HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1968-04-18, Page 12MONDAY, 22, 1868.
of 'Huron
County '41s1Price1. :Society •ea
1-1i4P4 it zntennial School.
.one mile south of Jane044
9p :Highway 4, Guest .epeeiceri
101.11akea
.Subject 'The •ataay of Pioneer
•
Wil,Iiam lagille• of Tirticotlem
:and His Family." POPO in*
, 16 t.t.
SATURDAY, .4141,1 20, 209
:1)44! Hake • Sale and Bazaar,
Town 'Hag, auspices Pf.:14.chss
Societies,, Christian Aeforme4
Church.,.. 16, .10 b
Whim you:rt. ',coy so no
the day . ..166 tha b00(111111;
HAINrIld
PIPING LINE
iNVITaTfOaTa AND
AalateeNCEMENT8
.ANSTETT . „ . .
ofiveu,eas..
Clinton
Walkerton ,.
And jeafinilt
'CLINTON 4824025
Members of the winning team of Bayfield bowling club were
awarded their trophies at a banquet held at Bayfield golf club,
The winning team, from left, is Yea Koene, captain, Mrs, Y. •
Koene, Dan Weston, Mrs. D. Weston, Mrs, William Mcllwain
and Bill McIlwain. (Photo by Belichamber)
Credit union Members say: shop for the lowest cote
Credit unions never charge more than a penny a Month
for each dollar you still owe. That's only $6.50 for $100
repaid in 12 monthly installrnents. No extra charges. if
you pay ahead, you save the eatrat interest.
Borrowing IS easier at the credit union, where the members
Ore the owners.
With few exceptions, your Iota) Is "Paid Pull" in cast
of your death, and your savings are matched dollar for
&Aar - with insurance provided by your credit union at
no extra charge through CUNA Mutual, the credit union
ihsurence company.
If there' ls no eiriertit Oulu,* you ttiOrk
'Write to:
Clinton Community
Credit Union
OPEN BOWLING
FRIDAY NIGHT — SATURDAY AFTERNOON
AND SATURDAY EVENING
For Other Schedules
Call For Group Reservations
Clinton Crown Lanes
482.7791 OR 482.7776
Victoria St. — Clinton
CLINTON
CAMPING & SPORTS SHOW
SEE THE NEW
440). TENTS
TRUCK CAMPERS
)44141/
4
BOATS AND MOTORS
CAMPING ACCESSORIES
APRIL 20-21 1-10 p.
CFB CLINTON
Admission 25c
REGISTRATION FORM
Girls' House League Softball
Agee 14 and under
Sponsored by the Kinette Club of Clinton
Name
Age Phone No.
Position you prefer to play
Submit Entry By April 30, 1968 to:
Mrs. Bert Clifford,
Box 730,
Clinton, Ont,
CUSTOM
BLIND SERVICE
BLINDS $2.49 to $185
CURTAIN RODS— DRAPERY TRACK
Plot All The Necessary Hardware
Are Available At
$. NOTICE
1968 KINSMEN
PEE WEE BASEBALL
FOR BOYS BORN AFTER JAN. 1, 1955
9 to 12,Year,Olds
Registration Forms Available
At , Local and District Public Schools
Diary Of A Vagabond
PLAN NOW TO 1.3g,SFIVVP.
PAtAr04y, October $.0 for
ion's. poll Festival , A large
Seleatioa.Pf handmade4.011p eta
will be AA' .sale and ae. well
unique doll collections, will be
on display.
Loll hobbyists are invited
to participate in .00. event, FPr.
farther detaile. 000tact. Mrs, A.
sT, ,A49w4t4o,tivenPrt 468-0006
or .Dursoa
FRIDAY, ApRil, /9, LONDESe
BORQ Hall,1,10111'e and dance.
Fuctire , at a:30, dancing at 10.
Music by Ramblers. $ponsored
by Hallett Federation of Agri..
caltere. 16 p
TUESDAY, APRIL 23, 8 P.m.
