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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1970-12-03, Page 15Classified s"Tfe "1: •..; • 11, BIRTHS. FE,4134 To Mr, and 'Mrs. Wayne. Fear, Brussels, in Clinton Hospital on Wednesday, December g, 1970, a .daughter, VERBURG: To Mr, and Mrs.. Jacobus Verburg, RR 1, Auburn,, in Clinton Public Hospital on Thursday, December 3, 1979, a daughter, Maria Elizabeth, ,........ . , MURRAY;: To Mr, and Mrs, Gary Murray, Clinton, in Clinton P ublic Hospital OA Saturday, December • 5, 1970, a daughter, Jody Lynn. BRAND: To Mr, and Mrs, Bill Brand, RR 2, Bayfield, in Clinton ,Public Hospital on Monday, December 7, 197Q, a daughter, Linda Jane. SCOTCHMER: To Mr. and Mrs, Howard Scotchmer, Chatham, in Chatham General Hospital on Saturday, December 5, 1970, a daughter, Lori Ann. 18 DEATHS GRIFFIN: John P. (Paddy) Sgt. First Battery C.F.A. 1914-1918. Life member of the Originals Club, Life member of Stevensons Lodge A.F. & A.M. Nor 218„ Member of Canadian Corps of Commissionaires, member of St. John's Church Norway. At Sunnybrook Hospital on Friday November 27, 1970 John P. Griffin, beloved husband of Ethel (Govier) Griffin of Toronto; dear father of Victor R. Griffin and Margaret (Mrs. William McGregor), both of Toronto; seven grandchildren; one brother Gerald W. Griffin, Toronto. Funeral service was Monday, November 30 from Austin J. Mack Ltd. Chapel with interment St. John's Norway Cemetery. HAYLOW: Suddenly as a result f an automobile accident, unday afternoon, December 6, 1970, Gregory David Haylow, in 's 4th year. Beloved son of avid and Velma Haylow, RR 2, oderich. Funeral service was from 1VIcCallum Funeral Home, oderich Tuesday, December 8 h interment in St. Peter's emetery, LAZIER: Suddenly, as a result f an automobile accident, riday, December 4, 1970, at Lapeer, Michigan, Mervin Clifford Glazier, OshaWa, in his 43rd year. Survivors are his 'wife; *.f. foriifeic Freda RicharcliOn, 11W; "` ons, Erie and Cameron, at home and parents, Mr. and Mrs Clifford Glazier, Clinton; sister, Mrs. James (Thelma) Wilson, Blyth. Funeral service was held at Beattie Funeral Home, Clinton on Monday, December 7 with interment in Clinton Cemetery. 20. CARDS of THANKS MOTE: We would like to thank riends, neighbours, and relatives who helped make our fiftieth wedding anniversary such a happy day. Special thanks to Mrs. Ken Brandon for her kindness. Thanks also for lovely cards and gifts received, Sincerely, Fred and Edna Mote. — 50p 20, CARPS of THANKS SCOTCHMER;. My sincere thanks .to .neighbours, friends and relatives, who .came to see Ine, and sent cards and flOWera. While in Clinton Resnitat, Special thanks to Dr, Walden, nurses and staff on :first floor. Alf Scotchiner, se5(1p BUTLER: I would like to thank everyone for cards, gifts and visits while I was a patient in Clinton Ileapital. Special thanks to Doctors Newland and Walden, nurses and staff on first floor. Lloyd Butler. —50b EYRE: I would like to thank all apse who remembered me with flowers, cards, treats and visits while I was a patient in Clinton. Hospital, Speeial thanks to Dr. Walden, Dr: Addison and nurses. Pearl Eyre. ---50h MIDDLETON: I would like .to express my sincere thanks to all those who sent cards and flowers while I was in the hospital. A very special thanks to all friends and relatives who helped in so many ways at home. Thank you to Dr. Addison and First Floor nurses also Box Ambulance Drivers and Victoria Hospital Staff, Dave Middleton. —50b HOGGART: Your kindness, your wishes for a speedy recovery, the treats, flowers, gifts, visits and the many ways help was given at home will never be forgotten. A sincere thanks to all including Dr. Walden, Dr. Harrett, Dr. Street and all the nursing staff on Wing I, First Floor, while I was a patient in Clinton Public Hospital:, Sincerely, Helen (Mrs. Art Hoggart) —50b 21. IN MEMORIAMS GLAZIER: In loving memory of a dear husband, William R. Glazier, who passed away seven years ago, December 10, 1963, Down the road that's calm and peaceful, Guided by God's loving hand, He has gone upon a journey To a bright and better land. His smile, his kindness and his love Which made our lives complete Are safe in loving hands above Where once again we'll meet. Lovingly remembered by wife Mayme and the Kennedys. —50b PARKER: In memory of a loVing,mother .and, grandmother Alice Christine Parker, who passed away, December 1, 1967. "Nothing can ever take away, The love our hearts hold dear, Fond memories linger every day Remembrance keeps her near," Al ways remembered by daughters, sons-in-law and grandchildren, —50b GIBB• In loving memory of a dear son, Thomas Gibb, who passed away Dec. 10th, 1966. We loved him, ah, no tongue can tell How much we loved him and how well. God loved him too, and thought it best To take him home with Him to rest, Lovingly remembered by