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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1955-10-06, Page 4E"'aO INIf?N°NPWS'A7E",CORD' • TBK713-SDAY,',O('I'QB$B, 6., 195'S;i "BUSINESS I'IRECTORX', INSURANCE Insure the op" Way;; !V. V,''ROY DistriPhone Cct- Representative , Bo ..310 CollectJlihton, Ontario Office 557 Res, 3243 H., O. LA,WSON Bank of Montreal Building Clinton PHONES: Office 251W; ; Res. 251J, 1!ast:mance — Real Estate Agent: 14tntuiQ,`Life AssuranceCo. Be Sure . • • De Insures) K. W. COLQ'CHOUN GENERAL INSURANCE. Representative Niru Life Assurance Co. of Canada Office: Royal Bank Building Office 50 --,PHONES Res, 703w2 J. E. HOWARD,: Bayfield Phone Bayfield 53r2 Car - Fire - Life - Accident Wind Insurance If you need Insurance, I have a Policy THE McIiILLOP MTJTUAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY Head Office: Seaforth Officers 1954: President, John TL' McEwing, Blyth; vice-presi- dent, Robert Archibald, Seaforth; secretary -treasurer and manager, M. A, Reid, Seaforth. Directors: John H. McEWing; Robert Archibald; Chris. Leon- hardt, Bornholm; E. J. Trewartha, Clinton; Wm. S. Alexander, Wal- ton; J. L. Malone, Seaforth; Har- vey Fuller, Goderich; T. E. Pepper, Brucefield; Alister Broadfoot, Sea - forth. Agents: Wm. Leiper Jr., Londes- boro; J. F. •Prueter, Brodhagen; Selwyn Baker, Brussels; Eric Munroe. Seaforth. INVESTMENTS Get The Facts Call VIC DINNNIN Phone 168 — Zurich Investor& Mutual Managed and Distributed by Investors Syndicate of Canada, Ltd. OPTOMETRY G. B. CLANCY Optometrist — Optician (successor to the late A. L. Cole, optometrist) For appointment phone 33, Goderich • J. E. LONGSTAFF Hours: Seaforth: Daily except Monday & Wednesday -9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. Wednesday, 9 a.m. to 12,30 p.m. Clinton: MacLaren's Studio—Mon- days only -9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. PHONE 791 SEAFORTH PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT ROY N. BENTLEY Public Accountant 4 Britannia Rd. (corner South St.) Telephone 1011 GODERICH ONT. RONALD G. McCANN Public Accountant Royal Bank Bldg., Phone 561. Res: Rattenbury St., Phone 455 CLINTON, ONTARIO 4-tfb REAL ESTATE LEONARD G. WINTER Real. Estate and Business Broker High ,Street — Clinton Phone 448 Business Girl Plans Worry- Free Future $150 Every Month For Rest ofHi r Life! A young Toronto woman. has solved the vital problem facing all , business and professional women— future security. If she stays single, her future will be protected by a Confederation Life policy which, at age 50, guarantees her $150 a month for the rest of her life! If she marries, this policy will provide a comfortable 'extra -income' for her and her husband. Her Confederation Life policy ie a systematic savings plan for build- ing a secure future—without finan- cial risks or investment'worries:'If, for example, she is totally disabled for at least six months by sickness or an accident before she is,. 50, Confederation Life's Disability Benefit will keep up her premiums for her until she is well again. Co1bdorat1on Iiifr ASSOCIATION For Free Booklet,: .I Want Insurance", calla H. H. THOMSON, C.L.U. Divisional Manager, Royal Bank Bldg., London ust B Used To. Be Appreciated r Slogan For Cheese Producers e "The only way to learn about while today the figure is edging up . towards six and one quarter pounds. Officials of the dairy in- duetry hope the figure will move up ,beyond, the .quartet' 'nark' dur- ing ; this year's 'October cheese festival. -- During the October Festival, which has been an annual event since 1949, grocery Stores, hotels, and restaurants have featured dozens of .varieties of cheese which has• resulted in. a steadily expanding`acceptanpe of cheese in its various forms by Canadian consumers, cheese is "beat it" was the advice giver many years ago by an Eng- lish gourmet and authority on cheese: For hundreds of•'years before MIS sage•adviee, people the world over had been eating many dif- ferent cheeses made from -the milk of cows or ghats, The, an- cients were quick to discover,, that the making of cheese allowed thein, literally, to store and ,trans- port milk, thereby making avail- able to themselves at all times, the major food values of the liquid product. Not until. com- paratively modern times was dairy science able to explain.