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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1955-12-01, Page 1131iCRSP,Or, PEGE1ViBER oftball Team. Is• • Eeted' At Gadericli Misses Joanne Castle and Kay ,S'irarp were honoured. in :Gode- 'lich with .other members"of the •poderieh softball team; to a com- p' ary pique:, Their par,_swamped Watford :here last' F efts, ' 1VIr. and Mrs, S. EI: 'Castle' dal' nigiit16 1 �n& dripped an 8 rind Mr. and : Mrs. Alvin sharpI decision to'Mitchell Legionair attended the' event. ' 1n.Mltehell on Monday night, Colts Whip Meet St.: filar' Clinton Colts split their games during the past week. They ri- -4 es This brings the Colts' standing to two wins and the same number of los- ses in the WOAA Big -8 Inter- mediate group, with the next home' game here ';Friday night against St. Marys, Winners of the Western Ontario Athletic Association intermediate girls' championship and also of the Ontario Amateur Softball As-. •aociation intermediate girls' chs nar piotiship, the team was feted by the 'townspeople • of Goderich, .:and presented with purple and white wool jackets; ' WOAA and DASA crests, as well -as •With' :musical clocks, chocolates and Watford proved no match for the youthful Clinton club in, the first home` game of the season, as the Colts • showedterrific scoring power to the delight of those in attendance. Ken Lee led the way n a with four goals and two ,assists, framed picture of the team, , followed, closely .by Don., Strong Coach of the champions it Guy Envrlerson, and'Mac MadDoriald is ..manager of the team. 'ifSBPPEN TURKEY SHOOT 'SATURDAY, ATUJRDAY, DECEMBER 3 A monster turkey shoot will he held by the Kippen Gun Club this Saturday, commencing at 12.30 o'clock sharp. ' There 'Will he two 25 -bird, • 16 yard events, and two 25 -bird ,handicap events, as 'well :AS "missand out", "Pellets-in- 'the-paper" Pellets rn'the-paper" and "Target Shooting "with .22 rifle;" Readline! Award Win haan. Driverg 540,0`00 GODERICH, Nov. 15/55—A settlement of $40,000 and costs was awarded Charles. Jones .of Wingham in a Supreme Court session which opened here yesterday. The 'action was against J. Wilson Brown, of St. Marys, who, it was learned 'by the court, was driving a car on 'highway '8 when in head-on collision with a car driven by . Jones, 'WOULD YOUR CAR INSURANCE COVER SUCH A SETTLEMENT? SIf it Wouldn't, better see W. V. ROY Res. 324J .— Bus. 557 SCO -OPERATORS INSURANCE ASSOCIATION 4S -b four goals and one assist and Murray Colquhoun three goals and three assists. The team Was backed by steady goaltending of Bill German who had a relatively easy evening's work. The lone Watford goal came off the stick of J. Kelly, 'Clinton opened the scoring at the 4.23 mark and before the mid- point of the first period they had run the score up to 5-0. They in- creased their lead to 8-0 at the Enid of the second period and ad- ded two more in the third before Kelly found the range for Wat- ford. Best goals of the night were scored by Don Strong, in the third period on two short breakaways jnst 12 seconds apart. Clinton: goal, Bill German; de - 1/111111 V I11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 HARRY WILLIAMS' GOVT GIVE UP/WD GRUMBLE 1 NO HEAT! WHAMS THE. USE?" NO- • Orn rnnoemnnKS.,K. HARRY W IT LIAMS I;UECOIL��. MQTOR Qui s' 'GASOLINE ;LUBRl(4$ 526J NOM III NIMBI 1111➢IIllllllllllllllllilllllllllllllllllllllllllilllllll!!IIIIi11IIluIIIIIIIIRPIIIu 'fence, Dan Colquhoun, Malt -Ed- gar; centre, John Hartley; wings, Bob Garon, Don Strong; subs, Jack Carter, Torn. Colquhoun; Ken' Lee, Murray Colquhoun, Bill Han- ly, Jerry Holmes, Hugh Coign - holm, Bob McDonald.: Watford: goal, Ridoc; defence, C. Wilton, . McMaster; centre, S. Kelly; wings •N. Wilson, G. Rol - brook; „subs,. `Wolsey,'' Latour, Dud- ley,' Huekwith Cook, Paul Dol - bear, Reg. Doobear, Jim Tomlin- son, Art Woodcock, sub -goal. Ibirst Period 1—Clinton, Lee, 4.23; 2 -Clin- ton, Hartley (Strong, Garon) 5.25; 3 -Clinton, Hanly, 5.44; -4—Clin- ton, Strong, 8.50; 5—Clinton, H. Colquhoun (McDonald) 9.45; 6— Clinton, M. Colquhoun (Lee) 14.45. Penalties: 'I', Colquhoun, Jack Carter, •P. Dolbear. Second Period 7 -Clinton, Strong ' (Hartley, Garan) 1.33; 