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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1968-11-07, Page 5nur TO. WORK. FOR YOU Me? Choose From 185 Sires? Yes Arabella, you can be a real coquette when you call United Breeders Inc. You can choose from the variety of bulls formerly used by our three parent breeding units — Central Ontario, Waterloo and Lambton Cattle Breeding Associations. Worried about picking the right bull? Your friend the local technician can. helpn He has catalogues and aids for choosing the right sire, based on the latest findings of the information gathering services. Sorry, if this sounds like computerized courtship, Arabella. It's all aimed at helping you to produce better calves, through the services of IwR U breeders inc. NITED See Me . HAL HARTLEY CANADA LIFE K. W. Colquhoun Ltd. ..14 ,Isaac, St., 'Clinton Phone 482-9747 • When You See Me Don't Think Of Life Insurance When You Think Of Life Insurance SALE CONTINUES '.4..4114001100:01c-irMi,064, p,. ' Ot. 11141 TN 5 rr. 4, 44 ‘1Sto) OLD MILL Tat-i (BAINTON LIMITED) tatra Annual ‘011`43 FACTORY OUTLET OCTOBER 24 TO NOVEMBER an The Same $peOlachiar Valoks You 14606 Come To Egitect Of tit Mohday to Odomy 9 a,hi. p.m.' Opt, 'D'"Y totordayi to td SALE ti 'BLY114,, ONTARIO .1,-, .1 -,••: • • enjoy Toronto more... . .. stay at me Lord Simcoe Hotel where .the service is warm and friendly . . where the prices are sensible . . where you're close to everything downtown ... where you can relax in modern refurbished rooms . . , where you can enjoy fine foods and intimate lounges. Singles start at $9.00 and end at $13.50 Doubles start at $14.00 and end at $18,50 Luxury. Suites Available Lord Simcoe Hotel University & King St. (at the subway)— Tel: 362-1848 Week End Special Car Coats Wools or Leathers — Plain or Fur Trimmed Special Offer 10% Off Mary Maxim Yarns NORTHLAND — Reg, 1.19 NOW .89 — 4 oz. skein DOUBLE KNITTING — Reg. .95 NOW .69 2 oz. skein PATTERNS ALL HALF PRICE LADIES' WEAR AND DRY GOODS Township Of Hullett Nomination meeting of Public School Electors of the iVlunicipalities of. The Village of Blyth.; The Town. Pf„glinton; The Township_ of Hullett and McKillop, in the Londesboro Community Hall, Monday, November 18, 1968 at 8:30 p.m„ to nominate candidates for the Huron County Board of Education. Two to be elected. Clare Vincent Returning Officer 45b AT DISCOUNT PRICES OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY 9:00 A.M. 9:00 P.M. FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE SATURDAY :00 A.M'.*46—•6:00 "SHOP THE STORE WHERE YOUR DOLLAR BUYS MORE" CLINTON DISCOUNT CENTRE AT THE STOP LIGHTS THIS YEAR COLOR YOUR WORLD WITH ADMIRAL COLOR TV The outstanding quality of Admiral Color TV shouldn't really surprise anyone. After all, these skills and (ingenuity have made Admiral leaders in just about everything connected with home entertainment. Nevertheless, people are surprised to see' such breath-taking results, such faithful reproduction of even the subtlest hues. Enjoy such freedom from fine tuning adjustment with Admiral's all-new push button* automatic fine tuning control. And hear such thrilling sound. Make 1969 your year to be surprised by any ohe of these beautiful sets. The Bonaventure Model 5611 — 25" Contemporary ConsOlette Color TV • Automatic fine tuning Instant Play 395 gq, in, screen • Color Fidelity control, tone control and dial light • "Super Scope" turret tuner • Automatic degaussing Video peaking selector • Front speaker Walnut-grained cabinet . 367/8 " W., 183/4 " GROVES & SON ELECTRIC • CLINTON PHONE 482.9414 Ambulance need. 22. BIRTHS 13OUDREAV: To Pte. and .m rs,,,p4101 Boudreau, Clinton, in Clinton Hospital, on Saturday, November' 2, 1968, a daughter. BEAM: To Mr, and Mrs. Orval -Beam (nee Mildred crieh) i n Port Colborne General Hospital, o.n Saturday, November 2, )908, a son, Glen Ernest, 23. DEATHS - I-lAYMAN: Passed away at the home of her daughter, Arthur (Ruth) Elliott, the Little Intl,' Bay field, Mrs, Albert Hayman, of London and Bayfield, the former Gladys Baker, in her 77th year. Other survivors are: sons, John, Belleville; Jim, London; daughters, Mrs. W. L. (Mary) Arther, Alexandria, Va,;Irother, Vernon, London; sisters, Mrs. Margaret Deeley, Michigan; Mrs. Kathleen Guimond, Indiana. Funeral services were from Needham Memorial Chapel, London on