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Clinton News Record, 1955-10-27, Page 3
PAGrE FOUR' CLINTON NEVIS -RECORD' Weddings Larson-J nston Wansbroug , Toronto, wore aBer only attendant, Miss Irma gown of dlsty silk rose organza (By our Bayfield correspondent)' with matching feather hat. I -ler corsage was of lestra hibberd and sweetheart roses. ' Keith Pruss, L o nd'o n, was groomsman. ng at Shallow Lake urch hail, the bride's mother a teal blue. tricatine .dress wit black velvet hat and black ace sories. The groom'sanother e a brown dress with gold ac ssories. - The marriage of Viola Shirley Colleeni Johnston, 'daughter of Mr.; ',old' Mrs. W, A. Johnston, Owen Sound, and Clarence Edgar Lar- son, son of Mr. 'and Mrs.. R. J. Larson, Bayfield, was solemnized at Shallow - Lake 'United Churn] on Saturday afternoon, October The Rev. J. Richardson offici d The bride wore,a cocktail -length gown of copen blue silk organ' a fashioned with a „portrait colla The widely flared skirt was gath-. On their return from a wedding erect from .a dropped, waistline. trip to southern points, the couple Her matching hat was in a turban will reside in London. For travel- ,. style, and. -she wore a shoulder ling, the bride chose a charcoal cascade of happy day roses and grey suit With matching acres sweetheart rosebuds. sories, FARMERS We are shipping cattle ever . Sa day for United Co-operatives of Ontario and soliot y ago. We will pick them up at your farm. Please HON LOLL 'day ni ht s Seaforth Far s -o eirative H. S. y unt, Manager Phone—Day 9, Evenings 481w 39 -tub Waterloo Cattle Breeding Association "WHERE BETTER BULLS ARE USED" Our volume of business is on the increase. During the first nine months of 1955, we inseminated a total of 37,861 cows—an increase over the saute period of 1954 by 6,711 cows or 21.54%. �` 1,110 people have /become members of the Waterloo Cattle Breeding. Association' during the first nine months of 1955 to bring the total membership to 5,209 as at September' 30th. This, is an increase of 27.1% in nine months.' We provide service from the following breeds: Holstein, Jersey, Ayrshire, Guernsey, Angus; Hereford (Polled and Horned), Beef Shorthorn (Polled end Horned), Dual Purpose Shorthorn. We have had an INCREASE IN VOLUME OF BUSINESS IN EACH BREED. %t you are, not using our services now,.why not do so. The cost is 1 e qii ility of only is high. Life Members $5 $6.00 per cow norl I�rs 4 services ore' given without extra charge if need- ed to obtain conception. For service or more information, phone collect to: CLINTON— 515 Between: 7.30 and -10.00 a.m. on week days 7.30 and 9.30 a.m. on Sundays and Holidays 43-b l umllall's IGA Market Meat .Specials IGA 'Tablerite SIDE BACON FRESH PORK SHOULDERS 21/2 *0 3'>n Ib.' average EVISCERATED FRYERS FRESH — Lean, Meaty `'y SIDE SPA 1'?ERIBS FRESH BUTT PORK R FRESH~ PORK LIVE �t PliG..35 - (pI LB, .29 LB. .43 47 • a•...- a L, . LE. .47 I.B. .1.9 Grocery avers York PEA)1,7 BUTTER .. 10 0:..41 IGgA�11,(1�}{1, STEW [y� BEEF STE tltl l3 OSE„ .25 IGA ROYAL QUEST CHEESE SLICES $ o. !b I'OII, .47 MINCEMEAT 2 -PIE sleet .43 tJABISCO SHREDDED WHEAT ° .15 ANEGLUSI MARSHMALLOWS 3 FOR $1.00 HALLOWE'EN KISSES CELLO PHM. 1 mt..35 Rumbal�'s PHONE 86 CLINTON Warner -Schmidt St. James' Lutheran Church, Mannheim, Ontario, was the scene of a pretty wedding on Satur- day,; 0ot4er 15, when against a' background of white 'mums, Mar- ilyn Lillian, daughter of Mr. ,and Mrs: Edward Schmidt, RR 1, Petersburg, became the bride of Donald Graham Warner, RR 1, Bayfield, son of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Warner, RR 1, Bayfield. Rev. D. J. Glebe, pastor of 'the church, officiated for the double - ring ceremony, The organist was Mrs, Ivan Sararas, New Dundee, who accompanied Mrs. Dalbin Egerdee as she sang, "0 Perfect I{ove" and the "Wedding Prayer Givenin marriage by her father, the bride wore white brocaded satin, fashioned with a sweetheart neckline and long lily point sleeves. The full skirt formed a long train, and a veil of nylon tulle extended over it. Her rapwas of brocaded satin, and she carried a cascade bouquet of red sweetheart roses, white stephanotis- and Ivy. Mrs. Stuart Schmidt, New Dun- dee, was her sisters maid of hon- our, wearing cinnamon 1al'feta with short sleeves, a scoop neck- line, shawl collar and full skirt. She wore matching elbow -length gloves and picture hat. Miss Marie Schmidt, another sister of the bride, as bridesmaid, wore a gown of olive green taffeta styled like that of the maid of honour, with matching hat and gloves and both carried bouquets of yellow 'and bronze 'mums. Miss Ruth Bowman, small niece of the bride wore a gown of gold taffeta, with full skirt, full sleeves and wide sash. The collar came to a V in the front. She carried a basket of yellow and bronze 'mums. All dresses .of the attend- ants were -worn over crinoline. Groomsman was Harold Warn- er, RR 2, Petersburg, brother of the groom and ushers were Lloyd Sowerby, RR 1, Bayfield, cousinof the groom, and Maurice Schmidt, RR 1, Petersburg, brother of the bride. For the dinner and reception in Omalgamated Hall, Kitchener, the bride's mother received in a two- piece dress of navy taffeta with ]ace trim; navy and pink -accessor- ies and a corsage of white baby 'mums and feathered carnations. The Top Sheli,. rq ;i Fe (Ely BENJAMIN. IgLnVI9RIDGE) Curious tourists who, happened cause/it doesn't seem to me that to be in the district -Were disap= pointed when they ,looked iri on the international tuna' -fishing tournament ';at Wedgeport, .N,S,, this year. From those 'special waters Mrs. Anne Crowniinshield of `Florida had caught an 882 - pound tuna,' the largest for a wo- man anywhere in the world:' It was there also that Ernest Heni- irigway and Zane Grey had in other years landed many giants of the deep. ' But this year only two small fish were weighed in, In` spite of this, though, Sold- ier's Rip and other favorite angling spots" along the southwest Scotian' coast were teeming with tuna. Commerciale fishermen _had" no trouble catching them with net and harpoon, But sportsmen who were competing for the Sharp trophy couldn't cope with the sharks. These viciotis pirates hung aroundh t e anglers' boats, waiting los a.strike; and when a hooked tuna was occupied with the fish- erman the sharks would strip the flesh front its bones. This dis- qualified the contestant, because a rule of the sport is that the tuna must be brought to gaff un- scathed. Anyone who had read Heming- way's "The Old Man and the Sea" can understand what a challenge this can be. * s ,. This is all very interesting be - The bridegroom's mother - wore navy taffeta with black and white accessories and a corsage of white baby 'mums and feathered earna- tions: A wedding trip to the United States was planned by the young couple, and the bride wore e- box. style suit of charcoal grey with a red velvet fleck, for travelling. Her hat and gloves were red, and shoes and purse were black. Upbn their return they plan to live at RR 1, Bayfield. Don't fish " for %he answer... buy OOP bat•arenf ;oaks awl dae.o•raf,m J. W. Counter Builders' Supplies PHONE 120 CLINTON, ONT. the sea arotvtd the Maritimes was so attractive to denizens from warmer water a quarter-century, ago, I remember that -the cold storage plant on the Pacific at' Prince Rupert used to keep a frigid' shark around as A.n oddity; but the North Atlantic is more akin to 'creatures that do not mind 'a few. icebergs in their bath. This summer, for instance, 'two giant tropical turtles -weighing 600 pounds—were caught ,in Hali- fax harbour, and along the coast there had never been such a.col- lection of flying fish -and queer looking things -brought up in nets familiar only to hake and cod and herring. ' The oceanographers have var- ious interpretations of this migrat- ory trend, but they all agree that the north Atlantic is much warm er than it used to be. Up to the time of this writing Nova Scotia had missed d the fall. hurricanes. Lobster: traps were intact, and the people along the rocky shores of Chester, Tancook, Hubbards and Mahone Bay were hoping they would escape this year. It was a wonderful sum- mer. The sea was even warm,en. ough to swim in, and old salts, who anchored their sailing ships in these inlets in the days before the trawlers came, were prone to blame the warmer waters on sun spots and atomic bombs. Nova Scotia's south shore has a strong pull on the imaginations and sentiments of its visitors. Populated two centuries ago by German and Dutch immigrants, the shore counties have retained their peerless hospitality and their inviting cuisine of sauer kraut and pickled fish, of scrumptious escal- lops and chowders, But even more fascinating is