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Clinton News-Record, 1965-11-11, Page 4......... ... Paget •�>*^�i.�n1'ot� News-M�e��r�--�T4i�,±r5,� .IN��.x. � �� �� go '1 1 4 $less Thea,. All IF TI34protect planned 14e1n'g undertaken by e Students' Council at Central Huron Secondary $chool �s any indication of the type of young crtixen being .produced in Huron County, rest_ dents have a right to feel smug The CH.$.,s tudexits Dave indicated their inteion to adopt one of the For. - ter Parent's •Plan children for a year, Funis have .already been raised through profits on sales to county residents .of chocolate b, ars by student salesme-i.. It is rewarding for area adults who have kept faith with the youngsters to see such a commendable act of charity is reassuring for parents wh9 at times ve wondered if any of the continued wining program has Laken root, It ..4 Erea nk for the general public who ve been tempted to believe the worst zt`wolAd be folly to suggest •that al1 1,300 _ so students enrolled at, CHS$ are completely enthralled -by the project and sympathetic to the .oquse--but that the 44th ing" young gaggle plan this method of sharing with others is an amen Qf goad for the futgre of us all. God bless` them in their ,progress toward responsllble adulthood, New Angle On Thalidomide THE SCIENTISTS are just as, goodbion,. at somersaults as the politicians, sug Should this startling sunri se turn gears The Financial Post. It now ap' out to be true comments The Post nA- nears that thalidomide, a drug general,- ' ' ly cursed and abjured as one of sgience's body 1s likely to propose .tha.t all ems - most ghastlymistakes could ,be a bless- taut mothers should be given the drug g in tohumanity. on the ground that deformed babies are There is a new,theary that thalido- better t ban no babes. mide, fa.r from- deforming Thousands of. On the gather hand, the use of thali- babies in Europe and elsewhere, made domide to aid transplants of anything possible the birth of infants who would from skin to kidneys, as has been sig- have been aborted soon after. concep- gested, looks like a great discovery. Three Cheers For The Rebels (Wingham Advance -Times) ' IT HAS been interesting to watch the -battle Which has raged for several months in, the Bayfield area as residents of that village and its surrounding rural district carry on the fight to retain the village school, L. Along with all ;other rural munici- palities they were being pushed toward a central school planand the abandon- ment of a comparatively new building in Bayfield. When it became apparent than the central school would be located on the east side .of the township, and` that a long bus trip daily for 'the stu- dents would be necessary, the Bayfield area started to rebel. So far their rebel- lion has been most refreshing. Now, we don't pretend to be pos- sessed of sufficientfacts to pass judg- ment about who is right and who is wrong. Nevertheless at is encouraging to find at least one group of people with enough courage to stand up for their convictions in tile face of the provincial authorities.. The plain to elltrainate all small schools ,in the province and to form township school areas is quite likely a sound one. It does promise a better grade of education for more youngsters. However, to assume that any one town- ship -is the !best possible -area for a single school is somewhat preposterous, and it would appear that the department of education has • not left nearly enough room for reasonable appeals against its mandate. We .are living in an age when our autonomy is fast disappearing. 