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Clinton News-Record, 1968-07-04, Page 9Clinton „News-Record, Thursday, , July 4, on 9 On a re ent • arade at Catiadian ',Forces Base of meritorious service. Receiving the decoration Clinton three personnel received tr‘t Canadian are Lieutenant (Navy) Storey, Corporal Hill and Forces Decoration in recognition of tf,(eive ydars Corporal Sumont. (Canadian Forces Photo) ARNOLD HUG1LL and SON CONTRACTOR and BUILDER 92' Cambria Rd. N., Goderich — Phone 52479437 2 7 — 30 e— CONCRETE SILOS Thirty years of experience, I can build a silo to suit your needs — 12', 13', 14' up to 55 feet. A few vacancies yet to fill, place your , order soon — by contacting NNN ,..\•••••••1•0..\\,..•%."0.\\\•••\'40, '400.0,0.• NOW IS THE TIME TO ADD • SILO EXTENSIONS SILO ROOFS Cell or Write Now, GEORGE WRAITH BOX 113 PHONE 5244511 (ODERICH if ,00.04.% 104 ,404. The limbs life Reg. 3.98 JERSEYS for L•99 THANK . YOU • CL INTON & DISTRICT FOR MAKING OUR GRAND OPENING AT A&A VARIETY CENTE A WHOPPING SUCCESS OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK — 9:00 A.M. to 11:00 a.m. 15 VICTORIA ST. (Between Martins and !twins) PHONE 482-9581 LEE S 125 DRESSES' FROM CURRENT STOCK MONDAY AT TANK TOP LEE' Clinton i_or,J@4 LADIES' SWIM SUITS ';l eA5to Now 4 99 STORE HOURS MONDAY TUESDAY ,. WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY CLOSED MONDAY, JULY 1st 9 9-6 -6 9-6 9-6 - 9- 9 Donald Bruce Bartliff, abeth Carol Bartliff, Nellie go Blok, Ruth Anne Brown, leen Ann Clifton, Cheryl Cox, Elizabeth Joan Davies, es Cathy Dykstra, George iam Elliott, Brian George r, Gerry Gerrits, Judith Ann ie Graham, Sharon Marie resa Griffin. Mary-Beth Ruth Harland, ole Cristine Harris, Brenda ise Hartman, Valerie Faye land, , John Robert Hoy, rley Irene Hunking, Gayle net te Johnston, Wendy istine Jones, Brian Douglas nedy, Shirley May Keys, bert Thomas Legg, Mary ricia Anne Little, David - ph Ford Million, Doris Ann h. Catherine Frances Ott, Ruth ne Pickard, Suzanne Marie gh, Carolynne Ruth binson, Barbara Eileen dges, Patricia Gayle Semple, nda Jane Shaw, Mary Ann ith Shipp, John David Steep, ry Margaret Stephenson, th Mary Wallis, Bernice Ann ompson, Gaye Heather a tson, Elizabeth Mildred mdag. Koehler, Abraham Peter Koene, Gary Tholmas Kyle, Dale M 4 4 riee 1:AmPortz Raymond Jghli 1.41000, Phtiglals Ross MacD9nald) Ralph Clare Martin, Wayne Doh$1 4S Mayer, Jack Murray MeCOW4n, William James McGregor, Thomas John Morgan,, William John Morgan, James Keith Orr, George Palsa, Wayne Ernest PeaeheY, Brian Douglas Potter, Wilfred Allan Preszcator, Glen Allen Rice, Douglas Wayne Rohde, Robert. Tyman Snow, William Steenstra, Eric Roy Gerald Stewart, Lloydon William Lovell Stewart, Richard David Talbot, Frederick Ross Trewartha, Jerry Prosper YanDruaene, Daniel Ross Walters, Clifton Lloyd Webber, Gordon Thomas Yeo, Ronald Murray Young. CERTIFICATE OF ,STANDING TWO-YEAR PROGRAM =puce; TECHNOLOGY AND TRADES Dale Edward Bachert, Harvey Earl Bernard, Ferdinand K a rli &all, Wilfred Charles Button, - -David John Dettmer, Joseph Franic Dueharme , John Michael Eckert, James Leonard Ellis, Norman James Hackney, Wayne Richard Hodges, Wayne Frederick Hoegy. Gordon Keith MacLean, William Ernest MacLeod, Eugene Robert Mathers, George Wayne McLa chlen, Thomas William McMahon, Carl Edward Merner, John David Muir, William Alexander Mustard, Brian Russel Price, James Benson Sanders, Dale Philip Skinner, Robert Edwin Smale, Robert Donald Wallace. 'CERTIFICATE OF . STANDING TWO-YEAR PROGRAM BUSINESS AND COMMERCE Brenda Joyce Clarke, Christopher John Cowan, Patricia Isabel Dougherty, Shirley Joyce Dupee, Anne Marie' Martins, Mary Lou Agnes McLaughlin, Arlene Dianne Mountford, Matthea Wynanda Oskami.Sharon.,Gwendolyn Ann- Smale, Alita Steegstra, Lynda Marie Torrance. CERTIFICATE OF TRAINING TWO-YEAR PROGRAM Joseph John Austin, Daniel Joseph Baker, Paul Russell Bossenberry; Thomas Richard Boyd, Ross Jasper Brindley, Donald Ray Elliott, Garry Finch Elliott, 'Brian Elgin Wayne Fowler, William Arthur Hastings, Kenneth Arthur Josling, Dennis Edward Michael, Johnston, Joseph Kenneth Milner, Robert MacKenzie- Newnham, Hubert Earl Thiel. CERTIFICATE OF TRAINING TWO-YEAR PROGRAM Heather May Beuerman, Gail Louise Brown, Marilyn Adeline Burroughs, Nancy