father, mother, brother and sister. —50p TO THOSE WHO SUPPORTED ME THANKS JOE ATKINSON BEST WISHES TO ALL My sincere , thanks to all Tuckersmith ratepayers for the confidence they placed in electing me on Monday. Wishing one and all the compliments of the season. ERVIN SILLER'Y ELECTORS OF CLINTON My sincere thanks for your generous support at the polls on Monday. Compliments of the season to all and may 1971 be a turning point and show an upward trend in Clinton. HAL HARTLEY THANK YOU. To the ratepayers Of Clinton, Blyth, fiullett and McKillop I wish to thank you for placing your confidence in me by electing me as trustee for another terM. will continue to work in the best interests of the students and ratepayers. Wishing you the Compliments a the Season. .JOHN HENDERSON 50 resetesseeeSticatakeelizelaesaSegirtitiasiaealee leSSYWaraetleMaet, A.I.WareeSatelieealaAlssMMXtel t SHOP AT HERMAN'S FOR FINE QUALITY MEN'S & BOY'S WEAR *FORSYTH SHIRTS 9 NEW DEEP TONE COLOURS Shelby — Terry Williams SWEATERS CARDIGANS V.NECK BELTED VESTS * Forsyth — Hickok SPORT SHIRTS *BLAZERS SPORT COATS ;SLACKS JACKETS *PYJAMAS -TERRY ROBES GIFT Boxes — GIFT CERTIFICATES 1 HERMAN'S MENS WEAR g (H..s. tiekEtt) 482.8351 Clinton 1WmAittskao:otmte,ht6asmiazitAso )ittoxiltoOotAttglmtvIxtgliwootApAroia‘mrA represent eight per cent —10 per Vent for this nationwide retailer, .14W price .and -durability .advantages appeal particularly to newly-weds. and young sophisticates for furnishing Apartments, Dining sets and accent Pieces are especially suited to this style, fitting into the same category is the injection moulded plastic furniture, Its clean, modern lines combine POMMY with design, It is lightweight but sturdy, functional, and highly practical 1414 durability, The high glow, primary colours meet the demand of the youth market for. individuality in home furniShing,. A new line Of A.BS plastic chairs, desks .and tableS, which retail from $19.95 up, will be on display at the Mart, as well as the acrylic and plexiglass furniture. With Canadians being ever on the move, low prieee • would allow the purchase of new groupings for each new home, But 'disposable' furniture is still a somewhat revolutionary idea. (ABS plastic is being used today in automobile manufacture, which indicates its strength and versatility). Glass will be seen combined more frequently with chrome or steel in dining tables and coffee and end tables. An exquisite reflection for crystal or ceramics. There has been a resurgence in popularity of Colonial furniture. Here the maple wood is being used with a much greater selection of fabrics, all of which will be apparent at the Canadian Furniture Mart. Prints and tweeds have been updated so that Colonial pieces can now be used with other, more modern, furnishing styles Gone are the days when '44 PAW NOM 1100. 19. be in th.e -Colonial -theme —it has :forsaken much of. its rustic appearance to. appeai .to. more peolile„ Upholstered pleeeS are expected to remain rather heavy and bulky looking, since these qualities seem to be associated. with .comfort and durability, velvet fabrics will be seen in greater quantity, in bright, multi-coloured prints and. ;geometric patterns, Fabrics which repel moisture, and the more freqeent use of man-made materials Are making a valuable contribution to today's demand for easy care for carefree living, Women's fashion has always had a strong influence on the furniture industry, and it will reflect in 1,971 with the appearance at the Canadian Furniture Mart of the 'wet loOk' for furnishings and lighting, and more use of suede and leather. THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE HOME FOR THE HOLIDAYS . . , and there's no place like home for Christmas fire hazards. Keep that tree butt immersed in water . . . check those strings of lights for frayed insulation and possible short circuits . . clear away discarded gift wrappings promptly , • and don't smoke near the tree. I wish to thank the electors who voted for me. I will • endeavour to do my utmost for the good of the Town of Clinton. Season's greetings to everyone. JIM ARMSTRONG AveC10.-0-W:44f241-..A:4r1010;40.:Ar-.10.0$1:1t '42C) • • Men's and Boys' SLIPPERS Corduroy or Leather SEE US FOR QUALITY LEATHER PRODUCTS KEY CASES BILLFOLDS UTILITY CASES For Men and Ladles —Gold Initialed pree- ENO PURSES OPERA -- MOCCASSIN 12.4(' ROMEO and SLIP-ON STYLES A :(Guess the size! We'll & exchange after Christmas) Th4 CHOOSE A GIFT FROM OUR COMPLETE SELECTION • SAMSONITE • McBRINE • CARSON BUDGET CASES from 3.95 * MEN'S & BOYS' GLOVES SPORT SHIRTS * SOCKS * BOWLING SHOES SHOE. BAGS * SyVEATERS AIKEN'S LUGGAGE and FOOTWEAR tv dinton hone 4/2-6352 i'ArletWATOO,Arattzer, 00:00:44"411tri,7 air • • 111/4 glinton -New,Pflgord Thursday, . PgperrOer it 70 7 Plastics seen taking bigger role in furniture design BY ANDBBW AMBINO Last week, in my _editorial on