'In fact our independence is being removed so smoothly that few seem to realize it is happening. The latest announcement is that the Provincial Police will take over the supervision of all municipalities where existing police forces numberless than 10 ••men. We aren't being asked, mark you -we're being told. Beards That Are Away Out FULL BLOWN beards may seem out of keeping with the clean cut, Acrew cut young astronauts of Cape Kennedy, but the necessities of space living may demand them., comments The Financial Post. All the best brainsin the U.S. space program, it appears, ,can't come up wittIf a solution to shaving inside a pressure mask. Asa result the astronauts must lett, their whiskers sprout and put up with the fact that these are exactly at their itchiest when total attention has to be concentrated on firing off retro rockets to return to earth. It -has been suggested, in the ab- sence of a billion -dollar space razor program, that the -thing to do is let the beard grow before blast off until it is soft and, comfortable. No decisions have been taken yet, The Post says, but it promises to do more for the beard's popularity than anything since Commander ' Whitehead. EVERY MAN FOR. HIMSELF Today is November 11 ... Remembrance Day. rivals, the Montreal Caaadi s and Toronto Maple Leafs. Again ,this sea - . _._. . . _ We found this story, written by Captain Gordon Coles in a Salvation Army publication. Since the article offers not only something to remember from the war years of the past but as well some solution for,;the,prevention of future wars, we thought the article could be included to provoke the thoughts of News -Record readers. described by Danny Galli- van,' with Frank Selke "One sweltering clay in except a few bruises. The appear itor, be dlecent, , respec- S'ingapore, during World strangest prisoners seized table people. Being good may War II, a small group of most of the fruit and kept not seem too difficult. But British prisaneis=of-war were ' it for themselves. The guard when .overwhelming tempba- working ona. new road. A asn fire -native stood be and sneered at spectacle. Usually our basic,�sinfuhat lheau na1 bored Japanese guard, armed "A few months- previously on tune ,evens itself, and we ' with rifle and bayonet, stood 'by, these men had been ,average, give way under pressure. close The prisoners, respectable citizens in their `There is only one way to washed with malnutrition and communli&es. Most of them curie permanently the selhsh- sick from months of 911 -treat- were • husband's and fathers. rias which •is std natuaial to us, land that to i'ble? Canadian in'dus'try needs Yet, when faced with terrific ,is allow meat, were bot and 'tired. temptation to. satisfy their Christ. to enter our {hearts I They looked longingly at a deep needs, evenat the ex- and cleanse us from every - food stall nearby, where a pence of their fellows; they thing unlike Haan. With His native was selling slices of could .not resist. The, veneer spirit petineating our-heamtJs fresh, cool pineapple, of civilization slipped off and' lives, we can overcome "Phe lgupa;rd, noticing the momentarily, aria they Were 'the sudden, devastating temp - men's yearning glances, sud- revealed as fundamentally nation to have Our own way, donly strode over to {tihe stall, seli> ish and greedy creatures, TlegaWlles's' of oithers or Gori. took a bray of Pineapple and "'Phis true dndidetit port- If His lave pprev!afls in: our ' laid it down by the prilon'ers, rays what usually happens t;auls, we shall be protected Ha then indicated that they when unregenerate man is TToM spiritual collapse and could help themselves, For !a faced: with a powerful hemp- gin, no matter what the crist moment the men statvd in- tation. The prisoners, urged might be. credulously .at the guard. by their hunger, ignored the "We all .need Christ; re' Then, like a pack of famished Christian: virtues of sharing garrdless of how strong or ' wolves, they fell on their and unselfisiibbtss! and thought self-sufficient we think we hands and knees and started only of self: are or seem to be to others, to grab all they could- • "Men and women are do- t?iir'-tuvi4e ealerate n�atume will � g "Th.ere was no effort to : ing much the same thing to- , let us down every time if divide the pineapple evenly, day, though not always so we donot rely on the Sav- w that every ascan could have blatantly, 'perhtps. We see flour; 13y ourselves, we are . a fair share. It. wasevery it and read about it all the no snatch for all tho' m-Izsh- , man for hlim,self, Pu. and time. ing temtpbatlons of modern shoving, they fought