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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1971-07-29, Page 10SEAFORTH LIONS tit' \1111 Carnival AUGUST 5-6-7 ERENT PROGRAM EACH NIGHT Wit 1 FEATURE THESE `,PECIA1 A TTRAC TIONS, • Leading \111;11llir (;rouns • ('h.'\ Winch Ito),: • Paul 140-. N. Shirley • Nano 111.1, 1111)1VAY Including Ferris Wheel, Merry go•ruutul Rolle, Coast er and nlher 1 1'1)pul a r met. NIONSTEU PENNI' SALE DRA,We totallIng $700 ADMISSION 50 cents CHILDRI N FREE' PARKING FREE 10. qintah .1\lvvs-92cord, Thursday, July 29, 1971 CASH BINGO: Legion Hall, Seaforth,. Friday, July 30, 8:15 p,rn, Regular games, $10; three $25 games; $75.00 jackpot to go. Door prizes admission $1.00. * Auspices Branch 156. Proceeds welfare work, —2tfn. THURSDAY, July'. 29, Bingo at Clinton Legion Hall, 8:30 p.m. Jackpot $55,00 in 55' numbers. A CHICKEN barbecue will be held in the Community Memorial Hall, Auburn on Saturday, July 31st, from 5;30 to 8:00 p.m. Adults $1.75; Children 6-14 yrs $1.00. preschoolers free. Tickets available at the door. —29, 30b • .ot, When you're ready t ::;:name E the day...see the beautiful RAINBOW WEBBING LINE ,'2 INVITATIONS AND ,ANNOUNCEMENTS ANOTETT JEWELLERS LTD., Clinton Walkerton , And Seaforth L CL}iNTON 4.8.2-90 \VOWINSVirtt ss MONDAY, August 2, Turkey and Ham supper. Home made salads and desserts. Adults $2.00. Children $1.25 at Bayfield United Church, 4:30 p.m. —29, 30 ANTIQUE Auction — Bayfield Arena, Aug, 14, commencing at 12:30, A full afternoon of wiling prime collector's items. 29, 30, 31, 32. TUESDAY, August 3, Bingo Huron Fish and Game Club. Jackpot $55.99 in 55 numbers.. Six door prizes. 8:30 p.m. —tfn RECEPTION — and DANCE for PETER and LYNDA POSTILL (nee Lynda Torrance) August 7th, 1971 9:00 1:00 Zurich Community Centre Music By Ken Mittleholtz and the Twylites Lunch Provided Evorvone Welcome —30, 31b Unlike some of the counties south of Perth and Huron, there is no general lack of rain in these two counties according to the agricultural representatives for the counties—W. N. T. Ashton in Perth, and Donald Pullen in Hu- ron. Both agreed there is a need for normal rainfall if the pastures and aftermath are to continue their growth. Mr. Pullen said there are some areas of Huron where the pastures are drying up faster this year than in some past years, Last week's rainfall was a great benefit, Mr. Pullen said. It was general throughout the county and helped all the crops. There could be a small second cutting of hay if there isn't the IOWIAJNYIANdIVVVVIAA04 GREY OWL The well known naturalist "Grey Owl" had his first outdoor article published in "Forest and Outdoors" which used to be published by the Canadian Forestry Association. From this beginning he became internationally known for his nature writings and lectures, especially about beaver. • NEW PAPERS - 1 e• Go- awn t..'" Nt , *FYI Melt ff: COMMUNITIES*AbVERTISLIK Bring this coupon for Free Admission (value $1.50) for One Adult with the purchase of one adult ticket at regular price. Valid only Monday Thru' Thursday. Expires August 26, 1971. ,4144141444,44044`4.84,4144•44,4*-#1N144.41444 WY I AN Fi r stnteit (.3 .0 MK.. WI CO MIC. 0,1,1 Bruce Darn Melody Patterson In Color A SHE BEAST • (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) Barbara Steel - John Carlson In Color KILL THEM ALL (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) Chuck Connors Color Cartoon WED. - THURS. FRI. August 4-5-6 RING OF BRIGHT WATER HOW TO COMMIT MARRIAGE DON'T MISS OUR OLD FASHION SALES DAYS FEATURES $$$ SPECIALS $$$ * YARD GOODS (Up to $2.98 yard) * SLIPPERS (Up to $3.98 pr.) $1 0 0 * BLOUSES (Regularly to $6.08) TOWELS (Regularly to $1,59) WHITE UNIFORMS (Regular to $12,95) HAND BAGS (Value to $5,95) 1.98 1/ 2 PRICE FEATURE YARD