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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1969-07-31, Page 3After Sunday's historic.enoon walk is there anything else worth mentioning in this coininn? There is really nothing more I can add concerning the whple affair. Everything that can be. said, has been said, over and over and over again. In fact, my modern youngsters are already so tired of hearing about Apollo 11 they are ready to dry dishes rather than watch television. Before we knew that the all-star game to be played in Washington Tuesday evening would be rained out, my son was absolutely livid to think the network would consider interrupting the ball garne to bring a further report of the space flight! That's just how impressed the younger generation is about the fact that three ordinary human beings have actually strolled on the surface of the moon. Yes sir, the kids of today have accepted the moon landing as just another happening. You have to be much older than 12 or 13 years to be very much moved by the recent lunar adventure. I suppose 'it is understandable. All their lifetimes, kids of that age have watched one space conquest after another. What's more, modern science courses in the elementary schools teach much More of the solar system than most parents ever knew, so getting to the moon hardly seems worthy of any special attention, Actually I wasn't too surprised that the Apollo 11 crew actually made it to the • BROWNIE 'S DRIVE-IN CLINTON. THEATRE ... Box Office Opens at 8.00 p.m. ALL' DOUBLE FEATURE SHOWS . THURS. & FRI. July 31, August 1 `The DETECTIVE' Showing at 9:15 p.m. — Starring kiMITTANCE Frank Sinatra aw., Lee Remick "'""`"m" •°""‘ Ralph Meeker ' In Color — — PLUS "JUST 'DON'T STAND THERE" Showing at 11:00 p.m.—Starring ROBERT WAGNER and MARY TYLER MOORE . Color Cartoon SAT., MON., TUES. August 2-4-5 "The 'Secret War Of Harry Frigg" Showing at 9.15 p.m. — Starring PAUL NEWMAN and SYLVIA KOSCINA In this comedy, an Army private, well known for his guardhouse escapes is promoted and sent to help five generals escape who are being held captive by the Italians and who are unable to come up with an escape plan themselves. In Color — — PLUS - "NOBODY'S PERFECT" Showing at 11 p.m. — Starring DOUG McCLURE & NANCY KWAN Color Cartoon Special SUNDAY SHOW August 3 — At Dusk HORROR AND SUSPENSE IN A BIG TRIPLE BILL Starting at 9.15 p,m. ."War Gods of the Deep" Vincent Price and Susan Hart "The Cobra" Dana Andrews and Anita Ekberg In Color (Adult Entertainment) "Master of Hdrror" All Star Cast ,— Plus Cartoon WED., THURS., FRI., SAT., MON., TUES. August 6-74-9.11-12 Top ramify 5ntet`toirtrnent IAN FLEMING'S "CHITTY CHITTY , BANG BANG" Showing- at 9.00 p.m. ,--- Starring' DICK VAN DYKE, SALLY ANN 'HOWES and 1.16NEI. JEFfRIES A•musical comedy about 6 zany- tnglish family and its magical car Corot 4-, Cartoon — PLUS "YOURS, MINE AND' OURS" Showing at 11,1s -. Starring HENRY FONT:4k A. tUCIttE SAL ft, Col-our IF YOU WANT THE FINEST ,SERVICE WE'RE PROMPT AND MOST EXACT. ART'S SUPERTEST Albert St. - Clinton 482-7903 BUY YOUR DRUG NEEDS AT YOUR DRUG STORE THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS Ban Roll On 1 oz. Reg. $1..09 for .84 Rexall insect repellant Reg. $1.33 for .98 Bromo Seltzer Reg..79 for .66 Gillette foamy shave cream Reg„ $1„25 for .99 Quick Bands 100's Reg,, $1,49 for .99 Lavoris 14 oz. Reg. $1,29,for .97 Resdan 6 oz. Reg. $1,,59 for $1.19 Cod Roll-On Deodorant MacLean's toothpaste family size $1„25' for .99 Scope 12 oz. Reg. $1.29 for $1„05 Athletes foot powder Reg. $1„33' for $1.13 J&J. Baby powder 14 oz. Reg. $1.09 for .27 Lady Patricia Hair spray 10 oz. Reg..99 for .79 Diaper rash cream 11/2 oz. Reg„ $1.27 for .85 Adrienne Hair spray 14 oz. Reg. $189 for .99 Regular 89c - Special 2 for '$1.10 NEWCOMBE Pharmacy PRESCRIPTIONS P one • 82-951 • Clinton, Ontario MICHAEL ANGE LOA'S ART SHOP Main Street BAYFIELD, ONTARIO "Where the aid and new meet" I 30 THE SQUARE PHONE 524.7811 PARK GODERICH AIRCONDITIONED THURS., FRI., SAT. — July 31, Aug. 1-2 : , 4,- kl 41' THE ' ' -, ' ''' (7f ' I .. ' ACCLAIMED ) - 4 DARRYL 1THE INTERNATIONALLY . VIDMIWP11111111MLIMPIIINE —Lkr riAAWCA'S 11111 , 1.