Card Party Oddfellows
Everyoae welcome. 16 p •
FRIDAY aPRIL 26, CLINTON
Horticultural Society, Town
Hall, 8 p.m, Mr. J, W. IVIcLaren
of •13enmiller will show slides
Please bring a "plant” for
Plant Exchange. 16,17 b
FRIDAY, APRIL 19, CASH
Bingo, Legion Hall, Seaforth
8:15 p.m. 15 regular games
for $10.00; 3 - $25.00 spec
ials; $75.00 jackpot to go. Two
door prizes. Admission $1,00;
extra cards 25a or 7 for $1,00.
Auspices Seaforth Branch 156
Canadian Legion. Proceeds for
Seaforth District High School
Girls Band,
THURSDAY APRIL 18 BINGO
at Clinton Legion Hall 8:30
P.m. Jackpot $55.00 in 55 num
hers; tfn
.,-$4,TVAPA,;, Aga,. 20,17afe
fodil T-100.-.4..o1P.PrO ay Wellleate.
Auxiliary, Ritchie 1a411ellag
Ades. trg Park. .2 4 'P.44.,!. '.86 181:164
TIXPPAYA .APRIL P? AP.8,a
bingo• at 1lurpn Fish and
Game c10. jackpot $55
0. numbers, 6 door Pr4Ps;
8;30-.13vm,,, thf
INTERNATIONAL HYDRO.
L •qpicm., DECADE STAMP
A four colour :tee CentStamp
to 'be released OY Panada
Pest Office on May $, 1068
will commemorate Canada's
Participation in the UNESCO
SPolleered 1905/1914 Internee
tional 113'01'0100es), Decade,
Postmaster G e n era 1, Jean"
Pierre Cote announced totiay.
The Predominantly brown
stamp, large in size
and horizontal in format, also
serves as a vehicletointrodaee
another newcomer in the field
of Canadian stamp design, The
ahosen renditiop was executed
by Hungarian born, Caoadian
by adoption, Prof. Imre von
Mosdossy of Agincourt, On.
tar* Versed in widely varied
fields of art and design, Prof.
von Mosdossy has to his credit
hundreds of stamps chosen for
use by postal administrations
in many, parts of the World.
Photogravure in three
colours and steel engraving in
One colour have been utilized
by the British American Bank
Note Co., Ottawa, to print
twenty.four million of the new
issue. First Day Cover Service
will be provided by the Post.
master, Ottawa, 2, Ontario.
In size the new stamp is
40 mm. x 24 mm. Centered
in the design is a weighing
rain gauge flanked on the right
by white lettering on the dark
brown background: "Inter.
national Hydrological Decade",
"1965.1974", "Decennie Hydro.
logique Internationale" an d
"Canada". To the left of centre
a small red eleven point
Canadian maple leaf is super.
imposed on the World in space.
The symbolic representations
of water and precipitation is in
white on the basically blue
World. White is used for the
sun and radiating rays in the
upper left corner and for the
denomination at the lower left.
Inks are combined to achieve
the near ochre in the central
gauge and the World's land
mass.
Canada is one ofninety-seven
member states cooperating in
the international study whose
purpose is not only to increase
knowledge in the developed
countries but to increase the
ability of the underdeveloped
countries to gain knowledge of
their own water resources. At
the National level, Canada has
served for four years on a
Co.ordinating Council of twenty.
one member countries which
has representatives from the
U.S.A., the U.S.S.R., France
and England as permanent delete.
gations,
Efforts of the Canadian
National Committee are cur.
rently concentrated on185 study
projects in a scientific field
which covers the entire history
of the cycle of water on earth.
An important aspect of study is
Bell ‘Atom an
outbowls men
Betty Daer outdid the men in
all categories in bowling play at
Clinton Crown lanes in the week
Of March 27. Playing in the Bell
Telephone league she won the
high average, high single, and
high triple with scores of 218,
302 and 795 respectively.