8—Clinton, Lee (M. Colquhoun) 8.50. Penalties: none, Third Period 9—Clinton, M. Colquhoun, 2.08; 14—CIinton, Lee (M. Colqulioun, Holmes) 3.30; 11—Clinton, Strong, 555; 12 --Clinton, Strong, • 6.07; 13—Watford, J. Kelly (N. Wilson) 7.15;' 14—Clinton, Garon (Strong) 7.45; 15—Clinton, Lee (M. Colqu- houn) 14.20; 16—Clinton, M. Col- e (Lee) 19,11. Penalties: Edgar, C. Wilson. Mitchell 7—Clinton 4 'The strong Mitchell Legionaires, reinforced by 'imports and waived players, were forced to battle all the way for a 7-4 win ,over the determined Colts Monday night. Leading 5-4 at the end of the second the home team launched a third period drive that netted them two goals while they held the Colts scoreless. Murray Col- quhoun led his team.. with • two goals, single tallies going to Ken Lee and Don Strong. Lawn Bowlers At Euchre Party The Clinton Lawn. )3kwling Club held a very successful euchre party at Hotel Clinton last Friday evening. Winners of prizes were: ladies' first, Mrs. Derwin Carter; ladies' consolation, Mrs. P. Town; men's first, John Sutter; men's consolation, Derwin Carter; lone hands, John Sutter; travelling prize, P. Town. Glen and Frank Cook kindly donated the use of their dining room and kitchen for the evening which was very much appreciat- ed. The next party will take place some time in January. TheBritishBritish North America Act, of 1867, and its amendments, makes each of Canada's provinces sovereign in its awn sphere. m imazeN'- iaizzziyt azzm.'rGt:tetziemmiaeG'iemi ie acne cclamicaiizmaantalatet;iemi i3+osuaai a' 3 iG micensissk iG'!WE T:$;.1 H 'NDURE HIST C'liRVI'M AS' ���.��<Y'�'� .'�'• "S�'.".8."�':;$e.'�c., .',.T�k�r3�f,.sl��i.�m,�:;c�.�s.�:,;...u..unv,��>vicea��rum.�.�.Z.n;.,...,. 6 -co ea6&,6 Mat •• •• • • OE SAFE! • • • • • ,77,14+ ,eat V $O.g$C.oOv-54 4e�0$FO2�OoQd . o ao oo� �Op aaaracbp o0O0 0 o°'°'oQ voo �000v Oho OvoQ��o ao O � . 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Phone 147 Sutter—Perdue In Your FRIGIDAIRE Dealer d6 NTPCZN, NEWS-REC7OHO VARNA WA 1Vleettng t iss Margaret McClymont, To- ronto, spent the weekend at the home hrents: •'lt anye1 fromerpahere-.attended' the Federation of Agriculture banquet which was held in Zurich Thurs- day evening last, The, November meeting of the Woman's Association was held in the church on Wednesday after- noon, November 23 with 20 ladies present, ',The president, Mrs. Robert Tay- lor presided., Mrs. Harold Dawson read the Scripture lesson. The de- dotional leaflet was taken by Mrs, Murvin Johnston, Mrs, Louis Tay- icr,,;Mrs. John-Aldington and Mrs. Lee. McConnell: Mrs. Gladys Cole- man gave a piano solo and Mrs.. Gordon Johnston gave a reading. The ' treasurer Miss Rachel Johnston reported $626.88 ` on hand; $15 was voted toward the Polio Victims' Fund. Roll call for next month will be answered with some suggestions on "how you want tospend the money we made this year". Mrs. Louis Taylor' gave a fine report on the WA convention held at Goderich in Ocober. Rev, T. J. Pitt conducted the election 'af officers which resulted as follows; president, Mrs. Robert Taylor; first vice-president (sales committee), Mrs- Orrin Dowson; second vice-president (entertain ment), Mrs. Percy Johnston and Mrs. William McAsh; third vice- pr.esident (bazaar committee), Mrs, Melvin Webster and Mrs. Wilfred 'Cuter; fourth vice-presi- dent (supper committee), Mrs. Lee McConnell. Secretary, Mrs, Murvin Johnston; treasurer, Miss Rachel Johnston; organist, Mrs. George Stephenson; assistants, Mrs. Ralph Stephenson and Mrs. Lyle Hill; cards, Mrs. A..Mustard, Mrs. Harvey Boyce and Mrs. Fred McClymont; lunch committee, Mrs. John McAsh and Mrs. George Reid, Rally Day A special Rally Day service was held in the United Church last Sunday with the pastor, Rev. T. J. Pitt in charge. A junior choir of 20 voices sang and •led the con- gregational singing. PORTER'S HILL Correspondent MRS. DON iiuli•IHS Phone Clinton 797 J 8 Sunday School The Sunday School of Grace Church is planning to hold the Christmas Concert an Saturday, December 10. Everyone is cord- lally invited, Commurdty Club The Porter's Hill Community Club held it's regul'adrrneeting on Wednesday afternoon at the home of Miss Peter Harrison, The