GOODS A VARIETY OF LINENS, COTTONS, POLYESTER, DENIMS COSTUME BOOTS REGULAR $8.98 PHANTOM PRICE PANTY MOSE 1/ 2 BONDED FABRICS Matching Plains and Plaids — Values to $6.50 yd. NOW ONLY $3,08 yd. LONG PYJAMAS AND CAPRI PYJAMAS Cotton Summer Weight SPECIAL 1/3 off COTTON HOUSECOATS — LOUNGE PYJAMAS SALE SPECIAL 1/3 off SARONG GIRLDES Sizes 26 to 33 SALE SPECIAL price SUMMER YARDAGE Plains and Patterns — You Must See These ALL REDUCED 20% SEWING CENTRE r— DRY GOODS CLINTON NOW 4.49 SOMETHING NEW THE BLYTH INN HOTEL, BLYTH, NOW OFFERING "Entertainment & Dancing" FRIDAY & SATURDAY EVENINGS This Weekend Featuring: The Maitland Trio ENTERTAINMENT Country and Western Red Knight Lounge Elgin Fisher Trio also Entertainment in the Ladies and Escorts Room Tasty Snacks Ample Free Parking COMMERCIAL HOTEL SEAFORTH, ONT. 30 4 AIR CONDI T RAE I) GODERICH PHONE 524 7811 ".'"7.4"Mtt.VYKTI)0(1C.I45 GENE HACKMAN DOROTHY STONEY and ES/WI:PARSONS $1.0611.0640 06(60, Mho 11,14111,TON .411 tO.Cio4 14 0.4ort SON '.11 .401 vo.4 t.,,414.11 oat .14.0 v,f.K.!YT COO Thu.29 Fri.30 sot. . 31 ABC Pictures Corp. prosatits4amas Ceovets's the starring Michael Omar Caine Sherif As you rush away to the cottage this weekend, remember to wear your seat belt. If your car stops suddenly, it Will keep you from being thrown forward against the mirror, windshield, or dashboard, causing unnecessary eye injury. "Your eyes are your most precious pbssession," says The Canadian National Institute for the Blind. "You ean never replace them." Avoid unnecessary eye accidents this summer. Start by storing 0116,S containers at Moderate temperatures and keep jarred and bottled goods either oh a lower shelf, in a cool room, or in a refrigerator. Exploding glass, resulting from exposure to excessive heat, causes many eye accidents. Eye care is your care acid the concern of the Canadian National Institute for the 131itith ' tIll1STS ADULT LNIEtTAIT.IMLN1 CLINT EASTWOOD Olio "NANG 'EM :11 HIGH- (01011 atlas, 1; WALT DISNEY tergettraks soars 111111111111110111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111011111111111111111i Thu.2 9 Fd.30 sot.31 tr. thde Good Otisitagaitittethelltedoutnst 800 4 f/ M'mm Winn% dOodt '',... 0 117.11. 11,11017A1K111 '..- '''... .a PETER SELLERS • OLDIE HAWN 7 --- West* 4inlingry8o4p 7 i To/4y_,... Charlin DMIthele a F_-• CURTIS WRONSON CAURCIER 2 OM 01/1111 Win' gm Fill i E-- DUSK To DAWN Aug. Sun. I only CLINT IS snd EASTWOOD ,L TTcaniorl "rAlltelW EASTWOOD NT MUM 4TH GO NINE' end THE E BAD OD ' ter THEUGLY" imuiumnomoayaimiimoimaji-aiana. • a;;"3".Wi OWN eri'ii mik ;;;E-n TC.40STOAg. Wt GIMMICK NIGHT 'Mon. fit Tues. eon.2 10..3 mi. 4 I 17:„P4)1:VattiffiVILLS Yes sznitched.on 7.4 rioe „ ni/1-1 1` 61157 Yfek/Cf/Ni • 4416--." Yui R IASttl.titotiOME110 ANON PARTY NIGHT DRIVE IN THEATRE Wednesday—$2.00 a Car rea. ='• A r,nrfa,rN a"rNNs, nk, algulatiattuntilititataigiongifigifilligaglitliontolgo; SAVE DURING *2850 $1110RE SALES DAYS 1969 Buick Le Sabre 4-door hardtop, fully powered with many extras, new belted whitewall tires. A one owner local car. Balance of 5 year.50,000 mile GM warranty remains. Lie. K42623. Sale price $2275 OUR INVENTORY MUST BE REMOVED NO REASONABLE OFFER REFUSED MAKE THURSDAY, FRIDAY OR SATURDAY YOUR vi DEAL DAY' at E,PROWN MoToutituk oit (Mb CMS 111041 110.00 is CUNTON, 011111000 1969 Chevrolet Belair 4-door sedan, automatic transmission, 250 6-cylinder engine, radio, new whitewall tires. A one owner Original driven only 22,000 miles. Balance of 5 year-50,000 mile warranty remains. Lic. K35948. Sale price S The barbershop of past was a place to congregate BROWNIE' DRIVE-111 BY LIZA WILLIAMS When we think of old-fashioned times, only the most obvious differences come to mind as a rule. Long skirts and gas lamps, carriages and quaint