almost �So 1cag as thiags are o- life, Only through Chitsts like animals. The weaker rLntg brim way and we ar& power can we conquer Sin inert Iost out and got nothing tfab ly tom'forbable, we may and self,,, Schoenhals, son of .Mrs. M. like a prison .every sec- ent languages" states Mr. Dirks „The importance of the total r elft-to NewsomeRecord THO CLINWN NEW AA Amalgamated ME dUkt'ON NEW3•k9C0kD isfabilthbd low 144 WaWlslisd 1801 t E jy PublishedE�reryron Thursday At The Haarf A Mum County y++' ��► Gllnfoh, ohfirlo, Canada �+If PopulatJbn 3,476 A. LAURIE COLOOHOW FUNLISWt1 e M e i t/ a Sighed contributions to fhit publikation, ata fhb oolnibnr U0 of the Wrifers Doty, and do not nabdiobrify bzptali QM jR'� the vtaitn' bf the ebwsoor� Aufhorlzed ai second Ciao Mall, post 01666 oWlsartmenf, bftawe, 'sad for Nyrnenf of p6dt s to dish j SUNSCk471dt1 $A18t Paybble Ih bdvaks Caned_a anal Oreat 6ritatn5 $4.6b e y ar Uawd U4140 mil Fn"rbitfh.. 35.50; stools, Coolie 10 t:a k "it`s Hockey Night In -canadta" The camera catches a tense moment in a tough game between the areh- arch rivals, the Montreal Caaadi s and Toronto Maple Leafs. Again ,this sea - . _._. . . _ son'CBC-TV brings you each Saturday -tight "Hockey Night in Canada".. Bill• Hewitt calls the Toronto games from the Gondola at the Maple Leaf Gardens while Ed Fitkin, Ward Cornell and Jack Eennettt handle the intermission show. The play-by-play from the Montreal Forum is described by Danny Galli- van,' with Frank Selke Jr. taking care of the between -Period interviews.. F1 omOur. Ea r revs R the United States. The auto The Liberal party, which trade pact, which. was set up 55 Years Ago h ate with J, R. Starling, Grode- ' Mr, and Mrg. Clarence Cooper, ponies would pern'At their rick. Township. G. G. Halll .and A, L. Colqu- explained just what this means, Dorothy Rorke was accomp- Noun attended the annual meot- THE CLINTON NEW ERA anied from Alma College by Ing Of the Western Ontario Thursday, November 19, 1910 two follow students tl* week- Weekly Press Association in lowing a policy of economic end when she visited w1it'h her Hanniston on, Saturday last. Mr. Palter from a House of Ref_ Parents 7 m town, president for uge write-ti.—"A fortnight ago perhaps 3s going to Have to be a ensuin•g Y' year. two slstem; long residents of i'ble? Canadian in'dus'try needs Rev. Herbert J. E. Webb as - Blyth, were committed' to the House of Refuge. One them 25 Years Ago sumed charge of the par&h of of over our border. Can we get Trinity, Bayfield, St. Jarnets, h!ad been "batty' for yeamend gftMs, and .setting up its own Middleton and, St. John's, should in the ftilstf place have CLINTON NEWS -RECORD Varnaon, Saturday last. been sent to the iesylum. She Thursday, November 14, 1940 mark a tuimimg paint tr.e became so violent that shehail pc�s'oasalities of Canadian poli- central gove nmeot ge oiiailly to be, placed in a straight jack- The spo;it of d. eer burning is (j 10 et, but even their it was'found becoiaing more popular with Years Agcy that ft would not do to keep local people, four ;have gone Liberal, Comservativ-e and NDP her at -the H of R and the frcan 'Clinton to the northern CLINTON NEWS -RECORD latter part of the week she woods tahils past weekend. They may glue tom ��' e iftc tattoo was taken to the county gaol are: Ross McEwan, Ellwood Thursday, November 10, x955 to await a vacancy in an asy- Epps, ThomRs Churchill and CKNX-TV Chaninea 8, will be lumpyJack Scouler. From Bayfield on 'the .air by Nbvember 18, if Jas. and Wdlllam Lawson and we note that J. Howard, B. the equipment is all sect up. Wilfrid Biggiin and D. Craw- Clark and Walter Westlake G. W. Cruickshank has stated ford of -town went to Berlin have -also gone to the "eds that test pattern will be shown on Tuesday to help in reliev- this weekend. for an hour during the after- ing the -blockade at the sugar Weddings include: Doris Eli- noon, and again during the 'factory there, zabebh Nickle, daughter of Mr. evening so that television deal - Hon. J. M. Gibson and Mr. and Mils. William Nickle, Olin" ers can lime up newly-histalled Kelso visited