* in detail why cheese was so highly regarded, generation after genera- tion. Before food scientists got into the story of cheese,.- thisproduct was prized both for tasteand for its ability to sustain strength in the, individual as he went about his; daily chores. It was undoubt- cclly this characteristic that has made cheese so popular' in work ingmen's, lunch boxes wherever heavy ;manual labor is required: The scientists have come up with the answer isi is er ...Gheese ideal all classes of workers because it is the most highly concentrated of the protein foods and as such, is inexpensive. Furthermore, 90 to 99 percent of all cheese is digested. Nutritionists consider cheese among the best of protein foods even for very young child- ren. I1 the only way to learn about cheese is to eat it, as has been suggested, Canadians are gradual- ly applying themselves to their cheese -eating lessons in greater and greater numbers. Back in 1950 we ate about five and one- half pounds of cheese per capita Woodstoc Wins Exeter Car `. (By our Ilensau correspondent) 3: R. Roberts, Woodstock, was the lucky winner of a 1955. poach car at Exeter arena last Friday. The bingo was sponsored by the Exeter Legion and 'Lions With proceeds Mr a Scout House. Be. tween seven and eight hundred attended, Incidentally, Mr., anti Mrs. Rebertsr were motoring to Southampton to close. `.their sum- mer cottage and had stopped off at Exeter for lunch when they learned of the bingo' being held there that night. Mr. Roberts owns a new car, and Mrs. Roberts recently won $1,000 in a bingo game. Sixty Penny Sale Winners Listed With Prizes, donors and winners .at the Clinton Hospital Auxiliary second annual penny sale are list- ed here: _ Prizes Won Flashlight from. Leslie Ball, won by Gerald Reaurne; $4.20 in milk tickets, Clinton Dairy, Miss Ada Adamsf basket groceries, Fitzsimons. Food Fair, Mrs. Roy Wheeler; table lamp, Beattie e Don n Pickard ; tie Furniture, o t and cuff link set, Herman's Men's Wear, Lawrence Falconer, -Bruce- field; beauty set, F. B. Pennebak- er, Mrs. Patricia Hackett; bushel apples, Fred Middleton, G. M. Counter; ham, ` Orville Stanley, George H. Gawley; scatter rug, Martin's Dept. Store, Mrs. A. Lynn, Dashwood; basket grocer- ies, George Rumball, Madeline Mutch. - Credit slip, $5, Hugh Hawkins, Mrs. A. G. Grigg; four steak din- neds, Hotel Clinton, Mrs. W. Col- clough; dry cleaning, $5, Clinton Laundry, Mrs. Patricia Hackett; cigarette lighter, Mayor Morgan J. Agnew, L. Denomme; hair tonic, Reeve Mel Crich, Mrs. T. The Record Speaks for itself . . IT WILL PAY YOU, TO GET THE FACTS! For the latest portfolio of securities • CaII Vic Dinnin Phone 168 P.O. Box 190 Zurich, Ont. Managed & distributed by Investors Syndicate of Canada Limited Clerk's Notice OF FIRST POSTING OF VOTERS' LISTS FOR 1955 Municipality of the Town of Clinton County of Huron NOTICE is hereby given that I have complied with Section 8 of the VOTERS' LIST ACT and I have posted up in my office at Clinton on the 16th day of September, 1955, the list of all persons entitled to vote in said Municip- ality at Municipal Elections,' and that stash list remains there for inspection. And I hereby call upon all voters to take immediate proceedings to have any errors or omissions corrected ac- cording to law, the last day of appeal being the 7th day of October 1955. Dated at Clinton this 16th day of September, 1955. JOHN LIVERMORE` Clerk of the Town of Clinton 38-39-40-b does int Khcik The Signalman "Get it there first; but first, get it right " ' Signals —nerve systerh of the Canadian Army —' a high-speed, accurate combination of radio networks, telephone and •teletype systems and motorcycle despatch riders. The Royal Canadian Corps of Signals, with other corps, offers hundreds of good -paying, life- time careers. The opportunities for advancement, special training and travel are meaty. A visit to your Army Recruiting Station' will soon show, without obligation, how you can fit in. Remember, in the Army you team up with men and leaders you can rely on right down the line. ~ S'`'4"?