language are the things we build our impressions on. But have you ever thought what happened in the 19th century when someone had a toothache? Or needed a container for apple cider, • molasses, or home-made wine? Or wanted a picture of something? In the Huron County Pioneer Museum there are several exhibits set up under categories, to represent various aspects of life in days of yore. These displays were assembled by Mr. J. H. Neill, curator, Mr. James Shishoim, assistant curator, and Mrs. Friedel Nanz; Museum Attendant and assist curator, in 1962. First is the barber shop. A plush red velvet chair dominates this replica, which includes examples of hair-cutting and shaving equipment from throughout the last two centuries. The chair has a crank in the back and an adjustable headrest so the barber could tilt his customer to the most advantageous angle. There is even a footrest with two levels for extra comfort. The barber shop was not exactly comparable to those of today in its functionS. Today a visit to the barber is a relatively infrequent event for many men. As Museum Guide Anne Legg says, "Men can't afford to get their hair cut nowadays — and anyway the style is long." Although the style was also long then, the old-fashioned barber shop was a place loved and frequented by gentlemen of its day. It was a place to congregate, to hear the daily gossip, to get out of the house and the company of women and into a private domain of the world of men. The museum's barber shop is a cheerful room, with a large chest of drawers for razors and towels, and a nearly full-length mirror of the old-fashioned glass which reflects like the mirrors in a funhouse at a fair. The room is made authentic by the addition of several touches like a hatstand with old-fashioned straw hats tossed gaily onto it, and a display of magazines and journals like the Livestock Farm Journal, the Farmer's Advocate from 1895, and an ancient copy of the Toronto Globe. One little visitor to the museum pressed her nose up against the glass and asked her mother what the display was supposed to be. "Oh, a barbershop? Doesn't look Like one!" Her father thought otherwise, With a nostalgic look he said, "My father used to have a couple of razors like that . " On a table is a display of razors and strops. Lather brushes and mugs line a shelf, A portable shaving kit bears the name Kriss Kroas Stropper and Razor; the advertising business knew even beck then that a catchy name was the key to a successful product. On another table lies printing equipment which the barber used to advertise his trade. The wooden stamps were used to put slogans and pictures on posters or leaflets to tell people what a fine barber there was. In the center of the room hangs a Hose Atkins Sunning Lamp. And that, apparently, was the last word for a popular barbershop. The main business of the dentist of the 19th century seemed to be to manufacture and fit false teeth. A great array of sample teeth is displayed on a table in the replica dentist's office at the museum, Dentures and, bite-plates are lying about just as if the dentist himself had left the room for a minute to mix up some Spence's Plaster or some De Trey's Synthetic Porcelain, "Hey, that's what Grandma has!" cried one small visitor in delight. And perhaps Grandma came to such an office to get her false teeth. In the center is a chair, adjustable like the ones of today, but without the sterile white and silver gleam we are used to in our dentist's offices. A rinsing bowl stands by the chair, and close at hand are drawers for tools. Directly in front of the chair dangles a drill. But attached to its stand are foot pedals of wrought iron, for the drill was not operated by electricity as ours are today. One visitor, looking at the pedals, commented, "It's