Loading...
Clinton News Record, 1955-05-12, Page 11'THURSDAY, MAY 12;1955 CLINTON NEWS -RECORD . t.-., . 44 '54 HUDSON= Super' Wasp - 11,000 miles'— fully equipped '53 PONTIAC SEDAN- - '52VR.O E LET SEDAN CH S N A ,'50 PONTIAC COACH '50 PONTIAC 2 -DOOR '49FORD . COACT '52 G.M.C. 1/2 -TON PICK-UP ANSON GILBERT 'MOTORS Pontiac Buick .— G.M.C. SEAFORTH PHONE SEAFORTH 461 , 18-tfb Patented Also Pend f. <j LIGHTWEIGHT CULTIVATOR Merry Tiller, the self-propelled, efficient rotary culti- vator and garden tractor—two machines in, one—for all your farm and garden needs!"Merry Tillr islig'ht, sturdy, dependable .... produces more garden easier, for lets money! REAL FARM AND GARDEN HELPER Come in or phone for free Merry Tiller demonstration! See it perform many jobs with little effort., Test ease of controls. No wheels to pack soil; patented gripper -leverage principle—out- performs machines" larger and heavier. See it today! YOUR Effome/726.4, DMALUR can be seen at NELSON'S MACHINE SHOP for demonstration calk J. W. VAN E:!GMOND PHONE 805r13 CLINTON 19-b Bayfield Church' Scene Of Benefit For Guides Group (Ily`our Bayfield correspondent) The basement of St. Andrew's United Church wasfilled to. cap- a city on Friday evening, April 29. The large . audience gave enthus- iastic applause throughout the fine program arranged by Mrs. LeRoy Poth and Mrs. John Lindsay. Mrs. J. B. Iliggins filled, the role, of chairman. in ,cher usual pleasant manner. ' She gave the note for the `opening number when all joined in singing "O Canada", which was followed by: vocal Solos by Jackie Weston, "It Is No Sec- ret", and 'Blackbirds", accomp- anied by Mrs. R. Moyer; piano- forte selection, "Old 'Black ;Joe", Elaine Rathtvell; vocal solos Mrs. R. Moyer, "Old Father Trrne' , and "Mighty Lak a 'Rose", accompan- ied by Mrs, R. S. Roddick; trio, Kathleen, Margaret and Marion Porter, "Bless This House", ac- companied by their sister, Miss Anna Porter; recitation, Susan Adams, "The Reason Why"; vocal solo, Catherine Welsh, "Moonlight and Roses", accompanied by her grandmother, Mrs. 0. Welsh; trio, Mrs. Maynard Corrie, Mrs. • R. Moyer and Mrs. J. E. Hovey, "Where E'er You Walk" (Handel) and "I Passed by Your Window", Mrs; Roddick, accompanist; re- citation, Michael Scotchmer, "No- thing Satisfied Him", and encore, "Man Wants but Little . Here"; vocal solos, Margaret Howard; "Where the River Shannon Flows" and "An Irish Lullaby", accomp- anied by her mother, Mrs. J. E. Howard. Before the collection was taken up, Mrs. LeRby poth explained that the idea to have this evening's entertainment to help the Guides and Brownies had originated with Mrs. John Lindsay. They had each thought of inviting friends to their respective homes to see the pic- tures of the Bayfield fishing boats caught in the ice. Then this plan had evolved on the previous Sat- urday, After the,' collection had - been PAGE ELEVEN 1 9 3 8 BETTER FISII The :Rifle Club's Spring. Shoot turned out better than expected, though there was a small crowd of only a dozen shooters took .part. When the rain set in they went to darts. Hams, cottage rolls, ducks,. chickens and sugar were the prizes. John Anderson won two hams and a cottage roll; A. Gilbert won a ham, a chicken and sugar; F. Gilbert, cottage roll and sugar; Tom Darling, cottage roll and sugar; H. Prouse, one ham and one cottage roll. 