HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1954-06-03, Page 6PGE SIX
CL)NTON NEWS -RECORD
Howard assisted behind the scenes,
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Acclaimed By Audience th
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Represenkative HAYFIELD 45 r 3
Phone B
MISS LUCY R. WOODS
Dr. and Mrs, John Duffy, Lon-
wasMiss Barbara Bassett, London,
home over the weekend. don,' and son John, Detroit, spent
Mrs. William J. Hall visited in Sunday in the village.
Stratford over the weekend, Mrs. John Johnston,
has Goderich,
d daughs
F/O Brawn has moved into the visiting her son-in-law
Bannister cottage on Catherine St. ter, Mr, and Mrs, George Little.
Bill Parker, London, is with Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Reeve'
,his' parents from'Wednesday until Mary and Peter, Detroit, occupied
Friday,the Kanter cottage over the holi-
Mrs. William Robinson, Niagara day.
rs. William R. Jowett came
Falls, is "at her cottage on Tuyll M
Street. on Monday to spend this week
C. Haslam, Detroit, visited his with her daughter, Mrs.' LeRoy
cousin, Mrg. Brown Higgins on
Monday. -
Mr. and Mrs. James. P. Ferguson,
London,' spent the weekend at their
cottage.
Miss Anne Drouin, Detroit, spent
the holiday at her cottage on Bay-
field Terrace.
Jackie Fraser, London, visited
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. 3. Fras-
er, over the weekend.
CALL.'IN AND
SEE US ABOUT
YOUR PROBLEMS
on:
EAVESTROUGHING
ELECTRICAL .WIRING
AIR-CONDITIONING
GRAVITY WARM -AIR
HEATING
PLUMBING
A FURNACE FOR EVERY
JOB
Poth.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Merritt
and Keith Dew, Sarnia, visited Mr.
and. Mrs. William Parker on. Sun-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Cook, Gail
and Lewis, Evanston, Ill., were at
their cottage, ' Hightop", over the
.weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. William Mack, Or-
lllia, were the guests of, Mr. and
Mrs. J. M. Atkinson over the
weekend.
Miss Grace Wolfenden, Detroit,
occupied her cottage on Howard
Street over the Decoration Day
weekend.
Mr.' and Mrs. James Day and
family, Pleasant Ridge, Mich., oc-
cupied their cottage over the long
weekend.
Mrs. Pat Harding, J. Enbart,
Renouf Johns and son, Guane, were
guests at The Albion Hotel over
the weekend. .
Miss Jessie Metcalf and guest,
Miss Maud Fiero, Detroit, were
with Mrs. W. F. Metcalf aver the
long weekend.
Dr. and Mrs. A. C. Chapman
were at their cottage on Louisa
Street over the weekend and De-
coration Day:
D. A. Atkinson returned to De-
troit on Monday after having
spent ten days at his home on
Bayfield Terrace.
Dr. and Mrs. Wilson Mitchell,
Birmingham, Mich., were at their
cottage on Chi>)iquy Street over
the long weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hendrick,
Birmingham, Mich., spent the
weekend and holiday at their cot-
tage, "Westwind•"
Rev. Peter Renner left on Tues-
day to attend the sessions of the
United, Church Conference held in.
Windsor this week.
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Toms were
in St. Thomas over the weekend
attending the funeral of their
niece, Mrs. Clara Fox.
Mr. and Mrs. J, M. Atkinson,' St.
Clair Shores, Mich„ were at their
home in the village over the De-
coration Day weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. George Willitts
Pleasant Ridge, Mich, were • at
their cotfage at The Highlands
over the holiday weekend.
Mr. and Mrs. Keith Pruss and'
Janice, and Mr. and Mrs. Les
Moore, London, spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs, J. H. Parker.
Mrs. Florence Rushmer and Dan
are spending a couple of weeks et
"Dingleton" cottage; while Mr. and
Mrs. Charles R. Will 'are in Que-
WISE and BATEMAN
Phone ;147—Clinton
Ba Field G.wides� v ..niy Program Stephen Scotchmer operated the
b d f
J
project-
curtains Ross Middleton ro ect=
Queen
Queen' is Crowned'
e program to a close.
On Saturday,May 29 Guides The First Goderich Company won
M a r g'a r e t Howard, - Rosalinde the' cup; the First Bayfield Comp •
-
Carew -Jones, Katherine Welsh, any came fifth' with first class:,
Elaine Weston and Rosemary Tel-' honours and were complimented
ford,' accompanied by Mrs. E. upon their achievement.