&" 44.0404 AAVD Yvi'eStL.F THE AIR/ Tobe eligible you must be 77 fo 40 years of ago, skilled tradesmen to 45. When applying bring:; birth certificate or other proof of age, Apply right away. Write, 'phone or visit the Army Recruiting Station nearest your home. No. 13 Personnel Depot, Wallis House, Rideau & Charlotte 8h„ Ottawa, Ont. — Telephone 9-4507 Amty Recruiting Station, 164 Wellington St„ Kingston, Ont. — Telephone 4736 Army Recruiting Station, 90 Richmond St. W., Toronto, Ont. — Teelphone EM. 6.8341 — Local 276. No. St6Ld Dep WlBarracks,Oxford & Elizabeth a., oOnt Wolseley — Local 135 Army Recruiting Station, 230 Main St, W., North Bay, Ont. —Telephone 456 Army Recruiting, Station, 164 King St. East, Hamlltan„Ont. . Telephone 2.8708 _. ..... 004W.0 Gordon Scribbins; beauty kit, the O'Neil sisters, Mrs, Eugene Me Adam; flower holders, K. C. Cooke, Florist, Miss Christine Bridle; . basket groceries, Reg. Ball, G. E. Hall; ladies' shoes, Clifford Lobb Store, Mrs. Ray Wise, RR 3, Clinton; leather ring binder, Aiken Bros„ Mrs. J. B. Levis; $4.20 in milk tickets, Fair - kerne. Dairy, Mrs. A. Hablrirk. Man's shirt, Pickett and Camp- bell, Mrs. Leonard Lamont,'Brus- sels; table cloth 'and serviettes, Irwin's ,Ladies' Wear, Miss Barb- ara Ball; ham, Burton Stanley, Miss Luella Walkinshaw; two chicken, dinners, Ferndale Grill, Miss Ada Adams; doll, ' Ruthie", purchased with cash donations And dressed by Mrs. Gordon Cun- inghame, Mrs. Fred Pepper; min- ute minder, a Toronto firm, Mrs. David Wilson; ottoman, Stratford firm, John Tones; bedroom clock, Simpson's Sears, Mrs. Mae Vand- erburg; ball point pen, a Toronto firm, Elaine Bruinsma, Bruce - field; cotton bedspread, six face cloths, one kitchen .table cloth; a Toronto firm, Miss Reay, Clinton Public Hospital staff; ball point pen W. C. Newcombe, MrS. E, McIntyre, Box of cigars, Clinton Bowling Alley, Tom Riley; gallon wall paint, D. A. Kay and Son, Mrs. A. Shaddick; bug killer and fire extinguisher from Charles Nelson, John VanLoo, Fulton Street, Clin- ton; chicken, C. J. Livermore, Helen Fairservice; picture, John A. Anstett, Mrs, Clarence Cooper; walking doll, McEwan's Station- ery, Mrs. R. Fairseivice, Londes- boro; gallon antifreeze, Clayton Dixon, Mrs. Florence Chowen; man's sport shirt, Epps Sport Shop, Mrs. C. Sturdy, RR 2, Clin- ton; one can cleaner, Howard Brunsdon, Mrs. K. W. Colquhoun, RR 5, Clinton; hair tonic, John Plumtree, Howard Currie. Electric s a n d w i c h toaster, Charles Brown, Mrs. L. E. Mor- ton; box of poultry conditioner, I=1. Charlesworth, K. M. Malkin - son; yellow wool blanket, Sher- lock -Manning Piano Co., Mrs. C. D. Connell- three pairs nylons, Par -Knit Hosiery,* Ltd., Mrs. Bert Irwin; chamois, Wells Auto Elec- tric, Mrs. G. Paterson, Hamilton; TV lamp (black horse), Groves Electric, Mrs. Alice Chapman; electric mixette, Sutter -Perdue, Mrs. Jean Kyle; car rug, Lorne, Brown Motors Ltd., Mrs, R. Roy Fitzsimons, Bayfield; credit slip, $10, Ball -Macaulay Ltd., Mrs.' Clarence Ball, RR 1, Clinton; silver bread tray, Norman Count- er, Mrs. F. Bridle; cedar wool blanket, Sherlock -Manning Piano Co., Mrs. Doreen Odie, Gore Bay (formerly of Clinton). Three pairs of girl's bobby sox, Clinton Hosiery, Miss Lottie Slo- man and Jake Feenstra;. boudoir lamp, Merrill Electric, Mrs. Hend- ricks, RR 3, Clinton; Christmas cake, Bartliff Bros„ Mrs. A. Lynn, Dashwood; two steak dinners, Finger's Resturant, Mrs. H. Ell- wood; electric iron, Clinton Elec- tric, Brenda Kingswell; basket groceries, T. J. Riley, William Gorsman, RR 2, Dashwood; six variety boxes, given by Toronto firms, won by Mrs. 