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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. insinammammaft,, HENSALL DISTRICT CO-OPERATIVE Announces Improved Facilities NOW IN OPERATION isopeamiDoemommilmmeal. TO, Receive White Beans At Your Elevator (FORMER MIME* PROPERTY) wer.r.r.wreee~49444 HOW DISTRICT CO-OP Z62-2716 tiENSALL 262-2608 38, 39 voitisiiimi xassinumimmumamw SEE YOUR LOCAL AUTHORIZED CHEVROLET DEALER 30 ONTARIO ST., CLINTON, ONT, . LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED PHONE 482:9321