meeting in the Charge of the pres- ident, opened with repeating the Lord's Prayer, It was decided to dispense with the December meet- ing. A crib quilt was quilted during the afternoon and the meeting closed by repeating the Mizpah Benediction in unison.Lunch was served by the hostess, 0 Canada's southernmost Eskimo settlement is on Cape Hope Island in James Bay. OIL BURNER SPECIALS Farm' Federation Names Executive Hears From Top Farm, Leaders ;(Continued fromPageOne) Montgomery,.' `:'a calfhood vaccina- tion program` in the Townships of Nay, Usborne and McKillop,. If on the program for.,, a period . of Artie there are certain: rights and privileges which the couhty can get, and those three- townships will, hold us, up from getting them)' - Other speakers included Tom Pryde, MLA for Huron; L. ' E. Cardiff, MP for Huron; and rep- resentatives of Middlesex, Bruce and. Grey Counties; Warden Earl Campbell;, • Bob Carbert, farm :commentat- or on CKNX radio and TV, ex- pressed appreciation for a 'resolu- tion ,thanking press, radio and TV for their co-operation, H. G. Webster, Woodstock, speaking for the 'Mitchell Con- centrated Milk Producers Associa- tion, spoke of, the surplusset prob- lem . in ,the powdered milk in- dustry. Since July, he said, due to greater merchandising efforts, prices have been raised 25 cents per hundred to the producers. However imports, which may be 'necessary to fill the demand for the product may be sold here for 2y/ cents per pound less than our own product, Industry is protected' by tariffs - arid unemployment insurance. Funds for unemployment insur- ance for labour are paid by gen- eral taxes at the rate of $2 per person in Canada. The gold in- dustry is supported by Canadian people at the rate of $1 per capita. In the face of these support prices, the 2.9 cents per capita for sup- port which the dairy industry re- ceives seems little enough when our contribution to the country is considered, .Mitchell is drafting a resolution asking for protection of our milk powder industry. One cent per pound tariff is presently being col- lected for milk powder imports; we are going to ask for 3% cents per pound, protection so that we can afford to keep our price up to 15 cents per pound. He requested support of Mit- chell's resolution by • the Huron Federation, This was given by the meeting. Mia Webster is with public relations•and field service, with the Ontario Milk Producers Association, Clarence Milligan, Napanee, a past president of the Ontario Fed- eration, was guest speaker for the afternoon. Canadianfarmers are doing "too good a job of raising food. There HOLMESVILLE • Jack Xeo has returned to his home from London, where he was a patient in Victoria Hospital, Miss Rita Cudinore, London, spent the weekend at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Cudmore. Mrs. James Harrison is visiting at the homes of her sons, Peter and Wilmer Harrison, in Goderich Township, Mr. and Mrs. Albert Taylor, Kenneth, Dorothy and Roy, St. Thomas, were guests on Sunday of Mr. and Mrs. Ninian Heard, Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Brown, Detroit, and Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lawson and Lynn, London, were weekend guests of Mr. and Mrs, D. E. Gliddon. The sympathy of the community is extended to the family of the late Frank Cudmore who passed away at his home on Friday, No- vember 25. Of Canadians' $18.1 billion per- sonal income last year, more than one-third went for tax payments. is bxaa)tch.'sunplof aus n lture. Practically every gricu There ' rs criticism of the west •far getting :such a good price for their grain, but it is to our ad- vantage if their strong, marketing agency continues to keep prices at the present level. Without strong wheat prices the Western Canada farmers will ;:go 'into ` pork and beef, and this would lower live- stock prices here. It is important, Mr. Milligan stated, that the dairy groups stick together and work co-operatively. Speaking of a gathering in Eng- land which he attended, Mr.