the Issue Of free dress I included: "It has been noticed that many of the students (male Mainly) have resorted to wearing the same clothes they wear in the barn! It probably saVes them chenging when they go helm but it is kind of detrimental to liken an expensive school to a barn." This week I have been asked to answer three questions on the matter: 1, How many of the students creating a poor image at MSS are farm students; 2. Would a stranger be able to tell which of the sloppily dressed students have ehores to do in a barn when they go home? 3. What gives one the opinion that some of the clothes worn to school are worn in the barn, In reply, I would first like to elaborate on the fact that I know the type of clothes in the barn: Although I live in town almost all my jobs have been involved in farming: chicken-catching, milkingihaying etc. The type of clothes I/and other farmworkers wear are the checkered lumberjacket and the blue jeans. As far as I'm concerned these clothes are usually worn for hard usage, usually cleaned by a hard working farm-wife and excellent for heavy duty use. However, these clothes have no place in an institution when they look the way they do in a barn. The first question asks how many students creating the "poor image" are farm students. I would have to be honest and say about half. I see in my illustration that I am implying that the farm students are alone in creating the "poor image". This is definitely not so. But again I would like to emphasize that 50 percent of students who come from Clinton and the surrounding towns have resorted to wearing sloppy apparel which to me and several others seems to be worn predominantly on our farms. A stranger will notice, rips in knees, patches 'on -the knees, " faded jeans and ripped unwashed shirts. But unless he happens to know the student he cannot know whether or not he comes from the farm. However in a rural , school like ours he'd probably have a 50.50 or 60-40 chance of guessing from where he comes. If my opinion was implying the predominance of sloppy apparel amongst farm students only I must apologize. However the paragraph was purely an illustrative device emphasizing the type of clothes worn rather than the implication seemed to have been given. I welcome the chance to defend' my views, It would be a poor newspaper if people didn't become involved in obtaining the exact truth: * * * Two weeks ago at the Harlem Diplomat game, a conspicuously tall girl was standing near the 6'8" centre of the team. Edging up to him with wide-eyed admiration she said, "Boy, are you good for my ego!" "In what way?" asked the centre, "Well," she replied, "I always thought I was tall, but standing beside you I think I could learn to live with it!" * * In a chemistry class, the professor was droning on and on about electrons and atoms. Almost everyone was dozing; their heads nodding no matter how hard they tried to stay awake. The instructor wai explaining how a high bolt of electricity would split a molecule into ions. Suddenly noticing the class's lack of attention, he continued in the same term, "By the same token, it will take the same bolt a lot of energy to wake you Up!" * * * In chemistry class a student was sent up to the blackhoard to write an equation. This equation had many water molecules in a row, written 1-120. Instead the student forgot the 2 and wrote it HO + HO + 1-10. A sarcastic voice broke through the silence of the class. "What is it, a message to Santa Claus?" There are students walking around Central Huron, muttering away to thenmlves and shaking their heads. Repeatedly they mumble, "I must be losing my stick! My mind must be going or coming or something!" I walked past one of these characters and noticed the near-raving and self-insulting nature of the student, "Pardon?" I asked. He turned to me blankly. "Pardon?" I repeated. Finally he recognized me. "Oh, hi Andy. Know something? There's an evil physic force stalking these hallowed halls of learning," he warned. "Can't you feel the presence? Haven't you felt depressed lately, not knowing if you're coming or going? Don't you feel like an inmate, losing all track of time'?" "You're right," I replied. "So, I'm not the only one who's felt this depression. But, what in the world is it?" "Oh...Something very strange is going on around here. I walked into the home room to see what time it was. Believe it or not it was seven o'clock. What a fright. No one in their right mind would come to school two hours early, "But I accepted it and went to my first class. Well, I know it couldn't have been 15 minutes later and the clock said 11 a.m.! In fact it stayed 11 all period! Oh well! It was still early. "Lots of things go wrong this, earlr in the "rlio'rri in-g ;1 6' Was if 1„, afternoon? So, I went to French. Now, French is usually strange but it can't be quarter to four! "And Biology had 