'Jim Mair, Brian Kennedy, Gladys Habkirk, Mrs. Joseph Clegg, Mrs. Jack Scruton, Mrs. G. Paterson, Hamil- ton; basket groceries, W. ,L. John- son and Son, Mrs. Arnold Miller, RR 3, Clinton; 40 bread 'tickets, Bartliff Bros„ Mrs. 'Roy Wheeler; News -Record subscriptions,. Mrs. Lillian McKinnon, Miss Q. Aiken- head, Brucefield; Nest of tables, $44 value, pur- chased with cash donations, Mrs. Ceriel VarrDamme; . pair of table lamps, purchased with cash dona- tions, Pauline Edwards; lawn chair, Ball and Mutch, Mrs. -Tref- fers three pairs stretchy sox, Clinton Hosiery, Shirley Vincent, Mrs, J. A. Addison; credit slip for $10, J. W. Counter, Mrs. John Blake; case of canned peas, a Stratford firm, Mrs. T. G. Scrib- bins; three pounds chocolates, a Brahtford firm, MrS. T. Reece Jenkins; basket groceries, Thomp- son's Food Market, Mrs. Alvin Sharp. Unless another' address follows the name the winner lives in Clin- ton. In Addition to those who gave prizes to use in the penny sale, the following people kindly' don- ated cash: Ashton's Taxi, Dr. 3. A. Addison, Chapman's Barber Shop, Chapman's Beauty Shoppe, Charles House of Beauty, Clinton Cab, Clinton Bargain House, K. W. Colquhoun, G. M. Counter, O. L. Engelstad, Fred Ford, Judge F. Fingland, Gliddon Cleaners, A. G. Grigg and Son, George German, Galbraith Radio and TV, Andrew Busty, Clinton Locker Service, A. M. Knight, H. C. Lawson, Beecher Menzies, W. L. Morlok, Dr. F. M. Newland, Dr. D. B. Pal- mer, S, Riddick and Sons, Ruby and Bill's Snack Bar, Ray's Shoe. Hospital, Stetiman's Store, Stan's Lunch, Sturdy's Farm Machinery, Dr. W A. Oakes, Welders' Service, London, Stafford Foods, Toronto; Ellis -Doh, Ltd., London. SRT FOR POWERFl6 GETAWAY! LONDESBORO:. Mr, and Mrs, A, Fangrad have returned home after . enjoying a trip to Buffalo, Rochester and Letchworth State Park, N. Y., (which is called the Grand Can- yon of the East)' also visiting Niagara Falls and Hamilton, Miss Ola Fangrad has resigned her position in the Mutual Life Assurance Co., Waterloo, and has entered the Nurses' Assistants class in Sunnybrook Hospital, To- ronto. There are 25 in the class. Mr. and MrS. Harry Durnin and Mervyn spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Dave .Millson and boys at Kinburn. There will be no services in the Londesboro United Church next Sunday -owing to the anniversary services at Burns Church, On October 16 there will be an- niversary services* at Londesboro when Rev. Stanley Brenton, Woodstock will be the speaker, Miss Vera Lyon, R.N., London, spent the weekend at her home Gordon Howes, Clinton, visited with Mr, and Mrs, Earl Gaunt: :W/SE & BATEMAN S ,:4roPLUMBER THAT WE CAN 00,. 15' WHAT YOUARE ENTITLED TO! Want To Sell Your Card Use s a News -Record Want Ad w,. e Now art: sale' -for cash or by instalments at all branches of the Royal Bank CANADA SAVINGS ■ OND ...a sure way to . save These bonds never drop in value. They can be cashed for their full face value, plus accrued interest, at any time, at any bank. They bear interest at the rate of 3%% a year. Order your bonds today at our nearest -branch.; •,Yost telephone, if you like. THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA a Breakfast — A Puffy Omelet crowned with melted cheese, Cheese makes sense on break- fast reakfast menus. It's a nutritious food that gets the family off to an energetic start. Lunch --Chili Cheese Rake is a recipe that will make you famous. Pinner — Frosted Cheese Ple Wine -flavored process cheese makes this the most unusual pie you've ever tasted! Dairy Feeds Service Bureau. "41h meal"Snack—Egg-in-the-hole is quick and tasty any time, Soo the glorious variety of Canadian Cheese your grocer is. featuring. Write for the recipes. Address Marie Fraser, Dairy Foods Service Bureau, 409 FIhron Street, Toronto. zbaay ' 8/G 'Ua/ue! DAiRY FARMERS OF CANADA 409 Huron Street, Toronto that vital link in each of your friendships Choose'From the, DI6GEST most DEAUTIFIL and VARIED display of Christmas Cards we have shown in many a year. YOU'LL LIKE THEis/'*' • t� Featured ,.1R� . ai ;, IN THE.., J) • NATIONAL LINE , ,0 7