'Mrs, Thomas Steepe won two bags of sugar. Do You Know? Junior Conservation Night is the third Tuesday -May 17. :Y * Hats off to the •grounds com- mittee! They have done a nice job of levelling off' the rifle range and planting the new grounds with trees --.a border of four rows for wind break. Some day this Will be a very nice shooter's park, taken, LeRoy Poth showed beauti- ful coloured slides while Mrs. Poth gave a running commentary. They included views of Niagara Falls in daytime and evening, Elora, scenes at Goderich,harbour, the old Court House before and after the fire, the clearing of the rubble, the new Court Rouse in the course of con- struction, beauty spots at Benmil- ler, the .Blue Water Bridge at Sarnia, and the local steel fishing fleet in distress andrescue opera- tions. After these interesting pictures, Mrs. John Lindsay expressed ap- preciation of . the very generous response to this effort. The col- lection amounted to, $40. An en- velope containing $20 was received by Mrs. J. B. Higgins for the Guides, and one containing an equal amount by Mrs, R. Turner and Mrs. Kenneth Brandon for the Brownies. Then followed a social hour during which tea was served. Sunset Drive -In 1 THEATRE Goderich 13/4 Miles East of Goderich on No. 8 Highway THURSDAY- and FRIDAY — May 12-13 • "TRAIL BLAZERS" Allan Hale Jr. drid Elena Verdereyo And on the Same Program: "YUKON MANHUNT"' Kirkley. Grant and Carol Thurston SATURDAY and MONDAY -- May 14-16 "CALIFORNIA CONQUEST" Cornel Wilde and Teresa Wright Comedy • : Cartoon ''TUESDAY and WEDNESDAY — May 17-18 "NEVER A DULL MOMENT" Irene Dunn- and Fred MacMurray Comedy Cartoon Box Office Opens 7.45 p.m. First Show at Dusk TWO SHOWS NIGHTLY RAIN OR CLEAR Children's0 ggrrPlayground 12 dder Refreshment Booth In Cars FREE To tleelectors of rthe •Riding of Huron:• Our Candidate in the forthcoming Provincial Election is JAMES g. SCOTT, of , Seaf Orth A young .man native of this County and decsendant of a pioneer family, Mr. Scott is a citizen particularly•well qualified to repre- - sent this riding. Educated at the 'Seaforth schools and the Universities of Toronto and 'Harvard, he has had an enviable record of -service to this, community and :the enation. , His experience'includesteaching at three Canadian ' Universities ' '(Toronto, Saskat- chewan 'arid' Western),' the Department of Talks Wand Public Affairs of the C.B.C. and book editor of 'the'Toronto'Telegram. He : is -known throughout Canada ,as.. a public speaker and is a recognized authority on education. . As official historian of Huron County, he knows every inch of this riding and .its problems and affairs, and has proved him- self an enthusiastic supporter of all worth - While community projects. Mr. Scott is a widower, has one daughter, isa, member of the Presbyterian Church, and has served on that church's. General:13oard of Education.: In every respect, by training, ability and service, he has proved himself qualified to give the Riding of Huron aggressive and out- standing representation. at Queen's Park. Yoursupport will be well repaid by the service he will render to this constituency. THE HURON LIBERAL ASSOCIATION wo hope, If you didn't go trout fishing last Weekend, you missed it. Two fishermen from Clinton went about 15 or 20 miles north of Clinton and,, came home each with a creel full of those lovely speckles. They took their limit with half of the fish over' 11 inches. A. foot -long was common. I'know because I had a 12% -inch ,trout for supper. 1 9.5 5 BETTER BUNTING PORTER'S HILL • Club Meeting The Community 'Clubwill hold its regular meeting on Wednesday, May 18, at the home of Mrs. Allen Betties, Baptisins At the morning worship in Grace United Church last Sun- day, Mother's Day, the following were presented for baptism: Fran- ces Marlene Switzer,daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Merrill Switzer; Kevin Lloyd Cox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Elgin Cox; Donald William Mellwain, son of Mr. and Mrs. William McIlwain; Randal Paul Sowerby, son of Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Sowerby. TENDER Township of Tuckersmith Tenders are- invited" by the Township of Tuckersmith for SPRAYING' FOR WEED CON- TROL on -Township Roads in 1955. The Township will supply spray material required and contractor must supply ail other requirements. Tender to state a rate per hour and work to be completed by June 10, 1955, Tenders to be in the clerks hands by 9.00 p.m., May 14, 1955. Lowest or any