Stratford as the ton, to Hugh McLeod, son of gets, guests of the Perth -Children's Mr's. McLeod and the late Mal- t, figures re - . . iIa and Humane Society. calm McLeod of Port Dover.Unemployinen Elliott, daughter of Mr. leased from Godezaich say there sible, but not all bh'e time, and and Mrs. Thomas Elliott, Gode- are 173 males and 68 females 40 Years Ago rich Township to Stewaz7t unemployed, d an the area this year 'aft the end of October. was hustling .rne toward that big, brick factory that looked Schoenhals, son of .Mrs. M. like a prison .every sec- ent languages" states Mr. Dirks „The importance of the total Beadle, :.Clinton and the late Last year there were 248. men CLINTON NEWS -RECORD Edwin Schoenhals. Dorothy and 54 women •unemploye!d at the same imine. Tliui:sday, November 12, 1925 B'airtliff, daughter of Mr. -and Middleton of RR 3 Thanksgiving Day, services MTs. H. Barblifif, Clanton to,Sftewart Jaanes Crozier, son of Misr Clinton won the silver tray for were -held in Wesley Church Crozier, St, Marys, and the the Grand Champion at • the on the morning of Thanksgiv- late George Crozier. Huran County Apple Festival ing Day With all ministers. tak- eas Corpus and my family, out held in. Clinton last Saturday. ing part. The usual collection 6' 15 Years. Ago Corporal ,and Mr's. R. E. Moy- er and twin daughters who for the hospital was taken and thew me the slum and $22.00 was the total amount D0 have been occupying the Balk - turned dn. Rev. and Mrs. F. H. Paull CLINTON NEWSRECORD Will house for over two yeax's in Bayfield have moved to Ad - returned to Bayfield after Thursday, November 9, 1950 astral. Park, Clinton. spending their vacation in Tor- T. R. Thompson was adver- -`-`o onto, Galt and. London. tizing Florida oranges 31c doz„ Canadian Students- Union Overalls found on the Bay- breakfast bacon (sliced) 55c Wants tax paid tuition, board, field' Road, Goderich Townftp,' lb,, No. 1 Ontario potatoes 75 double period with 10Z, the terror of the school, on Monday, November 2, new. lb. $1.10. travel and textbooks" — and Owner is asked to communic-1 Mr. and Mrs. R. S. Atkey, guaranteed diplomas? THIS WEEKEND AND NEXT By Ray Argyle' The Federal Election Campaign And The Candidates (Eighth of a Ten -Week Series on the Federal Election Campaign by Ray Argyle, Editor of the Toronto Telegram News Service) Words, But 'No Ans',wers Six weeks of campaigning Was settled in a few hours of voting Monday and, now a post- election euphoria has settled over the country. But if the election was sup- posed to have been a Great De- bate on the vital tissues, facing Canada, then: the campaign which eroded Nov. 8 must go down as the debater which never happened. For all the frenzied speech- maldug, how close did the parties come to telling, the Cana -clan peopled how they would deal with the two main problems of thins comtr(y — national unity. and national survival? All the candidates, from the party leaders to the least known outback nomdnoes paid the usual lisp service to these questions, " But no one, in .the words of Adlai SteveQtsaai�, ,'talked facts to the people,"` Perhaps this was whalt the , people songdd a�n the apathy of the oatnpaligih, 'Where was the patty leader" ready to bakethe u!uvpopular stand in ,the interest- of nterestof principle? ftom was the candidate wf:ub utas vwlilirsg fo, arc'ittnh that bits p tIty had any. fixing but a, perfect formula fiir the 1#6blems than face ,thee countro. Let's dis'se'ot th6se kof issues — stational unity acrd rwdonal rstzN val-Marti sere hbw We fad In +bl7b'i!S fist ft m- palign, ject, On the quc%tion of national The Liberal government, dur- unirty, it must now be eviclient ing the past two and gone -half that whether Fnglish Canada years, seems to have, set likes it or not, Queebe'c is going Canada on the road to some to re -shape Confedevation;;as we kind of -common inlLrket with have known it since 1867. the United States. The auto The Liberal party, which trade pact, which. was set up says it is dedicated to "co-op= in such a Way that 114, coin- erative federalism", never at ponies would pern'At their any