Top men's average in the
Bell league was Joe Daer, 213
While Brian Sanders had top
triple at 666 and Hein Repose.,
boom won men's single at 267.
the effects on man and the
effects of man's activities on
water. Although Canada is
estimated to have one-seventh
of the World's fresh water in
her lakes and •about one-tenth
of the World's fresh water in
her rivers, more than one-half
of the surface waters flow north
,and are therefore not im-
mediately usable by the ninety
percent of the population in.
habiting an area within two
hundred miles of the southern
border,
Estimates place the pro..
portion of sea-water as ninety.
seven percent of the World's
total. Two-thirds of the remain.
ing three percent is im-
mobilized in polar regions and
in glaciers, consequently for
his fresh water needs man must
depend on the remaining one
percent of the World's supply.
Most cottage rolls must be
cooked before eating although
some are fully cooked. Be sure
to read the label so you will
know which type you are buy.
ing, Regular cottage rolls can
be cooked by baking to an in.
ternai temperature of 170 de.
grees or by simmeringinwater
for 35 to 40 minutes per pound.
by Dorothy Barker
In thiS age of supermarkets
it is .an exciting experience to
find in one's travels a genuine
farmers' market. They are al.
most as scarse as hen's teeth
and are usually found in older
and are usually found in
older established communities.
There is the old St. Lawrence
Market in Toronto and another
in Kitchener, Ontario, which is
almost as famous south of the
border as it is within several
hundred miles of its own area.
The one I am about to write
of is older than a century. It
runs between two city blocks
in the heart of Saint John, New
Brunswick, and though it was
burned to the ground in 1842
and rebuilt in 1876, it survived
the disastrous fire that almost
wiped out the city in 1877.
Unlike the old fashioned
farmers' markets with their
out-of-door stalls, the Saint
John City Market is entirely
under cover. There are ten.
rants there who have been of.
fering their wares from the
same location for more than
a hundred years, generation
after generation. Perhaps de.
signating it as a farmers' mar.
ket limits the imagination to
vegetables, fowl, homebaking
and dairy products, Though
mach of the produce comes,
from farms, in its entirely it
is as enlightening as a visit
to a museum, a fisherman's
wharf, a nursery and a poll.
The Berean unit of the UCW
held the April meeting in the
church parlor. The president
opened with an Easter reading
followed by prayer.
Mrs. Lorne flunking read the
scripture passage. Roll call was
answered by a Bible verse.
Mrs. Scott contributed a solo
accompanied by Mrs. Wood.
Mrs. Harvey Bunking gave a
reading "The Legend," In place
of the study book, a film depict.
ing the Easter storywas shown.,
The .meeting closed with the
Miapah benediction, * * *
Visitors over the weekend
with ,Mr. and Mrs. Alien Shad•
dick were Mrs. Shaddick's sis.
ter Mrs. Doris Snyder and son •
Rodney, Kitchener, anda cousin
Mrs. /van Elliott and Mr. Elliott
Soverign Sask. The cousins had
not been in contact since child-
hood so' the visit was most en.
joyable.
* * *
Mrs. Bill Andrews and child.
ren, Toronto, spent a few days
with her parents Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Wood.
tical gathering all rolled into
one.
I had just entered and was
running my hand wrist-deep in
a basket of rock cranberries,
ruby red and as tiny as blue•
berries, when J. H. "Joe" Wall
asked me if I would like to
see his Centennial project. Joe
has had his stall since 1945,
which he bought from the Ca.
Neill Brothers whose tenancy
dated back more than 70 years.'
The "Project", displayed
among the produce, was a price.
less collection of pictures of
river boats that once floated -
on the commercially travelled
Saint John River. Rather gro.
tesquely among them was one
of Canada's first warships, the
aaiobe'l
His next project will be coat
letting pictures of wind jam..
mers and famous boats that car.
ried cargoes between the ports
of Saint John and Boston, old
side-paddlers and 'stern wheel..