Cheryl Clark, Joan Eliiabeth Desjardine, Brenda many Eaton, Brenda Jane Hay, • Lynn Dianne Wigzell, Janice Lorrine Young. AU the foods that go into your freezer should be well-labeled to save time and trouble later on. It would be wise to indicate the kind of food, the serving size, and the , date of freezing. Marking the date ensures a turnover of the contents of the freezer, advise Food Specialists. FIGHT CANCER 1L WITH A CHECK UP ' AND A CHEQUE Rose Show (continued from page 1) entries); mixed garden flowers, Miss Luella Johnston, Mrs. Charles Nelson, Mrs. J. W. Counter. Three stems of any other variety of flower, Mrs. F. Fingland, Mrs. F. Pullen, Mrs. B. Olde; floral arrangement depicting a song title, Mrs. Don Middleton, Mrs. Charles. Nelson, Mrs. Clifford Epps. Children's entries: container of mixed garden flowers, Paul Middleton, Paul Van Damme (only two entries); artistic arrangement of wayside flowers, Paul Middleton, Candy Middleton, Paul Van Damme, Marion Doucette, Fred Middleton. Commencement (continued from page 1) 12 science, technology and trade, Leland Adams, RR 1 Lonesboro. Subject awards were also presented to Grade 12 students: the Clinton News-Record award in English, to Paul Gornall; the Dr. D. B. Palmer award in geography to Harold Newland, the W. C. Newcombe award in mathematics to Charles Trewartha; the Harrison Fertilizer award in science to Harold Newland; the Clinton Kinsmen award in foreign languages to. Harold Newland, the E. B. Menzies award in history to Harold Newland. W. D. Fair Scholarships were presented to Grade 11 and 12 students: grade 11, Kerry Toll, Florence Martin, grade 12, Harold Newland, Charles Trewartha, Robert Baker, Paul Gornall, Leland Adams; special commercial, Andrew Thompson. A number of special awards were presented to students: the Bank of Montreal award in business and commerce to Agnes Dykstra; the Asmussen award in science, technology and trades to Robert Baker; Page and Steele plaque winners were: the George Jefferson Memorial Scholarship to Brian Cox, the Norman and Verna Carter Memorial Award in science to Judy Finley, Wayne Gornall and Martin Penner; the Women's Auxiliary to the Canadian Legion Branch 140 award to Cam Colquhoun, the Lavis Contracting Company Limited award to Jo-Ann Aldwinkle; the Murphy Bus Lines award to Casey Roest; Ontario Senior Mathematics award to Eldo Hildebrand. Canada Packers award to Robert Baker; CHSS library awards to James Hackey, Lynda Torrance, Daniel Baker, and Janice Young, the E. A. Fines Memorial award in mathematics to Eldo Hildebrand, the Mabel Moffatt memorial award in agriculture to Steve Thompson, the Women's Auxiliary to the Clinton Public Hospital bursaries to Irla Martin for R.N. and Agnes Dykstra for R.N.A.; the Sir Ernest Cooper Scholarship to Gwen Hendrick, Co-operators Insurance Association award to Ove Christensen. Christensen. The Carn ation Company Limited scholarship, which provides $500 per year, to the winner was not awarded Thursday evening since the company's judges had not decided who was to receive it. BLIND 101N.4 PICNIC 'The eighth annual Blind Line. Picnic was held at the !Zurich Park on Sunday June 30, 1968 with 51 people in .attendance, Families present were McBride, D eichert, C ausius, • u schwanter, Sch wals, and Reichert. Sports were convened by Mr. and Mrs, Harold 'Janson, Stratford, and Mr. and Mrs. Arthur O'Hara, London. A picnic supper was enjoyed by all. The 1969 picnic will be held the last Sunday . June at the Zurich. Park and it IS hoped Ihe attendance will be as fine. Approximately fifty boys and girls, pupils of Hensall Public School, met at the Hensall Arena Thursday night and had their bicycles taped and safety inspection by 0.P,P, John Wright of the Exeter Detachment, followed with a Bike Rodeo to test their riding, - skill and knowledge. This project was sponsored by the flensall Kinsmen Club. The annual Sunday School and congregational picnic of Chiselhurst United Church was held Friday eveninOune 28 and in spite of weather conditions was well attended and much enjoyed. A delicious picnic supper was served in the Sunday School rooms. This is being written before the national election. And there's nothing more exhilarat- ing than going out on a limb. It begins when you're very little, when you eat ,a worm to see if he'll really stay alive inside you, or pick up a toad to see whether you'll wind up covered with warts. Later, it might be climbing out on a long, shaky tree limb over a deep pool, when you can't swim. Or it might be caught up in a tree, shirt stuffed with apples, while the , voice of Geo. J. Jehovah thun- ders from beneath, "Come `down, ye little divas; I know yer up there and I'll whale the tar out of yez and the police'Il put yez away fer life." Or it might be caught in the act of swiping corn and racing through backyards and over fences, with the cobs dropping and your heart thumping and the shotgun going off into the sky. Or it might be, about age 12, smoking butts with the hoboes in the "jungle" beside the railway tracks, and having a drunk with a gallon of wine come up and start terrifying you with all sorts of obsceni- ties you don't understand. Or it might be, about 14 and spotted like a hyena with pim- ples, having to ask a girl to a party, knowing that you are the most repulsive, awkward booby in town. This is a rotten limb to be out on. It could be saying, "Don't you say that about my moth- er!" to the bully of your age and sailing into him, yourself outweighed 20 pounds, but, your fists and feet and teeth going like a windmill. Or it could' be a swimmingly exhilarating moment, like the day when I was in high school and kissed my French teacher up in an apple tree. She was a spinster, and six years older than I, but if I recall, it was a swooning experience and I think we both wound up hang- ing by our knees from the limb. These are some of the limbs I've been out on. Lots of other limbs. 'You've had yours; round limbs, crooked limbs, rotten limbs, smooth ones, brittle limbs, sturdy ones. We have all gone out on a limb. 'Pile following sports under direction of Mrs. Alvin .Cole and' Mrs. Jack llrintnell were run Oft and the winners were: Races girls 6-1-8, Jane Ross; boys 6-7-8, Alf Ross, girls 9-10-11, Joanne Ito; boys 9.--10-11,. Randy Glenn: girls 12' .13, 14, Jean Cole. Ladies' graceful walking, .Mrs. It. Taylor, men stepping 12 yards, Dick Taylor, ladies' kick slipper, Miss Mary Kinsman, men's kick .the slipper, Dick Taylor, elimination contest, Miss Jean Cole and father Alvin Cole, guessing jelly beans in jar, Jack Kinsman. Several relays were held. T w o Kinette Scholarships valued at . $2.5.0() each were presented to Wayne Corbett, R. rt .1 Exeter, and Sherry Travers, pensall, for the highest boy and girl average class standing in grade 8 of Hensall Public School. Mrs. Robert Caldwell, president, and Mrs. Ron Wareing, vice-president of Hensall Kinette Club made the presentations which took place Thursday afternoon June 27 at the sehool. This is an annual project of the Club. Mr. and Mrs. Bob Baker an d Mr,„ and Mrs. Lloyd Moussea left for the Calgary Stampede where Mr. and Mrs. Mousseau will celebrate their 22nd wedding Anniversary in the West July 6. When you're young, you don't really know• the differ- ence, or you just don't care. It's climbing out on the thing that matters. Even at 20.1 was climbing out on a limb, trying desper- ately to make the grade as a fighter pilot, sweating blood so that I could climb out on the fragile wing of a Spitfire and be killed. 'What an irony! Those who didn't make it were broken-hearted. And then there's the limb of marriage. Most males will climb out on the first limb that ,ipe...Rndowed withq -Fong eye- lashes or trim ankles or a big bust. Even though they know it's a very green one, or a very brittle one, out they go. I was lucky. The limb I climbed out on was firm but yielding, green but not brittle, And I damn soon discovered that when you climbed out on that particular limb, you didn't carry a saw, but a parachute and an iron-bound alibi. However, what I started out to say was that, as we • get older, we climb out on shorter and shorter, safer and safer limbs, until we are finally left, clutching the tree-trunk, even though we're only two feet off the ground. The old limbs (or the young limbs) creaked and swayed and cracked and dipped. They are replaced by the limbs of safety and conformity and se- curity and enough life insur- ance, And the sad part is that these are the limbs we want our children to climb out on, no farther than two feet from the trunk