• • - P`cri- DAYS henrys iwr "er'iriorehltu* ..t 1.'rf.r. flhiC I‘ok 4'r L---"Zwstit=sw"4=7.'gr, ONE SHOW ONLY .EACH NIGHT at 8.00 O'CLOCK SUN., MON., (Adult Entertainment) ONE SHOW ONLY "RACHEL, TUES., — JOANNE EACH WOODWARD NIGHT WED. RACHEL" at and Aug. 3 to 6 JAMES OLSON 8.00 O'CLOCK THURS., FRI., Starring ALAN Thurs. at 8 p.m. — s "PON" SAT. ARKIN and Fri. and ---Aug. 7.8-9 RITA 'MORENO Sat. at 7.30 & 9.15 J N, Elmer says: FIND THE BROKEN RULE t The Elmer rule broken here is number ri MAIL BEFORE AUG 5 TO: ELMER, riOX 4072, STATION A, TORONTO 1, ONT. NAME ADbRESS I (Town or Cart TELEPHONE AdE hay 1. Show which Elmer rule is being broken above, then COLOR the picture, 2. Any Canadian third of el-emery. lary School age may enter. 3. Hi! out 'box with your FULL name and address. 4. tot but along dotted fines end mail to address shown in box, 5. All , entries become prooerty of Elmer the Safety Elephant. Judos' decision is final, ONTARIO SAFETY LEAGUE 'L.Y TEE AccEsstntsr KITS Each kit tOntairts ValLiabolo ffetiis for yeti';' bike. JC* CIVE lf 1 ITAMBLER SCRAMBIER'l BIKES TWO BOYS' 'TWO GIRLS' 1. Look both ways be- . fore you cross the street. 2. Keep from between parked cars. 3. Ride your bike safely and obey all signs and signals. 4. Play your games in a safe place away From the street. 5. Walk when you leave the curb. 6. Where there are no sidewalks walk on the left side o f the road facing traffic. 11111•11"1"" 111111110Nommio (411ir t lo• Contest No. 4 From My Window,, Too 900d to ,be , true, Shirley Keller Farmers told; "no wheat on wheot" moon. I, too, have come to expect great things of the U.S. space team and, quite frankly, I would have been more amazed if Armstrong and Aldrin had experienced difficulty as they neared that far-off ball in the sky. I can understand superhuman beings, but between you and me, I'm still marvelling over those terrific mechanical instruments which never once failed or faltered. Take 'that television camera, for instance, the one the astronauts toted along to the moon with them. I was truly in awe at the ease at which it rolled out of the Eagle and began transmitting pictures of the lunar surface back to earth. I fully, expected that part of the show would bomb out. It always happens to me. One time I transported a television set from London, to ; my home and found at the end of the journey some wire had been broken in transit. I got a fuzzy picture and no sound "at' all. Just this spring I' packed' a slide projector in the car to take it to my aunt's house one hundred miles away, and when I arrived the bulb wouldn't light up. No pictures! And that radio hook-up! Do you know that the broadcast from the:mOon was much clearer than the garbled chatter I get on our stereo set from the radio station just 60 miles away? Just when I'm intensely interested in a certain news item, the crackling begins and I might as well forget all'about it. I was relieved when the Eagle rose, off the moon. With my luck Continued from Page 1 report of - a motorcycle helmet theft, Murray Grigg of 106 Joseph St„ said his $45 helmet was taken from a motorcycle parked on James Street Saturday night. The following eight auto accidents were investigated by Ontario Provincial Police from the Goderich detachment during the week which ended July 26: On Monday, July 21 on Highway 21 south of Huron Road 18, Dorothy Helen Ball, 171 King Street, Clinton, And Israel Gillies, Windsor, were involved in a two-car accident resulting in an approximate total damage of $450 to the vehicles. On Monday, July 21 on County Road 31 north of .County Road 1, Leonard Bowman, RR 4, Goderich and Keith Holland, RR 4, Clinton, were involved in a two-car accident resulting in $50 damage to the Holland vehicle. On Tuesday, July 22, on Highway 21 north of Bayfield, David Weaver, London, and Terry William Porter, RR 2, Goderich, were involved in a car-truck accident resulting in an approximate