"A
which brought,
(By bur Bayfield cer espondent) I the Guide movement• y
The Guides:'prograxmn the town
hall on Friday evening. was a de-"
cided success, both financially and
inthe way of entertainment: The
and
door receipts
dobsto e3was onatyppotrs of
The Rev,, E. Carew -Jones was
chairman and filled in with arnu,s-
ing anecdotes between numbers.
Mrs, H. H. Ormond accompanied
on her accordion, behind the
scenes, for some of the songs which
Lieut. Mrs. 3. B. Higgins con-
ducted.
The program commenced with
the singing of "O Canada" by the
company. Under the direction of
Lieut. Higgins, the company sang
a hymn, "How Sweet the Name of
Jesus Sounds", with Margaret.
Howard, Vicky Cluff and Brenda
Blair taking the descant; and a
group of songs, "Land of the Sil-
er • Birch" an'old Indian legend;
"Waltzing Matilda" (Percy Grain-
ger)
and a camp fire action song,
"By Peter's Flowing' Stream", all
of which the guides practised in
preparation
singingpationfor he test for their
badges.
The Guides and Brownies with
their officers, Captain Mrs. E.
Carew -Jones and Lieut. Mrs, J. B.
Higgins, Brown Owl, Mrs. Robert
Turner, Tawny Owl, Mrs. Pat
Worth, formed up onthe platform,
and the Rev. Peter Renner was
asked to present the badges, and
one year service stars. In con-
gratulating them, Mr. Renner said
that he knew that the girls had
had to work
for their badges, just
as boys in a group of Trail ang-
ers with which he had worked,
had to work for their badges.
The Company and Pack present-
ed a very smart appearance and
showed evidence of their training
in forming up and their smart
salutes to Mr. Renner, individually.
He presented second class badges
to Elaine Weston and Rosemary
Telford; reader's badge to Marg-
aret Howard (and he mentioned
that a religious and life emblem
was to have been presented to
Rosalinde Carew -Jones but that it
had not arrived).
First year service stars went to
Guides, Margaret Howard, Char-
lene Scotchmer, Vicky and Judy
Cluff, Rosemary Telford and El-
aine Weston; and Brownies Wendy
Heisler, Anne Gemeinhardt, Marg-
aret Smith, Freda and Roberta
McLeod, Ruthann Scotchmer,
Cathy Wallis, Margaret Wallis,
Ramona Telford and Janet and
Sharon Reder. Brown Owl Turner
and Lieut. Higgins had previously
received their warrant pins as
Commissioned Guides..
TFIi1RSDAY, JUNE 3, 1954,c
Carew -Jones (captain), Mrs. J. B, `c
Higgins (Lieutenant), Mrs. R. K
F. Gairdner (px(esident of the local
association) and Mrs, G. Adams.,
(who will become a lieutenant)",
attended a field day at Mitchell,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Hughes, Mr.
and Mrs. J. Q. Hughes, Richard
Ellis; Detroit, Miss Roberta Raby,
Michigan State College, East Lan-
sing, were the guests of, Mr. and
Mrs. LeRoy Poth over the week -
Alex McAllister and family,
Windsor, were with his parents,
Magistrate and Mrs. F. G. Mc-
Allister at the cottage, "The High-
bec,lands", over the weekend. On
Albert Vodden, Clinton, has re- Tuesday, Mrs. McAllister enter -
turned to Bayfield to spend the twined members of the Victoria
Hospital Women's Auxiliary at her
cottage.
Mr. and Mrs. Percy Parker, Ne-
koma, N.Dak., arrived on Saturday
to visit the former's'mother, Mrs.
Charles W. Parker, and other rela-
tives, Mr. and Mrs, Chris Parker,
who have been in Saskatchewan
since last November joined them
at Nekoma for the return trip to
their home near Varna.
William L. ,Cameron visited his
sisters, Misses E. and H. Cameron,
over the weekend and Decoration
Day. Their guests at a family
gathering on Sunday were Donald
Cameron and daughter, Miss Ethel
Cameron, Northville, Mich., Mr.
and Mrs. Donald Cameron, Jr., and
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cameron, De-
troit.
Avocado. Pear
M.S. A. M. Bassett has a novelty
in an avacado pear tree which has
just recently started from a pit
which she planted several months
ago. At first it was just one long
straight shoot with a leaf on top
but now it is branching out down
the stem.
summer with his niece, Miss L.
Langford, at her cottage on River
Road.
Mr. and Mrs. William Murray,
Detroit, visited the farmer's moth-
er, Mrs. Agnes Murray, and niece,
Mrs. John McLeod, over the long
weekend.
Misses M. and R. Kruke return-
ed to Dearborn on .Tuesday after
having been at their home, 'The
Village Guild", on Main Street for
of
few days.
Mr. and Mrs James Brown,
and Mrs.Richard Moore and RMr.