and no higher than two feet from the ground. While they want to climb on the swinging limbs that will sail them to the skies or break and let them fall. All this, of course, is a preamble to the fact that I'm still willing to go out on a limb. If somebody will fetch a step-ladder to help me get started up the tree, I repeat, this is written before the na- tional election. There's going •to be a land- slide. It May be in Quebec or Ontario, but it's more likely to happen in the Rockies. Obituary GARRY DOWSON The sympathy of the community is extended to Mr. and Mrs. George Dowson, of R.R.1 Varna, in the sad and sudden loss of 'their son Garry, who was found dead in a ditch on his fathers farm Lot 10, Concession 5, Stanley Township, on Saturday, June 29. Public funeral services were held from Varna United Chuxih , Monday July 1. Burial was in Bay field cemetery, KIPPEN Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Edison McLean and Heather were Mrs. Jim Gregg and Mrs. Ed Gork of Bernie, Manitoba, • Professor and Mrs. John Rose of Guelph, Mr. and 'Mrs. Earl Schroeder of London. Sunday guests included Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Mogk of Bornholm, Mr. and Mrs. McKay of Embro,. Mrs. Elgin Dewar and Jean of Atwood. Miss Sharon McBride of Sault Ste. Marie arrived at her home Sunday to spend the holidays with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Edgar McBride. Two-thirds of the wood cut down on Crown lands in Ontario is used to make paper. One out of every ten newspapers in the world is printed on Ontario .paper..:. Adastra I Park On a recent parade at Canadian Forces Base Clinton the local Transportation Section was awarded the Bucklers Safe Driving Shield. This award is presented by Training Command to the Canadian Forces Base with the best safe driving record for the year within Training Command. Shown presenting the shield is Colonel Castellano of Training Command Headquarters and receiving the award for the Base is Corporal John Gallant Safety Supervisor for the Transportation Section. (Canadian Forces Photo) LL continued From Per 8) n S ne II, Barbara. Lynn ks, gAil Margaret Shia, ther Lynn iesen, nne Gertrude ar a Ann Vociden, John rew Wieekowski, Graham gla.s Yeats, Stewart Henry ng, Donna Yynn Youngblut,. FIVE YEAR SCIENCE, ' HNOLOGY AND TRADES BRANCH eland William Henry Adams, rt David Anderson, Alan ibald Armstrong, Robert es CamPhell, ,James las Cooper, Martin Jacob a, Wallace Harold EaSt,- Robert Estabrooks, Ross Howes, Paul Allen Lavis, stopher Charles Lee, elius William Roest, ence Raymond Sewell, eth Allan Slade, Vaughn ey Toll. IVE-YEAR BUSINESS AND OMMERCE BRANCH rbara Marlene Burns, Hazel ise Collins, Kenneth r Colson, Charles Robert ish, Gary James Deline, ael Scott Graham, Barbara Henderson, Lynda Ruth Norman Edwin Howey, Eveleen Jennison, David ing McCullough, Judith McBride, Lotus Linda , Bonnie Ann Perdue, a Denese Radford, Charles Trewartha. ECONDARY SCHOOL ADUATION DIPLOMA PECIAL COMVERCIAL ' COURSE tricia Helen Bannon, Anna Linda Darlene Bowers, Jean Cole, Christopher e Coombs, Margaret Rose y, June Elaine Hillen, Mary be t h McCurdy, Wendy Dianne Moir, Robert e Peck, James Anthony ps, Sandra Lee Rawson, and John Sowerby, Robert rew Thompson, Frances ie Wilcox, John Grant „ ECONDARY SCHOOL RADUATION DIPLOMA OUR-YEAR BUSINESS AND COMMERCE BRANCH SECONDARY SCHOOL GRADUATION DIPLOMA FOUR-YEAR SCIENCE' FOUR-YEAR 'SCIENCE, TECHNOLOGY AND TRADES BRANCH Douglas William •chambault, Robert Baker, Main John Bierling, Kees bert Buffinga, Wesley John . 'ambers, George Edward irysler, Robert Murray Cole, mneth Matthew Coyne, maid Charles Crich, Robert unent Desjardins, Kenneth iarles Dolmage,Ronald irdon Dougall, Jon Jacob aizer, Mervyn James Erb, rman Gerrits, David Arnold )37 dibson, Steven Ronald orris; Gordon John Henderson. Gordon James Hem, Donald 'ant Hooper, Paul Albert Hoy, !It Stanley Johnston, John leinliaar, Ronald Brian URN CO-OPERATIVE EDICAL SERVICES offers to Residents of Huron County Comprehensive f edical Coverage At Cost! —INDIVIDUAL and GROUP RATES AVAILABLE— Inquire today from: Robert McMillan, RR 2, Seaforth Peter Roy, Clinton Gordon Richardson, RR I 4 Brucefield Bert Irwin, RR 2, Seaforth or at HURON CO.OPERATIVE MEDICAL SERVICES 82 Albert St., Clinton Phone 482-9751