HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1968-09-26, Page 11TOWN OF cLiNiQr.,1
NOTICE of FIRST POSTING
VOTERS' LIST 1968
Notice is hereby given that I have complied with Section
9 of the Voters' List Act,•and that I have posted up in my
Office at Town Hall, Clinton on the 24th Day of
September, 1968, the list of all persons entitled to vote in
the Municipality at Municiapl Elections, and that such list
remains there far inipection,
I hereby call on all Voters to take immediate
proceedings to have any omissions or errors corrected to
Law; the last day for appeal being the 8th day of October,
1968,
John Livermore,
Clerk,
Town of Clinton
OW IS ME TIME
TQ ADP •
WO EXTENSIONS
••SRO RQOF$
Coll or Write Now,
GEORGE WRAITH
•
•
•
Box 95
PHONE 524451;
coDERICH
tf
%.:N00.4,\N" %%%%% 1.'00....W0004"N
Ofr
MARK OF EXCELLENCE
Every Chevrolet
has to make it
before we mark it.
'69 Camaro SS Sport Coupe, plus RS
*I Li a liAa *tit C. ;iia 1:4 '<ice id ki Le tti C..; Ili
GM
FURNACE, and STOVE OILS
Maximum Energy Gasolines
DIESEL FUELS
MOTOR OILS
Plus a Full Flange of Special Lubricants and Greases
PAUL KERRIGAINI• 'AGENT
CA.IssTA.D-211 LIMITED•
379 Victoria Street Clinton P.;one 4820' 9652
McINIADWITON,. Volume I pi:
the: authorized
4Je .neral the It QV), Andrew
George Latta McNaughton,,
0, H.,.
'0, D.., will be- published
September 15 by The Ryerson
Press. 'Voittine It of
MON.A ii0H11 0111,
seen List, inventor ,and
statesman whe by dint of
prodigious .energy and still more
prodigious skill lived fully more
than a dozen. lives," will be
published early in 1969,
General McNaughton, who.
would have "nothing to do with
the memoirs business;". reversed
his decision after reading John
.Swettenhaires "TO SEIZE
VICTORY;" the story of the
Canadian Corps in World War I,
published .by The :Ryerson Press
in 1964, Swettenham, who has
had complete access to all the
General's • private papers, began
the biography in 1964 and - was
working closely with
IlicNatighton until July 1966
when the General died
Born in I S87 and educated at
McGill, where he was .lecturing
in . electrical engineering when.
World Wnr 1 broke put,
McNaughton went off to war
ending it as Commander of the
Canadian limy Artillery, a
brigadier.general at the age of 31, His 'inventive genius won him
the praise of Sir Arthur Currie as
"the best gunner in the world - •
not the British. Empire • but the
whole world." Later in. World
War II, General ,Sir Frederick
Pile described him as "probably
the best and most scientific
gunner in any artily in the'
world." Currie persuaded
MeNaughton to remain 'in the
Army at war's end. As Chief of
General Staff between wars, he
waged a constant battle to keep
at least a trained nucleus of the
Army in existence, a
disheartening experience in the
face of the apathy and hostility
PUT MORE spring INTO
NEXT summer's GROWTH WITH
tall APPLICATIONS OF
BROCKVILLE: SHUR•GAIN
fertilizers
FOR FORAGE CROPS—fall-applied phosphorus
• :andpotash virtually guarantees that, next sum-„
• • mer,
.
more,,,--graze more—ensile
ord"13ecd'ilSe suppliedt.tho
needed to get your hay and pastures off to an
early spring start . . . and to keep them growing
strongly through a second and third cutting or
summer-long grazing,
BROCKVILLE
'‘11111111".1
fertilizer service
Contact your nearby BROCKVILLE:SHUR-GAIN dealer
or service centre for all your fall fertilizer requirements
SHUR•GAIN
dIM11.*
'69 Chevelle SS 396 Spat Coupe
ti
000 0.
.......
'69 Chevy Nova
Putting you first,
keeps us first.
eX=i0'500
2A Clinton 'N9vvs-ROPPrd 7,ht,irscipy, S-pptombor 7.0,190,a Bograph of
• • • ••••
Andrew McNaughton was a
"PasSionate -patriot" whose
,overriding purpose in life was
the welfare of his country. He.
was a great fighter for every
Canadian cause in Which he
became involved. His tenacity
made many enemies including
Defence Minister Ralston and
Oefteral Sir Alan BroOke (later
Viscount Alanhroojce) Who
decisively influenced his career
in World War H. Volume I of
McNaughton ends with.
McNaughton's recall to the army
in 1939.
McNAUGHTON, Volume I,
John Sweetenham, publication
date, September 15, 1968, price
$10.
Irk Martin
awarded bursary
The Bursary Committee of
the Women's Auxiliary to the
Clinton Public Hospital
unanimously agreed to award
Irla Martin its $100. bursary for
a student entering nurses'
training during 1968.
Irla is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Joseph Martin of R.R. 3,
Bayfield.