6:30; and lunch was 8:23! I'm going hairy, Andy. I've got to' get out. Help me Andy! Help." "Now. Now, There has to be a logical, cool reason for all this. I know! The school is trying to make physic wrecks out of us before the Christmas holidays. Or, they're trying an experiment on the effects of disorientation of time. That's it! We're human guinea pigs!" If I'm wrong, what's the answer? * * * You've probably heard of these weird groups springing up in every other town. They all sit on the floor of a cow barn and sense objects. They touch, rub and scrape rocks to see what nature is really like. They close their eyes and breath deeply. In 4 -cow barn it may be dangerous! Anyway, we have somebody .like that in our Or* 13 class, Every day She carries a Delicious apple around with her from morning. till .night. she says she likes the cute little bumps on top of the apple, she cuddles it lovingly and says she adores the cool skin and the 'pleasant odours from it, "The apple must be ;known intimately before you can eat it because it bap its own pereoriality, "Some are fat and squat, others are lean .and sculptured. Besides the apple is living and can be just as much a part of you as any other food. "Something of that apple is retained in your body and anything that goes into my body has to know Ine'firet! "I think it's about time we initiate 'Take An Apple Home For Dinner " • She may not be that weird! Waterloo Lutheran no longer Wry' Moving from its historical position as a "dry" campus, Waterloo Lutheran University has agreed to drinking privileges for its on-campus students if they are over 21. Dr. Frank C. Peters, president of Waterloo Lutheran University, said the regulations, approved by the executive of the WLU board of governors, will allow the exercise of drinking rights comparable to that enjoyed by a person in his own home. "We hope that these new regulations will provide an opportunity for the development of a more mature attitude to liquor, enabling its use to be kept in a proper context with regards for the rights of all students." At present, the university permits liqttor only in graduate residents where all occupants are over the legal drinking age of 21. problem; arose' because Many other students are of legal drinking age but live in undergraduate residences. House councils in each residence will set rules for their own building but, in brief, the regulations will allow consumption in a person's own room as provided by provincial laws. Colour is the whole story in furniture for 1971, -Colour in woods, in acrylics, in 'fabrics, 0004, wild, grabber colours to match the modern mood, And the mood will be very modern. indeed. These are the projections of furniture designers, manufacturers. and retailers for 1971. They foresee a definite upswing in demand for furniture in the modern style contemporary modern using clean simple lines in wood es and "new materialist" Modern using plastic and glass, oDespite this, however, the largest percentage of our sales — approximately 25 per cent — will continue to be in the more traditional styles", says Bill Landrum, buyer for Eaton's in Toronto, "But even 'in Spanish, Mediterranean, and French and Italian Proyineial designs, the buying public are becoming more adventurous. Colours are brighter, and new and different applications are attractive to an apparently less sales resistant public". A wide variety of .Styles in every type of furniture will be on display at the Canadian Furniture Mart in Toronto's Exhibition Park between January 10 and 15, The largest trade show in Canada, the Mart will be open to the public between 5 p.m. and 10 p.m. on the last two .days of the Mart, January 14 and 15, Wood is still the most commonly accepted material, with rosewood the most recent entry on the Canadian market. Very popular in Scandinavia for the past three or four years, this rich, highly-grained dark wood is seen at its most elegant when combined and. offset with chrome. Coffee and accent tables and etageres or shelving units lend themselves well to this classic styling. Rosewood is unfortunately an expensive wood, but today's technology has produced veneers in this and other popular grains which not defy detection, but which stand up well to everyday use, and are much more kindly to the pocketbook. The light colour of birch lends itself well to the addition ,of bright colours, which although changing the. appeararice., ofs ;the, woods still.. permit the grain to show through. This is a more expensive version of the mix-and-match painted furniture which is expected to become increasingly important in 1971, According to Eaton's buyer Landrum, sales of this relatively recent introduction to Canadian furniture stores already Having been re-elected Reeve, I wish to thank the ratepayers of Hullett Township for their support last Monday. Season's Greetings to All. HUGH FLYNN