tender not neves. sarily accepted. E P. CHESNEY, Clerk 18.19-b WOOL JACKSON HOMES LTD. SEAFORTH is collecting wool for grading and sale on the co-operative plan. Ship- pers may obtain sacks and twine free of charge from the above or from their Licensed Operators. CANADIAN CO-OPERATIVE WOOL. GROWERS LIMITED 217 'Bay Street, Toronto 16-7-9-20-b See, me' for-remarkahly LOWRATESr ON: AUTO INSURANCE With eState Farm Mutual! LLOYD ETUE Phone x Collect Zurich 78r5 8-15p-tfb 1, S. Scruton CITIES SERVICE DISTRIBUTOR Phone Clinton 377 . Goderich 320=W 3) WISE 84TkMelN.'S' PLUV118.1ER JUST 'PHONE AND YOU WON'T HAVE TO AIT; WE'LL GLADLY GIVE AN ESTIMATE \.Ez,1NG THECaLvett SPORTS COLUMN 4 Seffie4 9e4944044 Alt the 'boxing experts seem to think that Rocky Marcia»o will knock out England's Don pockell in a, hurry waren they fight in San Francisco May 16. • • The bout has been termed by the experts a mis-rnatch. Marciano is quoted a 4-1 favourite. '` But old -tuners remember the . mighty John L, Sullivan who was quoted at 4-1 odds when he inet a slim, cocky, pompadoured bank clerk named Jim Corbett one Sep- tember night in 1892. Corbett was unimpressed by John L's. glares and roars, and systematically` cut the hero down to size zero. We recall that,. pack in 1914, the world middleweight title was held by a rugged warrior from Pittsburg, George Chip. He was matched to fight' a rather nondescript boxer, whose ring tag was Al MgCoy. McCoy wassupposedly out- classed. Chip walked from his corner and ten seconds later, he wasn't champion any more. Then 'there was the Max Baer -Jimmy Braddock, "mis- match" of 1935. Baer had everything, including the heavy weight title. Braddock had, nothing. ` He had just come off the relief rolls. And at the end of 15 rounds Braddock was world's heavyweight champion. Of course, scores of lids -matches have gone the way they were expected to go. Dempsey knocked off the slightly over- grown Georges Carpentler, though this mis=match drew the first million -dollar gate. The records would not indicate that Cocicell has much of a chance next week. He was knocked out by Randy. Turpin and Jinuny Slade and beaten by the incompetent likes of Aaron Wilson. On the other hand, that happened when Cockell was fighting as a' light -heavy.. As a heavyweight Cockell has,won tenin a row, four by kayo. Many strange upsets of the favourite's applecart have occurred in the past. This could conn eivably be one of - them, though we're not predicting 1t, Tour reosweMs mod sew/lens fer 114 edam ire be 'Olinda, by Elmer Ferguson; c/o Calvert House, 4331 Yong* St., Tomb. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED' 011 A/D It wont be long NO'... �` ill you have that The full line of Johnston '55 models, with all the modern features, are now being displayed at our store. Come In and select your reel or rotary Johnston Power M'ower'... a model for every fawn need. Ask about our Easy Payment Plan See the new .JOHNSTON Power Lawn Mower at COME IN FOR A FREE. DEMONSTRATION AUTO WELLS' ELECTRIC "The Original Tune -Up Shop" PHONE 762-J CLINTON 1955 CHEVROLET Deluxe Sedan, fully equipped ,,, $2,395 1954 CHEVROLET Deluxe Powerglide Sedan, fully equipped $1,995 10-1954 CHEVROLET STANDARD SEDANS, fully equipped $1,845 2-1954 CHEVROLET. Deluxe Sedans,.- fully equipped $1,895 1954 CHEVROLET "Bel -Air" Coach .,....,$2,095 2-1954, PONTIAC Standard Sedans` $1,845 1953 CHEVROLET SEDAN $1,395 1952 PONTIAC, Deluxe Sedan $1,195 1951 CHEVROLET Powerglide Sedan $.1,145' 1951 DODGE SEDAN $1,195 1950 CHEVROLET SEDAN ' $895 1949 ANGLIA Coach $250 TRUCKS 1948 INTERNATIONAL %2 TON PICK-UP—$350' Cars and Trucks can be driven' away at the prices listed in this advertisement For the convenience of those in Clinton district, please contact KNOX WILLIAMS, Albert St., one door north of Counter's Builder's Supply. Phone Clinton 649-J Bi'ussels Motors Huron County's Foremost Used Car Dealer BRUSSELS, ONTARIO PHONE 73X