HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1973-07-05, Page 10IDB
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Ask for this folder
from our representative,
Mr. J.D. Brinklow
who will be at:
The Bedford Hotel, GODERICH, on
Monday, July 9th, 1973
from 1:00 p.m. to 4:00 p.m.
Telephone: 524-7337
If you require financing to start, modernize,
or expand your business, and are unable to
obtain it elsewhere on reasonable terms and
conditions, perhaps IDB can help you.
'MIN
el1111T
BANK
67111A1
197 York Street,
London, Ontario.
NSA 1B2 J
SALE
THE BASE
FACTORY OUTLET
NOW LOCATED ON HWY NO. 4 SOUTH OF CLINTON AT VANASTRA
FURNITURE DEPT. FEATURES
Check this complete livingroom Value!
DOUBLE
BED SIZE
BOX SPRING
& MATTRESSES
OUR PRICE
$8997
Two End Tables
Matching Chair
Coffee Table
Two Matching
Lamps
TENDER TOOTSIES
All Summer Shoes
20%Q OFF
SUMMER GOWNS
And PYJAMAS
20% OFF
PonmerlAerchandise, tiovitAniSale,for
Dar July Clearance. Reductions 20% to 50%
PARTY DRESSES
DRESSES
$9.99 T° $ 19.99
All Weather
COATS
$12.99 TO $24.99
$15.99 UP
SWIMSUITS
$7.99 TO $14.99
PARIS STAR SPORTSWEAR
PANTS;BLAZERS, VESTS, SWEATERS, ETC.
SALE PRICED
FOR QUICK CLEARANCE
SHORTS, HALTERS
TANK TOPS
All at SALE PRICES
BRASSIERES
And GIRDLES
LARGE SELECTION
HALF PRICE
Come in and Shop and See our Many Bargains ...
Fabric Centre (ground floor)
ALL SUMMER FABRICS REDUCED FOR QUICK SALE
CRIMPLENE ... $2.69 YD. ACRYLIC PLAID ... $2.99 YD.
10-,--OLINTON NEW4-RECORP, THURSUAy, 19,3
-Hay ,Deputy-reeve dies
suddenly at home
The deputy-reeve. of Hay
Township since January of this
year, Harold M, Campbell, R R.
1, Exeter, passed away sud,
denly while working at home
on Monday, June 25, in his
48th year. He was a son of Hen-
sail clerk and former Hay
Township reeve Earl and Mrs.
Campbell, of Hensall.
Mr. Campbell served on the
Hay Township council for a
number of years prior to being
elected deputy-reeve last
Pentecostal picnic held
The annual Sunday school
picnic of the Calvary Pen-
tecostal Church was held
Saturday, June 24, at the Clin,
ton Community Park with 45
members and friends present.
Those winning games were as
follows: beginner and primary
classes: running race, Sharon
Sager and Michele Jamieson;
three legged race, Lloyd Crich
and David Gardner, Johnny
Reid and Stephen Watt; wheel
barrow race, Sharon Sager and
Brenda Hoy, Johnny Reid and
Paul McCullough;
Junior and Teen classes:;
three legged race, GeorgeL
Collins and Stephen Sager,
Dianne and Margaret,
Jamieson; ball competition,
George Collins and David Fitz-
patrick; Dianne Jamieson and
Julie McCullough; wheel
barrow race, Stephen Sager
and George Collins; ski race,
Jo-Anne Collins, Margaret
Jamieson, Dianne Jamieson,
George Collins, David Fitz-
patrick, and Stephen Sager.
Adult Class: many objects,
Pastor and Mrs. Leslie Hoy,
Gary and Dorothy Hoy, Leslie
Sager, Hazel Hoy, and Erma
Hoy; spoon on a string, Mrs.
Les Hoy, Margaret Jamieson,
Erma Hoy, Stephen Sager,
George Collins, Norma Gene
Reid, Sharon Sager, David Fit-
zpatrick, Brenda Hoy and
D ecember. He was an active
member of the Exeter branch of
the Royal Canadian Legion.
Surviving besides his parents
is his wife, the former Mona
Fletcher; three daughters, Mrs,
L arry (Carolyn) Ducharme,
Hensall, Marie, London, Judy,
at home; four sons, Jim,
Exeter, Brian, Hensall, Randy
and Fred, at home, There are
also two sisters, Mrs. Leonard
(Doreen) Smith, Lucan, Mrs,
Larry (Mary)
Lloyd Crich.
In honor of the 174th day of
the year, there were 174
jellybeans in a jar. The ones
guessing the nearest the num-
ber were Mrs. Hazel Hoy and
John Fraser.
Best Athlete Awards were
given to: Johnny Reid, Sharon
Sager, David Fitzpatrick,
George Collins and Mrs. Leslie
Hoy,
the cities. If one was at home in
London Ontario, it would take
very little adjustment to be
right at home in Winnipeg,
Regina, Saskatoon, Edmonton,
or Calgary. The cost of livirig
varies from city to city as do
the attitudes and aspirations of
the people, but the cities all
have a sort of sameness to
them. They all have traffic
jams, gleaming new sky
scrapers, sprawling suburbs
and slum areas full of drunks
and crime.
Politics, however, differ as
vastly as the geography. In
Manitoba and Saskatchewan,
it's solid ND?, while in
Alberta, it's solid Conservative.
It's ironic too, that even though
the Saskatchewan and
Manitoba voters will support
the NDP at the provincial
level, they're almost solid Con-
servative at the Federal level.