Wednesday, November 6, with intement in Woodland Cemetery, 2S. CARDS OF THANKS F STEWART: We wish to express our sincere thanks to relatives, friends and neighbours who helped since we lost our , barn. A'speeial thanks to Clinton Firemen who worked so hard and Blyth for their aid. Also we would like to thank those who helped put on a benefit dance and the large crowd who came. — Lloyd and Isabella Stewart and family. — 45b JOHNSON: I sincerely thank everyone who sent me cards, flowers, treats while I was a patient in Victoria Hospital, London. — Wilbert Johnson. — 45 26. IN MEMORIAM BALL: In loving memory of a dear wife Erna Ball who passed away November 2, 1967. "Her memory a daily thought," — Ever remembered by her husband Norman Ball, —'45p FREEMAN: In loving memory of a delr wife and mother Lydia who passed away, November 13, 1962. Precious forever are memories of you Today, tomorrow and all life through Wherever we are whatever we do We shall always love and remember — Lovingly remembered by husband Joseph and family. 45b 29. BUSINESS OPP. SPARE TIME INCOME Refilling and collecting money from NEW TYPE high-quality coin-operated dispensers in your area. No selling. To qualify you must have car, references, $600 to $2,900 cash. Seven to twelve hours weekly can net excellent monthly income. More full time. For personal interview write CANAPENN DISTRIBUTING LIMITED, 302 OUEL,LETTE AVENUE, WINDSOR, ONTARIO, Include phone number. — 45p THE WHAT'S IT SHOP 84 Wellington St. Clinton r4 48267682 ANTIQUES and Gifts We buy old Glassi china, Books and Small Fueniture STAN BLOWES TRAVEL SERVICE, 32 Wellington Street, Stratford, For all steamships, rail, hotel reservations, tours, bo,w bank rates on time payments. Prepaids arranged for reltitives visiting from oypywds,. call 271-5710, 28. ROOM and BOARD ROOMERS and boarders, accommodation for two, phone 482-7120. -7- 4.0 1,1'n Rates jump Continued from page the PVC's waterworks branch„ Mr. Boussey said, and the operation has been running a deficit for the last two years. Td d I at ions of operating expense and revenue so far this year show the average monthly deficit at more than $600 he said, with no provision for needed maintenance and improvement of _the water system., The present rates were.. set more than four decodes ago and based on 1923 estimates and plans, Mr, Boussey says, and may have been in effect even longer, but the old records are not Available. Among planned improvements mentioned by the PUC manager are replacement next year of 8,000 feet of undersized mains in areas where • growth and population increase have pushed demand beyond capacity of 60-year-old piping. It is also hoped eventually to automate the pumping plant, he said. The PUC, a five-man agency, includes the mayor and four men elected to the commission, Hal Hartley is commission chairman, John Wise is its secretary. Customers outside the Clinton corporation limits will continue to pay twice' the amounts paid in town, when the new rates go into effect. • Loyal Orange Murphy Loyal Orange Lodge No. 710 held its regular meeting last week with a good attendance. Plans were made for the auction sale on this Saturday. Members of the L.O,B.A. Lodge have been asked to help with the used clothing and baking. Ten dollars was donated to country church program at C.K.N.X. radio, Wingham, sponsored by the county lodges. At the next regular meeting, it will be Past Master night with *Thomas Deeves in charge and the Royal Arch Degree will be exemplified on several candidates. The annual meeting will be held on November 28 with supper at 7 p.m: Harry Cowie, Toronto, from the Orange Insurance Department will be the guest speaker. 4,1i-dinged took the Num! to hospital. Five other persons were taken to Clinton and Codcrich hospitalS when a third car piled into the two-car crash seconds after the accident..None of the five were seriously injured. In its verdict, the jury said: "The jury feels we should have better ambulance service in Clinton," It did not elaborate,.. Ambulance service in Clinton was formerly provided by two funeral directors who operated an ambulance together. They went out of the ambulance business early in 1966. At this time, they offered their three or four-year-old ambulance, fully equipped, to the town. Although town council said this was a generous Continued Concession 6, Hullett