the degree to which these people, mostly fisher folk, have retained their idioms of speech, a dialect of their own, though there has been no apprec- iable influx of outside immigrants since the original settlement, 4 5 * I was in Lunenburg for the fisheries exhibition., and a charm- ing swan song it was to an ele- gant summer spent -among those unforgettb"ble people. Capt. Angus Walters, former skipper of the Bluenose, took time out from his dairy work to watch the dory races in the harbour, and for me tlic "Natural History of Marine Life" had new meaning, as I view - ea the sea creatures, resting- in their natural form, on shredded ice. Some of the old fishermen were themselves awed at the strange specimens on display and drew some relationship between these and the fact that they couldn't get a good mess of manic - ere' any more. There was a salt water sturg- eon, reclining on an ice bank. (It is. wonderful what they can do with deep freeze these days.) It was not as big as the 2,000 - pounders the. Russians catch, but it was more 'than a man could lift. Half fish and half meat, the sturgeon is favored as a food in many places. Its roe is the source of caviar, and the- lining of its bladder is made into isinglass. While old salts sat knitting nets THURSDAY, OCrOBEE, '21, 195P ., and whittling nearby, dreaming 'Oscar Wilde' character, you will remember, whose face reflected: Gray's terrible sins, o 'gourmet --and my experience with B,C. salmon and Winnipeg goldeye has made me one—was also ;'pleased that .Lunenburg showed oysters, scallops, lobsters, Plains and qua -'i augs to best ad- vantage, There was some duise' on show as well, and of course the common' place halite;"'solea, flounders- and haddock. A strange and intriguing thing, the sea. perhaps of the. day •pf sails, before the trawlers came, when the -coves were populated by smugglers and rum-runners—as well as schoon- ers --we viewed many wonders of the sea. There were cat fish and dog fish, flying fishy ,swordfish; rudder' fish, "rat tails, monk fish, squid, Spicier crab, star fish, and laughing Jacks, all with literal names. For one whose early _fishing F ex- ploits were concerned with pin lines' and minnows, it was en- trancing to be close enough to a shark to tweak its ,snout,- or to. peife a finger into the spongy back of a porpoise. The ugliest of all these fish is the sculpin, a scaleless type quite common—as ugly things often are — in the North Atlantic. Its'face remind-' ed me a bit of Dorian Gray, the Come to the } THE 2 01(ii H L • . LtG RICU LTU RAI WINTER. FAIR. ', FRI. NOV. Iltb TO SAT. NOV. 19 • Champion Livestock! • Queen's Guineas Coy • Cattle ' ctions! • Colou 'f Flower :Coo' g emo • Dos ns, f of Send cheque or money order, with self-addressed envelope to: ROYAL COL etition i ow! ration! features! Ai- H • RSE SHOW .. pings $3.04-1i$2.00 Mimeos, Weds. and Frls.. $1.00 aturdays $1.50 ROYAL AGRICULTURAL WINTER FAIR, ROORONYAL TO. COLISEUM, , T Generar Admission: 50¢ ISEUM toronto as near as your telephone A C M i` LETS 711SE VICE '5( WESTE' ^.r ©t' $Ahad Cul RAYE B. P, TEBSON, !'rust Officer Hensel', i' Curio, Phone 51 - ar state P',nning and Wills cal ate Services neat Management and Advisory 0 • 1.'s Guaranteed Investments • 2 ;,% en savings -deposits may bo mailed Or Contact Any Office OJ ' ARANTY TRUST COMPANY OF CANADA Toronto • Montreal • Ottawa • Windsor Niagara Falls • Sudbury • Sault Ste. Mario Calgary • Vancouver =Easier 080 ever to dm re... snd own. NEW 1956 o S O R M I Your first glance tells you this is your kind of car! See how new' Flight Sweep From the low, broad hood to the smoothly up- swept line of rear fenders, it introduces. new styling brings new beauty to the Forward Look. y When you take the wheel, driving becomes to the Forward Look luxuriously automatic with revolutionary new push- button gear selection. And there's a new. V-8 engine for out -of -this -world performance. CHRYSLER WINDSOR 4.000R SEDAN When you get your hands on this great new Chrysler Windsor, you won't want to give it up. Nor need you! For it's a new kind of "surprise car" in price, as well as in luxury. See and drive. it soon Manufactured in Canadg by Chrysler Corporation of .Canada, Limited Don't miss the first showing of this great new car! Youi Chrysler -Plymouth -Fargo dealer will be pleased to demonstrate it to you Bowl PHONE 465 CLINTON