'ers. This interest has re•
suited in trading pictures with
Cecil Beesley and the formation
of the. Marine Historical Society
of Saint John.
While we talked of the know.
ledge and leadership Captain
H. R. Conley, retired sea cap.
taro, is lending the project, I
chewed on a wad of dulse and
tried to appear as though I
was enjoying its musty, salty
flavour,
AeeI Chapman is hale and
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Matson
and family visited over the
weekend with their parents Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Shobbrook,
* * *
Mrs. Townsend who returned
home from hospital last Thurs•
day left Monday for a visit
with her sister Mrs. Bentham
in Oshawa.
* * *
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hamilton,
London, were Sunday visitors
with Mr. Govier and Mrs. Web.
ster.
* *
Mrs. Robert Youngblut spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will-
iam Wells.
* * *
Mrs. Bunking visited Sunday
with Harvey at Westminster and
found him somewhat improved,
* *
' Mrs. Willows Moutaain was
taken to Clinton Hospital to be
under doctor's care, until she
shows improvement.
hearty at 94 and his green,
grocer stall is a friendly meet,
Lag place for customers who
have traded with him for more
years than he can recount.
Then there's Franlc Parks. lie
not• only has his own stall,
but sells his farm produce to
other tennants in the building.
Most interesting result of my
visit with him was to learn
that weather is forecast using
a sauerkraut barrel as a bare.
meter. If it is dry, fine weather
will be enjoyed; if wet, a storm
will brew within 24 hours. He
didn't explain where the fluid
goes when the weather turns
fine once more. As far as I
could d -termine, it's all in the
barrel, fair or stormy; prob.
ably sinking to the bottom only
to rise again when rain is in
the offing.
Mrs. J. W. Peacock (what a,
delightful name for a horticul-
turist) grows flowers on the
Sandy Point Road. There are
bowers of fresh flowers in her
booth and, rather surprisingly,
memorial wreaths of artificial
blooms displayed a m on g
crocheted baby bootees and
frilly aprons - all for sale.
A delightful person, Maritta
McNulty, broadcaster for radio
station CFBC, interviews cus-
tomers andwanderers, like/ did
each weekday for half an hour
before noon. She is sponsored
by stall operators, who told me
tourists and citizens alike visit
the market after hearing her
daily show.
I envied the housewives who
were purchasing farm raised
chickens - not the brooder-fed
type, but the good old-fashioned
kind that grandma used to raise
on table scraps and worms.
You can't beat their flavor.
There is sophistication
among all these goodies too,
for T. S. Fenwick is an im.
porter of cheeses from all over
the world. I bought honey and
maple syrup from him to ship
home along with the Grand
Manan dulse after he lectured
me about how good for my
thyroid, the seaweed really Is.
Ugh!
1966 Chevrolet 1/2-ton
pickup, long wide box.
1966 Chevrolet 3/4-ton
pickup, long box, heavy,
duty equipment.
1965 Chevy Van, side
loading doors, extra
heavy equipment.
1964 Chevrolet 1/2-ton
pickup, wide box, V-8
motor.
1964 Dodge __1-t o n,
stake body, dual rear
wheels.
1959 Ford 1/2-ton pick-
up.
1957 Mercury, 11/2-ton,
stake , body, dual rear
wheels.
LORNE ,BROWN
MOTORS LIMITS
Your Friendly Chevrolet,
Oldsmobile Dealer
482-9321 CL1NTO
TaaradaY,.-APaii,18,. 19.04
EVENTS
LONDESBORO
BROCKVI LLE
fertilizer service
• Bulk Warehouse
• Spreaders Available.
• Bulk and Bagged Delivery.
• $2 per ton Pick Up Allowance.
• Custom Anhydrous Service.
$6 per ton Bulk Discount.
• Complete Selection of Analyses
Dependable Service—Always.
CLINTON FEED MILL
PHONE 482-3484
ASK POR.
STAN pAouerre, Manager
a