Rich-
ard, Detroit, were guests at "The
Little Inn" over the weekend. Mrs.
Brown remained for a longer visit.
Rev. E. Carew -Jones, Mrs. C.
Knuckey, Mrs. R. J. Larson, Mrs.
J. M. Stewart, attended the Huron
Deanery meeting in St. Thomas
Church, Seaforth, on Wednesday
of last week.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas James,
Detroit, and Miss Kathleen Reid,
Windsor, left on Monday evening
for their respective homes after
having spent the weekend at "En-
field
Ernfield Cottage."
Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Robichaud,
Detroit; William Gemeiner, Susan
and Billy, Grosse Pointe Farm; Mr.
and Mrs. Joseph Spencer and son,
Gary, Toronto, spent the weekend
in Jowett Cottages.
Mrs. F. McFadden was in Brant-
ford on Thursday last attending
the funeral of her uncle, Arthur
Sinden, with whom she had made
her home after her father's death,
prior to her marriage.
Mr. and Mrs, Ernest Rehn,
Grosse Pointe'Farms, Mich., spent
the holiday weekend with the lat-
ter's mother, Mrs. David Dewar.
They motored to Kincardine where
Mrs. Dewar remained to visit for a
few days with her sister-in-law,
Miss Mary Dewar.
The Huron County Council will meet in
the Court House, Goderich, on Wednesday,
June 16th, 1954 at 10.00 a.m.
All correspondence, accounts.or notices
of deputations should be in the hands of the
County Clerk by Saturday, June 12, 1954.
A. H. ERSKINE,
Clerk,
County of Huron.
22-23-b
LLASHMAR
//
CLINTON
NEXT TO CLINTON COMMUNITY PARK
First Show at Dusk 2 Complete Shows Nightly
Thursday and Friday
"MY FAVOURITE SPY"
BOB ROPE HEDY LAMARR
• Cartoon • News
June 3-4
Saturday and Monday June 5-7
"WAR PAINT"
(COLOUR)
ROBERT STACK —\JOAN TAYLOR
• Cartoon • News
Tuesday and Wednesday
"BEACHHEAD"
(COLOUR)
TONY CURTIS — MARY MURPHY
▪ Cartoon 0 News
June 8-9
Thursday and Friday June 10-11
"JOE LOUIS STORY"
(COLOUR)
COLEY WALLACE
• Cartoon • News
CHILDREN'S PLAYGROUND
or Cl
q SHOWS NIGear GHTLY -- 9
Li Rain
:Children Under 12 in Cars FREE!
Unique Pin.
Miss Helen Cameron wears a
very beautiful ring which was be-
queathed to her by a lady in
Seattle. The setting is unique with
one large pearl and 'a large diam-
ond outstanding twith smaller
diamonds on the band. It was a
very interesting history. During
the Boer War, an American by the
name of Taylor in South Africa
had a bet with Lord Kitchener and
Lord Baden-Powell, then, British
Army officers, who put up their
stick pins. The American won the
bet and later had •the pins made
into a ring for his wife. And from
her it came to Miss Cameron.
WARNING TO FARMERS!
FIRE -4-
it+'OR YOUR HOME
FOR YOUR CAR
FOR YOUR OFFICE
FOR YOUR BOAT
Presto "C.B." Fire Extinguisher
A Dow Chemical Product. Recommended by
Reader's Digest Magazine.
THIS FIRE EXTINGUISHER IS GOOD FOR ALL FIRES
INCLUDING LIVE WIRING — GUARANTEED FOR
20 YEARS WITHOUT RECHARGING.
When fire breaks out . . . anytime . . . anywhere
the finest fire insurance policy you can have is PRESTO—
the one-man fire -fighting department that kills all fires faster
than bulky extinguishers many times its size and cost. A ne-
cessity for homes, cars, tractors, boats, etc.
PRESTO is priced so low that you simply can't afford
to be without its ever -ready protection.
only OQQ•95
Complete with wall bracket,
Riddick Sons Feed Mill
PHONE 114 CLINTON
Agents for PRESTO Fire Extinguishers
LAKEVIEW CASINO
GRAND BEND
DANCING EVERY SATURDAY
SA U
This week to the Music of
DON. WATSON and his ORCHESTRA
"The Newest in Dance Bands','
featuring "CHRISTINE P
Enjoy Dancing on Our, Beautiful' Now Floor
Kathy Welsh delighted the aud-
ience with a pianoforte selection,
"Sunset on the St. Lawrence" by
Maxime Haller; a reading, "Robin-
son Crusoe" by Rosalinde Carew -
Jones in costume (in which "Thun-
der", Steven Scotchmer's Great
Dane made his debut), was much
appreciated, as was also a vocal
solo, "Danny Boy" by Margaret
Howard. An amusing skit "Doc-
tor Come Quick" was presented by
Charlene Scotchmer (Doctor),
Vicky Cluff (nurse) and Rosalinde
Carew -Jones (a male patient);
Kathy Welsh sang, "The Place
Where I Worship is the Wide Open
Spaces" in fine voice.