Township, or!' Highway 4. The old farmhouse, owned by Jimmy Carter or Londesboro and used ror storage or straw and grain,. Was only a heap or blazing timber when !licnce arrived, Mr. Carter said at the time that the dollar loss was perhaps $1,000, but the intangible loss to him would- be much greater. He said there had been no electricity or other source of combustion in the structure and asserted that the rime was the. work or an arsonist. TWo other earlier fires occurred in the.Clinton environs, but did not ,involve. the town firemen. In the first of these blazes, at 12:30 a,m., on abandoned house owned by Ross McBeath, R.R. :3, Kippen, was burned down with loss estimated at $300. The other involved an abandoned barn on the property of Norman Durst, R.R. 2, Clinton. The barn, valued at $3,000 and situated one-hall' mile south of the. first road east 'of Benmiller in Colborne Township, was also a complete loss. The last fire of the night, and the most serious, was the only one in which the origin is not suspicious. In that case, fire started about 5 a.m. in the kitchen of the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ken E, Williams, H.R. 4, Clinton, and did at least $1,000 damage. Clinton fvernen„were A scene two hours or more. The house is on Highway 8, halfway to Seaforth. Seaforth sent a truck at one point, but the fire was already well under control and the Clinton men needed no help. Mrs. Williams (Dorothy), a kindergarten teacher at Clinton Public School, said she was awakened by smoke and roused the other members of the family. She managed to locate a car key and get out the back door, though the smoke there was so heavy that her husband and two sons, aged 11 and 15, were unable to exit and made their way out the front. Mr. Williams, who works at the Mitchell plant of Standard Products (Stratford) Ltd., drove to a neighbour's house and phoned firemen who were able to confine the fire to the one portion of the kitchen. The Williams' home has been Croat page 1 girt it believocl tt was refused bootitoie or eNtriensive ). poll cost~, Coroner R. \V. .FloWerk, Clinton, \vim 1.ondtteled 1. inquest said that Clinton is dependent, on (loclerich and Seaforth 44)04410p services. Dougherty was, alone in his ear and travelling north on Highway •-1. The jury determined the head-on crash occurred in the southbound lane of triirric. Doctors pronounced Dougherty and Mr, Rogers dead at the scene. Mr, Morley died in hospital. Mr. Rogers' -parents passed the accident scene shortly after the crash without knowing their son was a They too were returning to London from the wedding, its and More tha n NO ministers and ltiy1»on. .414end00 the throo-day thimilton 400 London Synod held at, 10os; Presbyterian Church, kloderieh„ Monday, i rueSday., and 1'ti e(111000, Moderator or the 9,5th synod Was Reverend . .James Kennedy Thomson, of KnoN. Presbyterian ()MINI!, St, Catharines, Mr. Thomson. was aeelaimed to the position Monday after .the retirement of :former moderator,. Reverend R. H. Armstrong, of Hamilton. The ministers .broke up into live discussion groups at the synod, Reverend W. A, Henderson headed the Camp Board; Reverend John Congrarn convened for . the Christian Education group; Reverend D. C. Archibald, Evangelism and Social Action; Reverend D. Campbell, Missions; RPverend A. Clements, Stewardship and Budget, Dr. E. H. Johnston, of Toronto, secretary of the Presbyterian Church's overseas mission, said Monday night that Canada may, lose one of its greatest moments refusing to take positive action on the Nigeria-Biafra war, Dr. Johnson, one of the few Canadian experts on Biafra, said the Canadian government is ill-informed on the situation and that Prime Minister Trudeau is "concerned more with being correct than compassionate". Dr. Johnson has made two trips to Biafra this year, one in January, the other in August. "Six ,thousand Biafrans were dying daily of starvation and illness during August," he said. More recent estimates put the figure at 10,000, and by Christmas 25,000 to 50,000 persons will die each day if food and medical supplies are not increased. Dr. Johnson has travelled to London, .Kngin.nd, and, Washington, D,Q„ to try to .f4el, of fit.ials working on a settlement of the RION situation, and is one of ,several church workers who are "keeping the heat on Ottawa" .ift an attempt