funny they had to have everything so ornate." On the wall, a complicated panel of dials mounted on white marble bears the label, "This air Raspberries popu The convenience of having fresh fruit available in season at a moment's notice is known only to the home fruit gardener. He has a hobby which rewards himself and his family. One of the most popular fruits with the home gardener is raspberries. Blackberries are also popular to a smaller extent. The first year after the berries are planted, the rows should be hoed and cultivated to keep them weed free. Take care not to injure young shoots, caution horticulturists with the Ontario Department of Agriculture and Food. To hold the canes erect, place one or two wires along each side of a row. Water the plants during prolonged dry periods. Do not water or fertilize in late fall as plant growth will be stimulated and it will not harden enough for protection against winter injury. Of the three varieties of raspberries grown in Ontario—red, purple, and black—the red raspberry is the most popular. When the red raspberry harvest is completed in the summer, cut the dead canes out at ground level and destroy them. Any weak suckers should be removed at the same time. No other pruning is required in the summer months. For purple and black raspberries and blackberries, pinch off the new shoots in the summer when the shoots are 2 to 3 feet high. Side branches will then be forced to grow. NAANVIAANOVWWWWAI photographs are a direct contact with the past. Above the door of the little shop are scenes of Goderich. There is a view of the Park and Square in 1866. Next to it is a storage elevator burning up in 1903. Beside it is a faded print entitled -"An Arch of 1700 salt barrels across West Street at Wellington built for Lord Dufferin's visit in 1866." In an age when products were not packaged in individual containers for purchase in a large supermarket, most people provided much of their own food from gardens and orchards. When harvest time came along, containers were needed for storing the food for the winter, and since neither cardboard boxes nor pfastic bags were available, the cooper shop was where people went to buy containers. The cooper made barrels and keys. The Home Economics Branch of the Ontario Department of Agriculture and Food is sponsoring a Homemaking Club Project this fall entitled "Dairy Fare". The nutritive value of milk and milk products is studied in the project and the girls will be given an opportunity to try many recipes using milk, Miss Catherine M. Hunt, Home Economist for Huron County will be conducting the following Training Schools: Exeter, Monday and Tuesday, August 16 and 17 at Exeter United Church; Clinton, Thursday and usual amount of rain, Mr, Pullen said. Huron gets off to a good start each year with the melted snow. This year was especially good for that, Mr. Pullen said. There weren't the heavy rains in the spring after planting that there have been some years, and this has eliminated the drowned out areas in some low fields, he added. Mr. Ashton said that other than the pastures and aftermaths, no crops in Perth County are suf- fering from lack of rainfall. The corn, beans, turnips and cereal crops are all looking well, he said. Both agricultural representa- tives report slight lodging es- pecially of the barley crops. The amount of lodging in Huron is not too significant, Mr. Pullen said. These past two weeks have been great corn growing wea- ther, he said. The White beans are RECEPTION For MR. and MRS. LARRY SCOTT (nee Brenda Kingswell) Friday, August 6th, Dancing 9:30-` 1:00 Clinton Legion Hall Music By George Love and Trutones Ladies Please Bring Lunch Refreshments Available —30, 31b He had an assortment of machines to assemble his barrels. A barrel-maker's stove