total damage of $150 to the vehicles. On Thursday, July 24 on Highway 4 south of County Road 25, Delbert Holland, Coombs Street, Blyth, and George Watt, Blyth, were involved in a two-car accident resulting in an approximate total FOR THAT LIKE NEW LOOK . We dean Clothes to dazzling perfection. Whether Sports togs 'or 'format wear, coent on us to restore "tike new" sparkle :,to every garment. Clinton Dry Cleaners 63 ALBEnt 'St 482.7064 e•teele. I would have been sitting there yet. Our family car never fails es Unless there is something really important to do. I recall one morning I got the 'dead' treatment, That was the day of the dental appointment I had waited six months to get. My old washing machine was another let-you-down-when- you-need-it-most mechanical dud. Just when the baby was right out of diapers, that was the time my washing machine whined but didn't whirl or roll but wouldn't wring. To my mind, it was almost unbelievable that some tiny wire wasn't loose to foul up the entire moon mission. ATTACK %Continued from Page 1 Mr. Gautrau told a London newsman that if the nerves are damaged permanently, his son might never smile again or be able to use other muscles in his • face. "It is a high price for living in a big city when a boy can't walk the streets," he said. "We, have always lived in small towns and. I have told James . that, it was different walking the, street in cities than it was on• the bases where one could walk any place without danger." James, a grade 12 student at Westminster Secondary School, has an older brother in the armed forces and two teenaged sisters at home. damage of $500 to the vehicles. On Friday, July 25 on Highway 21 south of County Road 24, John Richard Dodds, 107 Picton Street, Goderich and Hugh Duncan Fletcher,, RR 1, Ilderton, were involved in a two-car accident resulting. in an approximate total ,damage of $2,000 to the vehicles. - On Saturday„ July 26 on, Jowett's Grove Road, Goderich Twp,,, south of Highway 21, Raymond Riley, RR 1 Londesboro, and Keith Holland, RR 4, Clinton, were involved in a two-car accident resulting in an approximate total damage of $175 to the vehicles. On Saturday, July 26 on Highway 4, south of Clinton, Peter Postma, R11, 4, Clinton, and Hugh Scoullar, CFB Clinton, were involved in . a two-car accident resulting in an approximate total damage 'of $250 to the vehicles. On Saturday, July 26 on Highway 21 south of Goderich, Lawrence William Wilson, RR 2, Goderich, struck a mule on the roadway, resulting in $100 damage to his vehicle, "No wheat 9.4 cannot grow 'W1.1.9.41; .001,114044y,,," Thi$ was the warning ..given by Pr, Neil Stoskopf of Guelph liniversitY when he spoketo Inore than 100 Huron County farmers at H1404,5011 and Crop Association twilight program at John. Haelit.t'e farm nor Benmiller last. Thursday. Dr. Stoskopf s advice echoed the recent recommendations of Doug Jamieson, Dept, of Agriculture and Food agronomist of Clinton.. Both men have said that growing, wheat .one year out of three on, any one field is about the rnaximuni. and even that, according to Dr, Stoskopf„ is "nip and tuck." The problem, one which showed itself widely over Huron connty,,this year, is the foot rot disease which causes lodging and . results in poor quality, shrunken kernels. Stoskopf called foot rot "as common as the everyday cold" and• said it is so bad in parts of southwestern Ontario this year that farmers must find ways to prevent its occurrence or stop growing `wheat, He said he did not mean to discourage farmers from growing wheat, but only wanted to make them aware of the fact that they cannot safely grow wheat on a continuous basis. He said the organism responsible for the strawbreaker disease builds up in the soil and when the conditions are right - an& this year's cool, wet spring was right - there can be a Sudden epidemic. The last severe outbreak was probably in 1957, he noted,' Dr, Stoskopf said he expects a "real seed loss" in some cases and has talked to the crop insurance. people and told them to' believe farmers who claim .a 