons onions
1/4, cup butter
11/2 teaspoons salt
teaspoon PePner
2 tablespoons light cream
paprika
Saute onion with butter Um,
til tender but not brown. Care,
fttlly stoop squash from shell
with Own. Reserve four shells.
to squash, add sauteed onion,
salt, pepper; and &dant Beat
well with Wk. Lightly pile
mixture Into shells and spins
kle With paprika. Broil lb tuns
uteS, or Until 4 ctelicate brawn.
Vices' fdtur serving.
OIL FURNACES
SHOULD BE CLEANED AND CHECKED NOW.
If yours has not been done yet this year, please
call or write and make arrangements to do it now:
JUST CLIP AND MAIL
A. G. GRIGG & SON
CLINTON, ONT. •
' Please clean my furnace on
Suitable Date
Please bill me for any parts
Please bill for labour.
Name of company I buy oil from.
Please bill me for labour
Mark with an X
Name Of Customer
If you wish to become one of * our fuel oil
customers and receive FREE SERVICE all year round
just contact us.
A. G. GRIGG St SON
402-9411 , CLINTON
'42-3b
-s
411111111111111MI
HURON
FARMERS
NEED A MAN
T KTiAWA
Who Understands
THEIR PROBLEMS!
AN EXPERIENCED FARMER
Can Best Represent Huron
VOTE:
(KINLEY, Robert E. X
HURON firiOGI:tesstvt CONSERVATIVE ASSOCIATION
Les Elliott travelled with the
group and have submitted the
following report of that trip. *
"Our 'first two days were
spent in London where We met
a number of Lions and had a
very interesting boat trip up
the Thames River.
"The tour through England
and Scotland took us to the
best hotels and restaurants.
The food was wonderful, We
visited Beaconsfield, 'a historic
town with its 17th century
houses, `quaint church hostels
and old coaching inns.
"We crossed the Chiltorn
hills into Oxfordshire and stop-
ped at the town of Woodstock
Where Edward the' Black Prince
was born in- 1330, "Evesham"
with its eighth century abbey
is .the centre of a very fertile
district of fruit and vegetables.
Our stay at Llangollen which
is on the River Dee with its
14th century bridge is where
the International musical Eis-
teddfod is held every year.
"The city of Chester with
Its old' Roman wall built around
it was very pleasant. The walls,
12 to 40 feet high, built in the
14th century, completely en-
circle the old town.
"The Mersey Tunnel, two
and a half miles long, opened
in 1934 and is one of he won,
ders of modem engineering.
The cost of the tunnel was
over $7,000,000,
"At Carlisle we passed the
Roman Wall which was built in
120 AD by the Emperor Had-
rian. It is a continuous ram-
part 73 miles long across Eng-
land.
-"Gretna Green was a Pretty
little town where run away
Rambling Nth Luc., f 1V9904.).
.Lucy 1179K0 out the .Prt Monolpy.So many
thwght.s. were Passing through her mind. Whorpforg, should
Oho. rarMe?
A :gaol: of ,wjnd caught up regentlx,felien leaves .and
they whirled around 4n MO pPrfogmaanee, on the lawn, before.
settbing in some corner to decay. :N1Sq !sprites in a dance
Of death!" thought 144C5r,
She looked towards the barn d over the ridge blew several golden maple leaves from the next lot, They danced
about on the lee slide of the roe', lighting here an . there like big ,butterflies, until .finally .sucked up by a streInger etverefot of alr,'und carried off to she knew not where!
Lucy decided her ramblings would be like the loaves en the roof — "here and there',
First of all she thought of death — the demise of the little country school. And although Lucy rambled around
Stanley •Thwnship on Priday in the rain, the sight of neat
little country ,sehools, wellsilghted with electricity did not
depress her as it aid "Ye Editor" last weeic.
In passing one, . she noticed the inventive turn of mind
disPlayed by pupils who had built 4 play house of bags
against the fence, I1 recalled the joy of playing "house" in
large piles of dry leaves heaped in the corners or against the
figgtn board the sun, in her young days in Bayfielcl
Publie School, Children 'inevitably get more pleasure out of
what they have created in fantasy than that which is handed
to Ulm for their entertainment.
Of course Lucy admits to having a double rose tint in
her glosses,. But with nostalgic thoughts of the doomed little
Rural School; she also envisioned the death of the cumber-
some expensive construction yet to be erected by the Stanley-
Tuckersinith. school area, Rose-tinted glasses or none at all
(Lucy is short sighted) it is plain to her that in 25 years or
less this large proposed building will be sold like the section
schools of today.
On "Take Your Choice", CFPL-TV on Saturday night
Km. Walters, who had taught grades I - VIII in: a country
school in the West Lorne area with about 19 pupils far eight
years, and is now teaching in the' consolidated school, spoke
in favour of the small country school'. "There are not so
many pupils and the teacher gets to know them better. The
little ones feel more secure in • the class with older sisters,
brothers, or children they know." Asked about the work she
said there was plenty, but also hard work for the teacher
in the large school.
Yes, the taxpayer of Stanley and Tuekersmith will surely
have to pay "through the nose" for the proposed new school
with all its frills. But Lucy doubts if in this mass education
we'll get "what we pay for!!!!"
Then she looked at the headlines in the London Free
Press en 'Saturday, re the gulls dying on Lake Erie, Research
has found D.D.T. in their bodies, supposedly from eating
fish. It has run off in, the creeks. Could not the roadside
weeds be cut to reduce the use of D.D.T., somewhat? she
wondered, Lucy thought of the large flock of gulls she'd
seen. on a ploughed field on Friday. Would they one day dis-
appear from the scene here?
Would Lake Huron become like Lake Erie which is
-doomed to be a dead sea, we are told?
The Mayfly, the food of fiSh has vanished; the yellow
pickerel and blue pickerel have vanished; and now the gulls,
too, from Lake Erie.
Lake Huron, may be similarly polluted by our detergents,
our fertilizers; our poison sprays. Trout have disappeared in
this pant off the lake. There are very few whitefish.
In today's struggle with so-called adVanced methods of
Agriculture, fruit growing and market gard'ening, to raise
larger and better crops to compensate for the 'high-priced
machinery necessary today, man is spelling the, doom not
only of fish and fowl but ultimately himself.
It is to be hoped when man locates on the moon or Mars,
he profits by experience an earth and goes back to pioneer
days, letting the balance of nature take care of pests.
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