heated the staves until they were able to be bent into the proper shape. A special saw was used for cutting barrel headg'. A hand machine was used to cut notches in the hoops for butter tubs, A drilling device and anvil held the hoop in place for nailing. It was operated by a foot lever. A barrel-maker's press put the heads on the wood stave barrels. There are examples in the shop of beer kegs, apple baskets and cider kegs, and even a barrel for home-made cherry wine. There are other shops in the museum which are equally interesting, as a shoemaker's, carpenter's and weaving room. But they are best able to speak for themselves, as is the entire museum, Friday, August 19 and 20 at Department of Agriculture Board Room, Clinton; Seaforth, Monday and Tuesday, August 23 and 24 at Department of Agriculture Board Room, Clinton; Wingham, Thursday and Friday, August 26 and 27 at the Salvation Army, 292 Edward Street, Wingham (for club leaders west of Wingham) and again in Wingham, Monday and Tuesday, August 30 and 31 at the Salvation Army, 292 Edward Street, Wingham (for club leaders east of Wingham). looking first rate. Mr. Pullen suspects there could be a slight reduction in the fall wheat yield this year, not so much because of recent weather condition, he said, but because of the winter kill. The fall wheat stands just weren't as thick this spring as they could have been, he said. BOX OFFICE OPINE AT SA irsi, FIRST SHOW AT DUIK Beech Street Next to Community Park CLINTON - ONTARIO WED., THURS. - FRI. JULY 28 - 29 +. 30 — COMEDY DOUBLE FEMURS - CARRY ON CAMPING (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) The Carry On Gang In Color PERFECT FRIDAY (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) Ursule Andress - Stanley Baker Color Cartoon 4KANN•••••••••~••••••••••••mmoo SAT.: MON. - TUES. July 31, August 2-3 - DOUBLE FEATURE - ARTHUR MILEY'S HOTEL (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) Rod Taylor Catherine Speak Carl Malden In a modern grand hotel there are as many varieties of comedy, tragedy and excitement as there are guests, In Color COOL HAND LUKE (ADULT ENTERTAINMENT) PAUL NEWMAN Color Cartoon wispommommwm,•,••••••••• SPECIAL SUNDAY NIGHT HOLIDAY SHOW—Aug. 1 GIANT TRIPLE BILL -• CYCLE SAVAGES pressure and controls, is for blowing out the drillings and drying the inside of the tooth before filling." In the corner stand sortie tanks of gas in case the patient couldn't stand the proceedings in his mouth. It was no wonder he couldn't sometimes, for on the table lies a turnkey for extractions. This little gadget looks like a key on the top and a clamp on the bottom, and its use was very simple: the dentist merely placed it around a tooth, turned it slightly, and YANKED. So much for 19th century dentistry, The photographer's studio is next, and visitor's eyes light up at the sight of it. Here is a familiar scene; we have seen similar apparatus in old movies, There was no such thing as do-it-yourself pictures in old-fashioned times, unless you were an enterprising inventor and made your own camera. A family portrait had to be taken by a professional photographer in his studio, with equipment which looked much like a cross between an accordion and a telescope. Besides the camera itself, the studio replica displays methods of film processing, including equipment for developing like an old-fashioned Kodak lantern, a mortar and pestle to grind up chemicals, and pans and rollers to soak the negatives. A chair and backdrop await the next customer. Portraits line the walls, and faces of the past look down the ages. These tar If healthy planting stock is used and proper care is taken, your plants should yield two pints of berries per foot of row, Leadership training planned for 4-H courses Huron, Perth crops good