95 per cent loss„ A welcome was extended by the program chairman, Doug McNeil, soil and crop association vice president who spoke also for the Colborne Township reeve and council, and JimeMcKnight, county association president, was introduced. Mr. I-fazlitt led the group of farmers past test plots of beans end barley, pointing out varieties grown, the different methods and time of seeding end the various types and applications of fertilizers and herbicidee in use. Dr. ,Ernie` Reinbergs commented on rod row cereal plots and told of experiments to find superior grain varieties, He forecast a greater interest in spring wheat and advocated earlier seeding of barley. A number of the farmers coming to the program were from or drove through the storm-battered Exeter district and word of the damage was spread quickly. Several arrived with stalks of corn shredded' by ' hail. Doug Jamieson..was unable to, be present, Don Pullen said, because of a foot of water in his basement. Those present from the Dept. of Agriculture and Food's Clinton office included Howard Lane, soils specialist; Gary Howse, extension assistant; Sam Bradshaw, engineer and Tom Clapp, assistant representative. Although his appointment has not yet officially been announced by the provincial minister, Stan Pacjeet of Goderich, former manager of the Clinton Feed Mill, was introduced as a new farm management specialist in the Huron County office: The discussion of weather problems and of wheat disease prompted Don Pullen to recall the London Free Press treatment of a recent crop report issued by his office. The free Press story, subsequently picked up by Canadian. Press And widely circulated, told of a "mysterious" disease which had struck beans, corn and wheat in Huron county, "I'm sere," said Mr. Pullen, "that no one believed it. We sure didn't_and it didn't say it in Tom Clapp's report." He said the report led some persons falsely to believe crops in Huron had been "wiped out.' Stoskopf picked up the ball and started to sec 'e the news media in general, saying newsmen were looking for stories to sell papers, but Mr. Pullen interrupted to note that the crop report was published accurately by the weekly newspapers in the county and that the weekly press cooperated well with his staff, agaddeol STUDIO Specializing in . . . • Weddings • Children Single or Group Portraits; and Passports 524-8787 118 St. David Gadurich 411111•101110111W Clinton Novv$-Record Crash hurts three. Three persons were admitted to Seaforth Community hospital following I, a two-car crash Tuesday afternoon at Huron County Road 11 and Perth County Road 10 about 11/2 miles east of Exeter. Listed by the, hospital as 'in satisfactory condition were: Miss Wilma Jean Millar, 20, RR 1, Hensall, driver of one car, and her mother Mrs. Harry Millar, RR 1, Hensall, a passenger in the car; and Thomas Allen Younge, 76, of Staffs, driver of the second car. Extent of their injuries was not known. Provincial Constable Frank ,Griffini . of Exeter estimated damage at $3,000. Tiwr$daY r -JulY 31, 1969 3 RECEPTION For, Sheila lVitgraY 4 and Richard t„ernpwich Newlyweds At PASHWOOD COMMUNITY CENTRE at 9;00 p,m, SATURDAY, AUG. 2nd Country and Western Music Lunch Provided Everyone Welcome Boy runs in front of car SUNSEr DRIVE-IN THEATRE CLINTON GODERICH CARLOW .e ! . SUNSET I VI= c"%t.tEe- HWY. 8 GODERICH AT CONCESSION RD. 4 • PHONE 524.9981 f • , , ..,m NM JEREMY WE' totx RUNE JOCtlYiliftNt for actionli VVICIalalriwurslf ttlei141416 . THURS., FRI., SAT. --July 31, Aug. 1-2 •••• The ROUGHEST RIDE HORROR... SHARP AS IN TOWN! A RAZOR'S EDGE! \ A thick . iti, "1.066P ; with ‘ „rite , - an itch •'"` ACILS TECHNICOLOR * - - LA i (ADULT EICcRIAIAIMgNit (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) "Pit & PENDULUM" Showing at 10:00 p.M. , SUNDAY Only - Aug. 3 — OWL SHOW _ _ 3 HORROR SHOWS -:- ---, "HOUSE OF USHER" Showing at 12;0 am, "TALES OF TERROR" Showi1:29 a.m, MON, TUES., WED, ---Aug 4-54 DOUBLE FEATURE -- - Math Show Ate Adult Enterfaintitent) & 1,Ate • • 'Mad RoomII me For A Killing' ll