to increase C.34ncidicio aid to Biafra, HO says he .13 anadion government should send supplies to Biafra, then press for a United Nat ions settlement of the dispute. ".Each aircraft full of supplies Canada sends to. 33iatra saves tens Or th011SOndS of lives," he said. Dr. Johnson said the Canadian government is ignoring the Biafran problem — hoping it hill"just go away", Reports, from presbyteries and committees were given at the meeting, including one dealing with student revolts. In it; report, the -Presbytery of Bruce-Maitland said: "Black Power has clear and well-defined objectives; they know what they want! Student power has not found a popular slogan, nor do they know what they want, or where they are going. That is not to say that students have no common factor that unites them...they are sickened with the face of their world: its blood and carnage; its extravagant waste; its hunger and poverty and unhappiness; its galling smugness, and its helpless e institutions, such as the United Nations, a sounding board for complete disunity and eOnfosion. It looks as if the Youth of the generation. are not going to accept the world as it is. 'They are not going to accept its institutions, .however hallowed and sanctified by age, They are not. going to accept the present evils as something ordained by heaven. .and sing, `this earth is a vale of tears, heaven is my home'. They are not going to accept the bad-man theory of history., and hold .Stolin and Hitler responsible for a shattered world, this is the thinking and mental c.,limate that produces Revolutions and Reformations, then that is what we must expect; and the only question left is — on what side shall we take our stand?" Kippen Emerson Kyle retureed home Sunday after being hospitalized in South Huron Hospital. Exeter. Miss Mary Thomson underwent sitivery Tuesday in the Sick Children's Memorial Hospital, London. Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Schneider and Family of Stratford were recent visitors with Robert Thomson. Mrs. Alma Hess entertained Mrs, Gordon Schwalm, Mrs. John 1VIcEwen, Mrs. Glad'ys Coleman or Henson and Mrs. N. Long Sunday at her Hess—Haven Cottage in the Pinery. soccer results Soccer teams from rlietou Pttblie School visited A/AI, Hugh. 3umtillelI School Wetinesdoy„ 0clober 80, Clinton won the boy's tame with Danny Colnuboun. Sewing both goals t'in' Clinton and. Eugene .Sehwah tallying for the host team, The girl's game was closely contested tied ended in a tie. Joyce Neilan scored for Clinton minutes alter Nancy Parker put A/M Hugh Campbell ahead, 4-0 CirrnslIT35 1743-TV 0,1175.1fICTO-ro Clinton NeWs-Record. Tht,rsday, .November 7, 1955 -5, yno Held at Knox McCANN: Many thanks to thy friends and neighbours for all gifts, flowers, and get well wishes sent during my recent stay in Clinton Hospital, Sincere appreciation and special thanks to Dr, Walden, Dr. Newland and the nursing staff on first floor. ,Mrs. Ronald McCann (Marion) 45p JOHNSTON: We wish to .express our sincere thanks to our relatives, neighbours and friends who did so much for us when we -16St"ottr barn. A special thanks fianithePri..work child gelititorit who !hided /them. ,:.i„ Lodge 'notes „ Also we would like to thank ' those who went to so much , work and time putting on a benefit dance. — Larry and Helen Johnston:- 45b PICKETT: I would like to thank Doctors Addison and Walden also nurses and staff and those who sent flowers, cards, and visited me while a patient in Clinton Hospital. — Mrs. May Pickett, --'45p Firemen kept busy from page 1 rem odele , coneeo I i ng. original log construction, one concern was that the flaws would get into the heavy timbers. Firefighters hat! to use air tanks to work inside and smoke damage occur:red throughout the houSe. Police aro investigating chtmage to the public school, where several windows were broken Hallowe'en night, Ohio I' Lloyd Westlake said there. miry be - charges in thin instance of vandalism. Damage was also reported t o an automobile parked behind the , Mhay-Moe Restaurant on Albert. Street and a number Of windows were broken at the home of Brock Olde, 99 Princess Street East. One accident was reported early Friday morning. Police said it involved a pickup truck owned by Alan Armstrong of Varna and driven by Gregory Armstrong, Hi, and an auto operated by David Riley,- 20, or Kitchener,