time during the campaign Caoadlan subsidiaries to sell explained just what this means, in the U.S,, was the prime ex - Does A- mean one. Set of deals ample of .this trend. for Quebec and another for the But at the stame birAe, fin - rest of Canada? ante minister Gordon was fol - As repugnant as this may lowing a policy of economic seem on the surface, this m!ay nationalism, aimed at secuming indeed be the only way to, pre- greater Canadian ownership of serve , Confederation.. Quebec our dndustzy. perhaps 3s going to Have to be Are the two alms: compat- given a special sWtw, , and be i'ble? Canadian in'dus'try needs Allowed to go its own way on fordign'z mar'laets, and the: great - rr;:aai rirta'bte>r acs. many It ala�ead y Y est market in the world is t e w l us j doing this by opting but oaf eer- over our border. Can we get tatin oedereal - provincial pro- kito this market without r4acri- gftMs, and .setting up its own # ldhg our {national identityt rnachlVeW in Wich areas as, the No me hide told us: how. 4ontributary pension rpr'ogram. The election just ended may Ori robe other hand, do the mark a tuimimg paint tr.e Liberals stand fora a Weka•k& pc�s'oasalities of Canadian poli- central gove nmeot ge oiiailly '6ics'and pemha!ps the policies of by glnvI all provinces the the parde's; same latitude as Quebec, so There Is every likelihood that they wodt be accused of ap- within the next tthate yeamthe peasing Frendh Canada? Liberal, Comservativ-e and NDP A specital 8t, W§ for Quebec patties twill gall have hdVv lead- -which r ief 'ak has wlxich 1Vfi . D er as errs. The - en of the next few thttndere�d again -at �- may at may glue tom ��' e iftc tattoo least be prefbt:able to weakenw as to how Soon these changes drag federal authovity over the sato 6d b%pected, either mime ptWhoelg, Brut 1t is„ when you've left your driving p'blit 16W."y 64de'd3,eaA ,to l gfie e 1S more waterthan the vounOs rntM off Aith ty`ub, land on the etarrthls surtaW. r Now Jt All le9an A.ddres.sing a gi uP 1!'194 the lnvalual4e. tl`. l g for school !teaclzer+s thetther aztgipt, my teaohimg career, I was reoailing hOw entoz�ed Aad I mzu'st admit that thing6 the , ., . •oh, , ,.., tefa�*lg ga' , have gone Well. In three yam,. busixres,s, v0caon, IYriess6on oa f .fought Tray way RA to a dap- racket -- what ymt 4`89 it dal aPtment-be6dship. Oh, it to* pends on who you - purely n lot of midnight-rnl- inn by iacctdent. cWee-buyling fair • the pri'new, I had brought my family to a'n'd the 44 that they couldn't thig to!lvn .one Zunvcliay to'bave a :gest anybody else 'foal' 'the job, loglk at the %gb ts, ag we hadn't I�At I m440 it. been lheM before. And now I ,have my own pn the way out of to we little empire: a dozen or, t§o d'r w around the sdd'e stpeeW to English teachers who are so kir admire the fine bpmles, "The!t's &we Of me that tbW never 04,01” I. sa!i!d to my lvufe. bl=Qw more than $10; and "Them'Is 'a big, new fae otury assistant department head who smack in th'e rridd!le of t'hrest hangs on my ;every word, and den ,Cal section. They, don't then contradicts :it; and the usually alloYf' that;" thztl of attending departmiueat Then I' saw the roadblock, head' ?itwetings, of 'being 04 in fr'omt of the 'sprawl ing the lgside, where the big de one -storey factory, There was a Moons are made. $^i'im? agent besi:do It, well -dimes- Like what are we gonna, do ed 1but with ia. sort o¢ wild glint with }rids who oaa've '!Heid' In his eye. He flagged ane Laves Fiske' on the clWty, down, over I stopped- Ile over `a The Bible Mai the caa', "Can you Sege of at 104st one toys?", he quedW.. 