She has wanted to be a nurse
for as, long as she can remember
and during the past two
summers gained practical
experience working in a 78 bed
nursing home in Strathroy.
Having successfully
completed Grade 13 last June,
she is engaged in the final period
of preparation and is in training
at St. Mary's General Hospital,
Kitchener.
Along with the bursary,
congratulations go to Irla and
the hope of the Auxiliary that
she will find the years in training
a pleasant and rewarding
experience.
Event
Caprice.
Match this,
you other 69's.,
Should we have made the
'69 Caprice shorter?
Or adorned it with flashy
nicknacks? Should we have
skipped the bigger new
327 cu.-in. standard V8 engine,
the added interior elegance,
and the improved Astro
Ventilation System? Some
people think so--our
competitors.
Camaro.
Who needs to say
`announcing' or
'new' or 'better.'
Just look how the '69 Hugger
hangs together. Not a line
that isn't leaning into the wind.
We've improved the interior,
too. Quieted the ride. And
made the Astro Ventilation
ventilate even better.
No wonder the other sportsters
are gnashing their gears.
If somebody else
made a car like
this '69 Chevelle,
we'd be worried.
Think of the '69 Chevelle as
`concentrated Chevrolet.'
It's got Big Chevrolet features,
• but a naturally active
personality all its own.
Just add gas—and let the
other mid-size cars step aside.
1969
Chevy Nova
with Torque-Drive.
The '69 Chevy Nova costs
very little to get into. Very
little to run. Arid with
low-cost Torque-OrIvo
transmission you can order
for any 6-cylinder model ;
it's the thriftiest way yet
to get out of a clutch,
Eileen. Garrett, Clinton, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. Pert Garrett,
graduated from Woodstock
General Hospital. She received
the proficiency award in
Maternity Nursing.
HARBOURI,ITE
INN
Thanksgiving
Sunday
Oct. 13-10 pm
FOR THE
YOUNG CROWD
Got a GET
heap of HELP
washday FAST..
Let Us Do
woes?
Your Laundry
Save time and work ... let us
do the wash. Get back bright,
sparkling shirts ... perfectly
finished linens and all the
family's laundry. You just
relax.
HURON
LAUNDRY'.--r”
154 Beech Street
CLINTON
(Near Drive-1n Theatre)
Open Every Saturday
Morning
10 a.m. to 12 noon
Phone 482-9491
Chevrolet introduces 19
'69 Caprice Coupe
General McNaughton Is A Maier Publishing
of ,politicians ,aod their
chepsepering attitude towards
defence. He managed it by
getting Departments other than
Defence to pay the eOsk' of fly4V operations, Signals' work in the
North and for defence projects
,,pmpleted under
Unemployment Relief. Perhaps
his greatest contribution was
TQA, invaluable for the Air
Force as well as for civil flying,
Which he built as a relief project
during the Depression. He then
went to the National Research
Council as President, the top
scientific post in Canada, to
prepare the country industrially
for war.
Hindsight has little disputed
the *Naughton was a genius. in
1923, he was the co inventor of
the cathode ray' direction finder,
the direct forerunner of radar.
He found time to do the
calculations for "a proper
dimension for a St. Lawrence
Waterway" and it was on these
that the Seaway was built. He
brought surveying methods up
to date and had much to do with
the mapping of the North, At
NRC, his contemporaries
reported that they had difficulty
in keeping up with his
`far-ranging mind," when he was
preparing the institution for the
great part it played in the war
and reconstruction periods.
At the outbreak of World War
II, Mackenzie King selected
McNaughton to command the
overseas troops. He built and
commanded l'irst Canadian,
Army .but believing, that "the
acid test .of apvereiglity .is the
control of the armed forces,"
violently ,opposed the
Government's policy of splitting
the army and sending a corps 'to-
fight in - Italy under liritiStl
command, He left the army at,
the end of 1943 and returned to,
Canada where his involvement In.
-the conscription crisis as
Minister of National Defence
made him an even :more
controversial -figure. He pulled
back the detached corps from
Italy and brought the army
together again.
McNaughton was. .appointed
'Canadian Head of the Permanent
Joint Board on Defence and
contributed greatly to the equal
Partnership between Canada and
the United States in the defence
of North America. At the same
time he was Canadjan
Representative on the United
Nations " Atomic: Energy
Commissi on and also the
Security Council, Side by side
with this he was President of the
Atomic Energy Control Board of
Canada.
On leaving the United
Nations in 1950, McNaughton
was appointed Chairman of the
Canadian section of the
International Joint Commission
which deals with boundary
water problems. A major
achievement in this field was the
St. Lawrence Seaway which
McNaughton ; . more than any
other, made an accomplished
fact. In the Columbia River
battle with the United States,
which McNaughton considered
Canada lost, he obtained
millions of dollars in
"downstream benefits" which
might not have been obtained
without him: More important,
he made Canadians aware of
their resources.
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HENSALL DISTRICT
CO-OPERATIVE
Announces
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SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER
30 ONTARIO ST., CLINTON, ONT, . LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED
PHONE 482:9321