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Clinton News-Record, 1971-10-28, Page 102A Clinton News-Record, Thursday, October 28, 1971 ambling with Lucy 11111•11111111111111.1111111111111111111110111111101 HARRIS — HOGGART LET US MAKE YOUR OLD FURNITURE BETTER THAN NEW! For a free estimate and a look at our newest samples of materials — CALL CLARK UPHOLSTERY' Ph. 523-4272; 5234528 R. Cook, Prop. Blyth, Ont. WE HAVE A FREE PICK-UP AND DELIVERY SERVICE Wk, 31 and e.o.w. You're in the centre of "what's happening" when you stay at the Lord Simcoe. Attractions like the O'Keefe Centre, the Toronto Dominion Centres new City Hall, the noyal Alex Theatre, fascinating shops — all are only walking minutes from the front door, And for activities at Maple Leaf Gar- dens or the C.N.E. grounds, the subway and streetcars are right outside the front door. Enjoy' weekend or a week at the Lord Simcoe — you'll find the prices surprisingly sensible. University & King Streets, Tel, 362-1848. Nohody *sin se/AlhearBeiotY FOR ALL-AROUND TOP VALUE ... A&P BEEF IS YOUR BEST BUY! HOW SURE AREWE? • We're very sure . . . because A&P sells only Red Brand Beef ASP's finest quality. We invite you to compare quality, trim and selec- tion with any Other supermarket. It's a good bet you'll agree A&P Beef is your best buy! (Heavenly Dessert at a Down to Earth Price) JANE PARKER ANGEL CAKE SMALL SIZE 9-02 CAKES 400 (BUY 3 — SAVE 47c) "RED BRAND STEER BEEF" BONELESS RUMP ROAST $ WING STEAK or ROAST SIRLOIN STEAK lb POINT SIRLOIN STEAKS NO FAT ADDED TO BEEF ROASTS — NOT AT A&P! WEST ST., GODERICH ALL PRICES SHOWN IN THIS AD GUARANTEED EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1971. RED BRAND STEER BEEF BONELESS BOTTOM CUT ROIM,RAFEAK SIRLOIN. POINT BONELE SS POINT ROAST Ib I 00 9 ,J MAPLE LEAF BRAND, SLICED (16 SLICES) HAM Cooked 12-nz vac pac 99% MINCED 3-LBS OR MORE ROUND STEAK - • MAPLE LEAF BRAND WIENERS 116vacpac5951 LB Canada Fancy Grade ONTARIO SNOW APPLES 5-LB CELLO BAG et Haloween r Shel:-outs VIRGINIAg Peanuts BRAZILIAN VALENCIA Oranges NONE PRICED HIGHER AT A&P MIX OR MATCH! JANE PARKER CUP CAKES MACAROON OR BRAN MUFFINS 3 Ps;I: e$1.00 JAN5 PARKER, HAMBURG OR (Buy 4 Pkgs Save 32c) Wiener Rolls 4 Pkgs of 8 $1.00 INSTANT Nescafe Coffee 10-oz jar $1.75 ORANGE PEKOE Red Rose Tea Bags pkg of 60 8 3C MIX & EAT CEREAL Cream Of Wheat 10-oz pkg 43c ANOTHER BARGAIN! PLAIN OR SALTED MORMICICS - SODA CRACKERS 3 la $1 400 PKGS (SAVE 260 LB 990 CUT FROM EYE OF SIRLOIN POINT Fresh Roasted in Shell 16 3 9? 5,16 cello bag 8 9? STEA KS La $1.49 SAUSAGES PORK 1649? BURNS BRAND, STORE PACK, BEEF S. MEATS Cooked 3 SCHNEIDERS BRAND, 7 VARIETIES, SLICED FRESH (LB 790) GROUND pKG LB 76? CHUCK 3-LBS & OVER SUPER-RIGHT BRAND, SLICED SIDE BACON* 1‘':59fe SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY, SLICED, SKINLESS BEEF LIVER lb 59)i WESGATE ICE CREAM VANILLA, CHOCOLATE, BUTTERSCOTCH RIPPLE 1/2-GALLON CTN 791 4 .14;411 .00 (BUY 4 -- SAVE 24c) Look At These Prices! A F a c ia l Tissues 200-2 ply 35 4 PASTEURIZED,' PROCESS, CHEESE, SINGLES Kraft Cheese Slices 1-16 0989c BABIES ONLY PLEASE, White, PIA, Yellow, Lilac, Blue Bathroom Tissue 3794.0e$1.00 GLAD, PLASTIC (NM OF to 750) Garbage Bags pkg of 20s1.39 Made with PURE VEGETABLE SHORTENING JANE PARKER BREAD SLICED 100% WHOLE WHEAT CRACKED WHEAT 60% WHOLE WHEAT World of CARE campaign Guests were present at the wedding from Toronto, London, Kitchener, Goderich, Detroit, Niagara Falls and Sarnia. • Sandi the, cat has not come back to see Carl since Eater morning. He heard strange voices then and didn't wait for his, cat food. So now Carl has a new pet of which Lucy doesn't altogether approve.' She is the grey squirrel with a white shirt front which he has named "Clarabelle" Last winter she used to haunt the bird-feeding station and would nt1 be frightened away. Strangely enough, Carl kept putting out sun flower" seeds and didn't seem to mind that she ate more than the birds. Lucy couldn't help but admire her beautiful tail as she sat on the corner post in the garden. Clarabelle wormed herself not only into Carl's affections but into the house, She made her nest in the attic and raised at least three young ones, Her mate is black 'and he is not so friendly as Clarabelle. Lucy had her entrance closed in August when carpenters replaced the old board which had been pulled off by an eave trough filled with ice Clarabelle still climbs up the lilac tree to the roof of the sunporch. She has evidently been looking for a new opening to the warm attic. Once when Carl went out to watch she crouched in the eave trough and hung her head over to look at him. And one day in the summer when Lucy and some visitors were sitting at the side door, she ambled over to the wheel chair, looked up, and not seeing encouragement on anyone's face, turned and went through the flower bed' to her favourite lilac tree approach to the roof. Clarabelle is a dark grey squirrel with a hint of chesnut in the sun. She is not a large grey squirrel. One of her offspring resembles her even to the white