1- Henry and. Tana have assumed hum that I had 40-40 .Dirks spent two years as Congo In- vision, wr something of the sort, I thought land Missionaries in literature it was some Idod' bf Cana - production, reports the Cem$n kooky, plain clothes p;oiitce dian. duan Mennonite. Aral ale check, 'tht) kind you run anito lli Canada, with their fia�n�l"! y for when you've left your driving a short ourlough they expect license in your other pants. to rroturn to Congo wbere Mr. "Ever been :to a university?", Dirks is in charge of t1Le L he shot at me. I said X'd been (La Liibraare Evangelique du to Oxford. I remernber spend- lug a Nwivole weekend them Congo) .press, which ft a co - duming the war, waiting for .a Operative work of several mis- cion :boards. Land Army gull who. never did, •. Pubtlli'sliurg books including Show up. He br+glitened considerably. scriptures and magazines, in Targe quantities, 'they are call- "Have you any contagious dis- "Have far much needed e ni was the next question. "Like -leprosy?" I told nim I to ,bo keep up-wdemands. the heavy pz�r- heavy p -duction, was las sound as any man in demands. The Brutish and Foreign and my condition could be. Beaming now, he. went on the American Bible Societies with the questionnaire. "And are heaping financially in the translation, production and you don't dlrink, smiake,play the horses ' or -chase women, distribution of millions of Rigbt?„ pieces of Scripture in many I !started to point out that I con- languages in -.the Congo, con - tinues The Mennonite. did all of these whenever poi- The Saaieties' will recoiive sible, but not all bh'e time, and 500,000 Gospels -of Mark in mine not ;all at once. But he wasn't listening. He had the car door different{ languages prlavted at "They and nd me by the arm-, acid LECO. want to place' orders for 400,000 copies of the was hustling .rne toward that big, brick factory that looked New Testament in four diffeu- like a prison .every sec- ent languages" states Mr. Dirks „The importance of the total ond. I thought I was under ar» o-n wlid'espread distribution of the rest. When we gat i�nsicle, he shov- d of God .through the whole ed me into a khat-; I wAt- oCongo :armor be aver=ern- of f .and ed, feiarfnlly, for the brightphastized." Suggested Daily Bible ReadAngs light in fire face, and the rub- rub -Sunday, Nov. 14: Amos 7. ber phase, But .he fooled me. He Monday, Nov. 15: Amos 8. stuck a confession under iny. Tuesday, Nov. 16: Amis 9. nose and snarled. "Sign here," Wed., Nov. 17: Jonah 1, I signed, wondering what had. be6c&ie of Magna Carta, Hab- Thum, � Nov. 18: Jonah 2. eas Corpus and my family, out Fei,day, Nov. 19: Jonah 3. Saturday, Nov. 20: Jonah 4. in the car. It was not until he offered to thew me the slum and the cafeteaI realized a that that RECEPTION - and - Chet history was s high school, and and that X had just experienced C the hard sell on teachers. However, it wasn't much of a switch for me. I .knout/ that the in jump into teaching, from "big industr5al list, shoe salesman or KINBUM HALL shm t -order cools has been a traumatic experience for some for people. You ,can see thein any day, tottering whine -faced to. Mr. and Mrs. James ward the staff rbom, after a Preszcator double period with 10Z, the terror of the school, (nee Janice Jewitt) ,But I had little difficulty an making the adjustment. After Friday, Nov. 1 � all, I had been a weekly news- paper editor. In that job, you Scoff's Orehesfra spend most of your time telling LADIES PLEASE BRING people things they don't listen LUNCH to, and -urging them to do things 45p they don't want to do. T found B-ttsi ess and Professional Directory t INSURANCE OPTOMETRY J, E. LONG STAFF OPTOMETRIST Mondays and Wednesdays 20 ISAAC STREET 482-7010 SEAFORTH OFFICE 527-1240 G. 8. CLANCY, O.G. — OPTOMETRIST '-•- For Appointment Phont 524-7:51 G<?DERICH 3S -rift R. W. BELL OPTO M ETR I $T F. T. „ARMSTRONd Consuittho Optometrlat the Square GODERICH 524-1$61 Itfb Classified Ads. Bring Quick Results K. W, COLQUHOUN IN$URANCE & REAL ESTATS Phones: Office '482.9747 Res. 487.7804 JOHN 'WISE, Salesman Phone 482-7265 H. C. LAWSON First Mortgage Money Available Lowest Current Xnterett Rates INSURANCE - REAL.. ESTATE INVESTMENTS Phones: Office 4BI-9644 Res. 487,-9787 H. E. HARTLEY LME IN•S1YRANCE Planned Savings .. .. Fttate Autalyslz CANADA LIFT= ASSURANCE CO. Clinton, Ontario ALUMINUM PRODUCTS. For A.ir-Master. Alumihuta Boors and Windows and Rockwell Power Irools ` ,)FRMS SALES R. L. JON16-41il Albbet Et. Clinton --482-9890 Ami HARPIER, C1#Ah',TERSD ACOUNtA�Nts . WW ZUTH $T. TELOWNE GC?DERSGHy �N7'. 52Q-y�62 14, ss