Mrs. Gairdner, president of the
Guides Association, expressed pride
in, and thanks to the leaders, and
all who had helped in making the
evening a success. She appealed
for members of the association, not
only the mothers of the children,
but others to come forward and
join to give strong support to the
Guide movement begun one year
ago by Mrs. E. Carew -Jones and
so ably assisted by the other of-
ficers.
The Brownie Pack then gave one
of their singing games, "Old Rog-
er is dead."
Lieut. Higgins excelled in her
role as interlocutor in the minstrel
show by the Company, and the
girls did splendidly with their
jokes, dance "Oh Dem Golden
Slippers", and other darky chor-
uses. Mrs. 3. Cluff and Mrs. J. E.
4
S2flie for legs -than the besk?
That's a good question, but how are you going
to find out which chopper is the best? Come
in and talk it over with us. We made quite a
study of the question before decidi ng to sell the
With Quick Switch
Mower•Sar
Attachment
1
New. Quick Switch
2•Row
Cern Head
J. S. Scruton
Oils - Greases - Gasoline
Petroleum Products
Phone Clinton 377 •
Phone Goderich 320-W
CITIES SERVICE
DISTRIBUTOR
FORAGE HARVESTER 1
Here are some of the reasons why
we sell the Gehl:
• Gehl has been building ensilage cutters
and forage chopping machinery for over half
a century. • Experience is responsible for
the superior chopping ability of the Gehl
Forage Harvester. • More chopper -wise
farmers own Gehl Choppers than any other
independent make. • Gehl engineering is
assurance of sturdy construction and fine
performance.
There are a lot of other reasons why we
recommend the Gehl.
COME IN NOW . , . Jet's talk it over man to
man, The NEW GEHL gives you 4 attachments;
QUICK SWITCH , .. from Mower -Bar to Wind-
row Pickup or Row Crop Attachment in only 5 minutes
so easy a boy can wheel it in. NEW 2 -ROW ATTACH-
MENT for Corn, Sorghum, etc., cuts twice as much ...
costs little more than the 1 -Row Attachments.
EXCLUSIVE PTO drive for Forage Blower. No
belts to tighten, no power toss, faster unloading.
FREE PLANS for building your own self -unloading
Forage Wagon using Gehl Metal Parts Kit. t
PTO Drlr• for forage blower
THERE'S NOTHING BETTER THAN A GEHL...
John Aldington
VARNA, Ont. -' Phone .Clinton 626 r 5
COAL
Summer Prices
Now In Effect
ORDER YOUR
SUPPLY EARLY
AS PRICES MAY
ADVANCE JULY 1.
ement
Canadian Cement
available now
PHONE US FOR YOUR
SUPPLY
MUSTARD
Lumber and Coal
BRUCEFIELD, ONTARIO
PHONE CLINTON 634r11
22-3-6
STOP
LOOKING FOR A GOOD DEAL.
IN A USED CAR?:
ONLY
MURPHY BROTHERS OFFER; SO
MUCH
CHECK THESE FEATURES:
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Highest Trade -In Prices.
Ali Cars Thoroughly Checked and:Reconditioned.
Highest Values -- Lowest Pricesa.
_I.A.C. Merit Plan Service
Ideal Warranty Plan. Re
Central Location — Easy toReath
An Established Dealership. Catering- to the Wise
Buyer who Demands the Kite of' Service only
Murphy Brothers can. give.
THIS WEEK'S SPECIALS:
1951 PLYMOUTH SEDAN- .. $1200
1949 MONARCH COACH- , . $1025
VERY CLEAN.
See These and Many Other Extra: Values
—AT—
MffiRPHY BROS.
CHRYSLER---PLYMOUTH--FARGO
Sales and Service
PHONE 465 Huron Street CLINTON,. ONT.
A pig today will be worth about $50.00 to $55.00
when he is marketed. How much profit he will make
for the farmer depends upon how Tong it takes the
farmer to get him to market and how much feed he
has to put into him.
Many tests at the SHUR-GAIN Farm and by hundreds
of hog raisers have demonstrated that SHUR-GAIN fed
hogs go to market on 600 lbs. of feed in 5 to 6 months.
Straight grain fed hogs. take up to 2 months longer
and require about 500 lbs, more feed.
Feed SHUR-GAIN Hog Feeds to one litter and you
will see that
SHUR-GAIN saves and makes you money.
CLINTON FEED MILL