vest, another is black like papa, and the third is a bright chesnut. Carl saw the black and the auburn-haired one playing around the maple tree one day. He could hardly believe his eyes, for red squirrels and black do not fraternize. Then he realizes that they were two of Clarabelle's children. Harold Bell told Carl that the late Mr. Towers had fed Clarabelle and two black squirrels which became quite tame like Tom Bailey's "Missy" a few years ago. So now Carl keeps peanuts in his pocket. Lucy warned him that he' wasn't to let her touch him. But once when she saw peanuts in his hand, she climbed up his pant legs to get them. He dropped three on the ground. She quickly buried two and ate the third. And if he shells them for her, she sits up and very neatly takes off the dark skin. Carl groans if Lucy suggests taking picture's in the garden but he would dearly love a snapshot of Clarabelle. She used to get up on a bench Carl erected in the spring to hold flats of flowers and vegetables to harden off before transplanting. But a lady sitting in the sun room turned her head suddenly and frightened the squirrel one day. Lucy suggested that he leave peanuts there and perhaps she'd come regularly and he could take a snap. But three peanuts remained there for several days. One day Mr. Blue Jay was flying by. Lucy had heard his raucous call and looked up just in time to see him do a sudden dive and back to the lilac tree. In a moment he flew down to the bench, perched on the edge of a flat and viewed those peanuts. In a few seconds he decided they might be good to eat, took two in his bill and flew off. Next day the other one disappeared too. Carl likes certain black walnuts and he picked up about half a six-quart basket, some with hulls off, on Catherine Street. He hung the basket from a beam in the drive shed and went up to the store again. He was only away ten minutes but in that time Clarabelle had taken all the hulled nuts out and was busy getting the others out of the basket - an acrobatic feat. . Carl thinks she must have smelled them. How sharp are the Sight and other senses of both birds and animals which hunt their own food! Carl left German prunes on the trees for his nephew to pick at Thanksgiving. But when he looked at the trees there wasn't one left and the ground littered with pits! The raccoons had feasted on them. Clarabelle and family have the gardens at "The Hut" well planted with black walnuts, stored up for future needs. And if they don't find all their caches there'll be a veritable black walnut forest - if left to grow in 50 or 60 years it would be valuable! Now she has started to collect horse chesnuts, too. Carl saw her sitting on the gatepost with one in her mouth. He walked up and placed two peanuts on the post. Her mouth was wide open holding the chestnut. She wasn't going to drop it, yet she couldn't pick them up. So she dropped down and buried the chestnut beside the post and came back for the peanuts. Clarabelle is not greedy but she likes lots. Carl has given her half an arrowroot biscuit from time to time. Now if he comes into the house after she has been following him around, she sits up on a table outside the window waiting for a hand out of biscuit. She sits up and nibbles around it very daintily, much to Carl's delight. Ontario Street United Church was decorated with flower arrangements of bronze and yellow mums and candelabra on Oct. 9, 1971 for the wedding of Dennis Ray Harris, RR 2, Bayfield and Donna Marie Hogart, 13 Winter Court, Clinton. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ivan Hoggayt, Clinton and the groom, the son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Harris, RR 2 Bayfiehl. Rev. Don Beck officiated at the double-ring ceremony with Mrs. William Cox at the organ. The bride wore a gown of polyester satin styled with an empire waistline and A-line skirt with gibson-girl sleeves and stand-up collar. The gown was trimmed with an overlay of French lace on the bodice, collar and cuffs. The detachable train had an insert of French lace. She wore an elbow-length veil of French lace. The bouquet was of yellow roses, stephanotis and white shasta daisies. Maid of honour was Miss Bonnie Townsend of Seaforth, cousin of the bride and bridesmaids were Miss Jane Harris, sister of the groom and Miss Lorraine Townsend, Seaforth, cousin of the bride. Their gowns complemented the bride's. They were of moss green silk worsted with Victorian neckline and full, wrist-length, Juliette sleeves and were trimmed in gold. To complete their ensembles they wore detachable hood with elegant gold trim. Groomsman was Jake De Ruyter of Clinton and ushers were Brian Durnin, London, cousin of the groom and Morris Hoggart, London, brother of the bride. Following the ceremony a reception was held at the Clinton Legion Hall. The bride's mother received guests, wearing a deep rose pink dress of satin peau with long chiffon sleeves, matching accessories, and a corsage of a mauve orchid. She was assisted by the groom's mother who wore a purple and mulberry