People of Ontario could learn
a good deal from our Western
neighbours. Some of their ideas
make good sense and others
should be implemented im-
'mediately. One that par-
ticularly impressed us was the
number of litter and trash con-
tainers placed on the highways
out West. They are well
marked and sufficient advance
notice is given by road signs,
that almost no litter defaces
the roadsides. Ontario, it
seems, spends thOusands of
dollars on an advertising cam-
itiaign telling you not to throw
litter on the highways, but
doesn't provide any containers
in which to throw it!
Another excellent anti-litter
idea, which so far is only in ef-
fect in Alberta, is a collectable
refund on all bottles and metal
drinking cans. One can collect
anywhere from two cents on a
soft drink can to a nickel on a
used whiskey bottle. It keeps
the littering to a minimum and
also recycles a good deal of
metal and glass that would end
up in a bulky land fill site.
We ,were impressed too by
the paved shoulders on many of
the highways in Manitoba,
Saskatchewan and Alberta. It
gives a driver a sense of
security as well as an extra
safety margin.
One of the more pleasant sur-
prises during the trip was to
buy something in Alberta. If
the price tag said $1.98, that's
what you paid. No extra .14
cents, no sales tax, very nice.
Canada today is still a coun-
try divided by sectionalism, but
I think that many of our dif-
ferences could be worked out if
more people in Canada
travelled in Canada and stop-
ped and talked with other
Canadians. A couple of days
travelling in another part of
your country is worth more
than several weeks holidays to
Europe or the United States.
One bit of advice, though,
don't try to drive 5,600 miles in
two weeks. It's a bit too much.
CANCER OF THE LUNG
NEARLY ALWAYS FATAL
Twenty-five years ago, the de4th
rates from cancer were approxi-
mately equal in men and women.
However, now men die more frequ-
ently from cancer than women
due partly to the rise in numbers of
male smokers and the resulting
rapid increase in cancer of the lung.
Because lung cancer is one of the
most difficult forms of cancer to
diagnose and cure, 95% of the cases
are fatal. The logical response is: if
you don't smoke, don't start, and if
you smoke, quit. The Canadian
Cancer Society can provide you
with helpful information for
smokers.
The Clinton Christian School held their graduatlori,exercleeS
last Thursday. 1973 graduates back row left to right are
Wilma Greldarius, Jake Benjamin*, Mike Slerteema, Tim De
Weird, Bert Amaing, Clarence Roost, Jim. De Boer, Ronnie
Kesel's, John Valkenburg, John Hack, Nick Heykaop,
Jeanette Kulpers, and Helen Ts Brinks. Front row are Alice
Bog, Anita Daterna, Emmy Monkes, Glens Dolma, Betty-Ann
Poatma, Arlene Vender Wel, Helen Boa, and Wendy
Greldanue. (News-Record- photo)
A letter from a travelling editor
Travelling through five
provinces in two weeks can
sometimes be a grueling affair,
but it also proved to be very
educational as well.
Sitting back here in Clinton
at the old familiar typewriter
watching familiar faces walk
down Albert Street is a
pleasant experience after
driving 5,600 long and oc-
casionally lonely miles.
To anyone who has travelled
across Canada, and I and my
wife Lois really only covered
half of it, the very size and
diversity of both the geography
and the people leaves one ut-
terly amazed that the country
is tied together in one bond un-
der one central government.
From ,the near sub-tropical
climate of Southern Ontario to
the barren snow covered moun-
tains of Alberta and British
Columbia, the differences are
so great that at times we seem
to have little in common but
the name `!Canada." Even our
national flag has little meaning
FOOT PROBLEMS
(not a joke) . putt ngi toomu9h„pressuye „, i
447v dins *1 lie -
nerve system on the Whims of'your feet, calcium depOstts cart
develop on joints, veins and arteries. Stiffness, aches and pain
can follow.
ALZNNER FOOT CORRECTOR
ARCH SUPPORTS
Can be your answer. They dlitribute the weight evenly and
promote blood circulation ... make walking a pleasure again.
Recommended by doctors.
THE ONLY ONE WHICH MASSAGES AND CORRECTS
FREE DEMONSTRATION AT YOUR DEALER'S
HOLLAND'S SHOE STORE
28 Albert St.
CLINTON 482-9692
for a vast part of Canada when
you consider that once you're
out of Sault Ste. Marie, there
isn't a Maple tree to be found
anywhere in Manitoba, Saskat-
chewan or Alberta. We didn't
see any, so you must wonder
what the rest of Canada thinks.
The vastness and diversity
also applies to farming too.
What we would consider to be
a good size farm here in Huron
County, say about 300 acres,
would merely be one field to a
wheat or rapeseed farmer in
Manitoba or Saskatchewan.
The methods of cultivation
vary a good deal from ours too.
The plow is nearly unheard of,
as tile drains are, for the most
part, a strange term too.
Where we could easily sup-
port one cow on two acres of
land, in parts of Alberta 10 or
even 15 acres are needed. In
fact, the only thing fenced in in
some parts of Alberta was the
highway.
One thing most Canadians
have in common, however, is
GOOD NEWS
DRIVE IN
(3 mile* west of Clinton on. No. $ Highway) •
"Jericho Road"
foto..
Speaker: John Martin
wao.n.1.10
SUNDAY' 8:30 p.m
EVERYONE WELCOME
COME AS YOU ARE IN YOUR CAR
65% POLYESTER, 35% COTTON
PLAID SEERSUCKER $1.79 YD.
.0.
PLAID CRIMPLENE $3.99 YD. ciiCTORIAN PRINTS $1.49 YD.
SCHAEFER'S
LADIES WEAR LIMITED
ON THE SQUARE, GODERICH