• Milli- gan'said there were a new group of young men in charge of import- ing and it was important that Canadians do ' a greater job of advertising their product. "Our costs of production ma- chinery, ,,etc., is being set for us. We must set our price comparable to what other workers are getting. We have a strong Federation to work for us, we must find a way to educate and instruct all farm- ers in what the Federation has done. We have to get the story back to the individual farmer," he went on, -`For that purpose we have set up a public relations 'department with a fulitime man in charge. "I believe our surplus hi all products is so small that they don't amount to very much. The increase in population has taken care of some of it. We would be PAGE : FaLEVEN in very bad situation if there were. no surpluses, "f don't believe there is any, problem of ever having to import foods to feed our nation, The possibilities of agriculture are endless, -,I wonder rfitisn'tCour- age' that we need, togo ahead with these things." Mrs. Tait ,Clark Goderich, re- ported for the women's branch of the Federation. • A resolution was -passed, kr to ask the Ontario Federation of Agricul- ture .to ask the Health of Anals Branch, D'epartnlenvt 01 Agrieu3-, tune, to press for co mpuisory brucellosis vaccination for heifer, calves from six to nine months conning in from Western Canada, before they arrive, ERVICE t ECURITY AFETY AVINGS Thousands are Joining the NATIONAL AUTOMOBILE LEAGUE OF CANADA Local Representative Jack A. Webb Tel. 777,T CLINTON ONTAJHO 40-46-b r I E C;aly e.rt SPORTS 001:11MR 4,Seffgedt?e4 +fit Not long ago, the gene'rallprecognised wrestling champion, Lon Thesz of St; Lords, flung a challenge at world'lreavyweight box- ing champion, Rocky Marcityro, to meet film irr,a mixed match, wrestler'vs.'boxer, each -using his own form of mayhem. Of course, Marciano ignored the challenge,- and a symposium of opinion indicated this was the smart thing for him to do. But the challenge revives an old debate: "Can a boxer beat a wrestler under mixed rules?" Phony efforts to test eroayseerhtmAnd tthiswthas always believed a fighter would have no chance against a wrestler in such an encounter. The wrestler would dive-bomb the boxer and bring him to the floor before the fighter could strike a blow, Once on the canvas, boxing would be nullified and the bout would become a mere wrestling match, A hammerloek or a toe- hold would put the boxer quickly out of commission: The boxer's only ,eluuroo would be to disable the wrestler before his opponent could get hinr on the canvas. The chances are that this, cannot be done. If you ever saw a capable wrestler employ the "kip" to bring an opponent to the canvas and then swarm over him, you'd get the Mea. Even Jack Dempsey, lightning puncher in his prime, wouldn't have had much chance with a wrestling flash like Joe Stecher, champion matman of the same era. Or even against a good middleweight. Wrestling is a far better defensive weapon against attacks by unarmed thugs than boxing. A few years ago news columns carried a story, of how a wrestler was waylaid by two would•be holdup men. He subdued both simultan- eously, one with a scissors, the other with a hammerlock. - Wrestling in its more lethal forms, including Judo, with its .deadly punches, was taught soldiers likely to engage in close combat during the war, being considered more useful ,for such purposes than boxing. Your comments and wppedtons for Mb cofumn wlU be •einem by Elmer fa at:son, cfo Calved Houle, 431 Yong° St, Toranf,. Calvert DISTILLERS LIMITED AMHLRSTAURO, ONTARIO til+ .r .. almn,ax DraiValt7DRVIci ele tGW.a leleleiDeateld' iazaleelelanialle.Kftf. .t3 islerng, CHECK OUR ple4taseor*: • 'hitv� 'vVi-th GIVE HIM A WHITE SHIRT Arrow White is ,Always Right Bram 3.95 up ft. While They Last OIL BURNERS Reg: Price Special $ 84.95 •....,. $ 65.00 119.50 • 89.95 185:00 149.00- One Floor Furnace $329.00 $249.00 Clinton Electric Shop — D, W. Cornish Your WESTINGHOTJSE Dealer I'7HONE 479 — CLINTON e "You con be sure if it's Westinghouse"% See our. TIE Selection 'Hundreds To Choose From $1.00 to $2.00. SOCKS - - PYJAMAS SWEATERS. - - HATS JEWELLERY - BELTS CrIFT BOXES JACKETS - - SCARVES GLOVES - - ROBES LUGGAGE -. Etc, USE OUR LAY -AWAY PLAN 'ickett & Campbell Ltd. Arrow Shirts Stetson Hats Phone 25 . Main Corner 600400monotometesavz cr i Avvoltaismil Clinton