dress of trevira with matching accessories and a pink and white corsage of carnations. For the wedding trip to northern Ontario, the bride wore a Victorian-style, red crimplene dress and a corsage of white stephanotis and a gardenia. Prior to her wedding the bride was honoured at showers given by Mrs. Jake De Ruyter, Mrs. Derwin Carter and Miss Jane Harris at Mrs. De Ruyter's home; Mrs. Ross Feagen and Mrs. James Durwin, aunts of the groom, at Mrs. Feagen's; Mrs. Madelon Yeats, and at a lingerie shower given by Miss Bonnie and Lorraine Townsend. (by Janet Rodges) Spotlighting Dairy Desserts, Holmesville I, II and III met together for their sixth meeting with Holmesville II in charge, Susan Lobb held adiscussion on different dairy desserts. Susan tobb, Carol Weber and Laurel Anne Bond demonstrated cheese cake, a very tasty dessert indeed. Achievement vlay will be in the Clinton High School on November 27„ Schooling and health help will receive major emphasis in the allocation of $200,000.00 of undesignated funds that Canadians have given to CARE in the past six months, it was decided this week at a meeting of the Executive Committee of CARE of Canada. Many CARE donors designate a particular country and project, but every six months the Committee meets to decide how the undesignated funds will be spent. This time they allocated $100,000,00 to self-help projects in Kenya and Lesotho to provide equipment for community health centres, supplies for schools, cattle dips in farm areas, pure water supplies for villages, bridges and roads to markets. The emphasis will, be on education and health because in those countries the infant mortality rate runs as high as 150 deaths per thousand,live births, and illiteracy as high as 75 per cent of the population. The rest of the $200,000.00 was channelled to the support of CARE's Food Crusade programs in Haiti and Sierra Leone. The Food Crusade provides one nutritious meal a day for school children and/or food for work, for refugees, disaster victims and others. The cattle dip program is an example of CARE'S self-help projects. Tick-infested cattle are dipped in tanks containing a solution effective against parasites. CARE supplies materials and instructions. The recipients provide land and labour, and many village farmers donate a cow for auction to put added money into the pot. By such partnership efforts plus purchasing direct from suppliers, obtaining donations of surplus goods, foodstuffs and transportation — CARE is able to provide $5.00 in aid for every $1.00 donated. CARE's fall campaign emphasizing the World of CARE is now underway. It aims to raise $500,000.00 to continue the programs and projects already being carried out in 32 countries overseas. On the spot CARE personnel are in charge of the actual projects and CARE is officially recognized by both the host and Canadian Governments as a registered charitable organization. Donations may be forwarded to CARE-Canada, 63 Sparks, OTTAWA KIT 5A6, and a receipt for income tax deduction will be provided. The voluntary members of CARE's Executive Committee are: K. B. Andras, President of Andras, Hatch & Hetherington; A. C. Ashforth, former President of the Toronto-Dominion Banks; H. E. Langford, Q.C., former President of Chartered Trust and former Chairman of the Ontario Securities Commission; A. Ross Pyntz, President of Imperial Life; and J. L. Steward, Q.C., senior partner of Fraser & Beatty. • Varna BY FRED McCLYMONT • A large crowd attended the United Church Auction sale Saturday in the arena and the bake sale in the Orange Hall, The auctioneer was Bruce 14thwell. The Explorer group met last Tuesday evening with 12 members present. The president, Bev Cantelon opened the meeting, scripture lesson was read by Janis Chuter. Prayer was led by Mary Ann Kalbfleisch, The roll call was answered by naming a favourite verse from the Bible. The offering was taken up by Miss Bonnie Dowson. The group had a booth at the Orange Hall during the sale Saturday. Bev Cantelon closed the meeting with the Explorer prayer. The sacrament of the Lord's Supper will be administered next Sunday, Oct. 31 in the United Church with Rev. John Huether of Zurich in charge. Mr. Floyd McAsh of Hamilton spent the weekend at the home of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John McAsh. Mrs. William McAsh is at present a patient in hospital. Several hundred Orangemen attended the County Orange Lodge at G reenway last WednesdayThe next meeting will be held at Varna in February. 1911141111111111111111111111111111111"11111111011INNIIMINNI Serving every money need Whether you want to borrow, save or invest—safe keep your valuables—set up a retirement or an investment fund—appoint a reliable executor for your estate or an agent to handle funds—Victoria and Grey offers you every range of service, backed by eighty yearS of successful experience. WCTORM and VG GREY TRUST COMPANY SINCE 18139 Lealand Hill, Manager Elgin and Kingston Strattik Goderich 5211i731,1' 11111111111111111111111111111111111111111101111111IIIIIIIIIIIIIHM5