HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1951-04-12, Page 9-'1,HURSDAY, APRIL 12, 1951
4/16--•••••
CLINTONNEWS-RECORD
PAGE NINE
RCAF Station and Adastral Park New.
Dogs Again...
LOUD AND STRIDENT are the wails arising from those
residents of Adastral Park who are not in favor of the latest
s litvg Laid) down ,by the Council. In an effort to control
'the rising number of Man's Best Friends which are running
rampant, owners have been asked to confine or tie their
pets—and to hear the groans one would think they were
being forced to contribute ,half their salary to the Party
with the cost of living index hovering somewhere around
e8o1,5r/z.
This •ufringeni!ent of canine liberty is no more than is
.required in any community, but without the additional ex-
pense of licensing. It is required for more reasons than
,:just plain nastiness or cussedness. More than one resident
has complained of broken milk bottles and upturned garbage
mans, those in the Parker area being particularly vulnerable
not having furnaces in what to burn garbage or milk boxes.
for this necessary commodity. With Spring at hand, land-
scaping will shortly be in progress. Some seeded arias are
already at the mercy of the bone -hoarding packs, and shrubs,
small trees and sodded or seeded portions can expect much
the same treatment. Many parents prefer to educate their
'children along certain eines in their own manner. To judge
-ley the actions of many household pets, the owners couldn't
.care less or believe this subject should be treated as a
public display. Furthermore, the addition of clogs to Com-
manding Officers' parades never has been conducive to
:good discipline.
More drastic measures than ordered have been sug-
gested; one resident is in favor of a 50 -position gallows;
• another believes that the stat vi egg Europeans might benefit
by the addition of canned Shound tp theie diet. But judg-
ing by the reactions of most owners, these steps will never
be necessary; they are taking the ruling in good part and
co-operating fully. After all, the committee is interested
in ridding the community only of those apparently uncared-
for and unwanted strays that are roaming the area from
:Main Gabe to Victoria Blvd,
This superb tea guarantees
the flavour of every cup
"SALAD
First thing to do in Detroit is check
in at Hotel Tuller! You'll enjoy
every minute. Newly modernized.
Beautifully decorated. Within
walking distance of all downtown
stores,titeatres and business activ-
ities ... yet, you enjoy the ever-
green atmosphere of Grand Circus
Park ... The Tuller Coffee Shop or
Cafeteria for excellent food
modestly priced.
COCKTAIL LOUNGE
ONE OF DETROIT'S FINEST
800 ROOMS $�
WITH BATH FROM
Rote!'ulle
Harry E. Paulsen, Gell Mgr
DETROIT'S
"FIRST"
ICONVENIENCE •
j' COMFORT •
QUALITY
RCAF PERSONALS
S/L and lyres. A. H. Tinker
spent the weekend in Detroit,
Mich.
F/S G. II, Jackson spent the
weekend with his mother in
Victoria, B.C.
Mrs. White, 48 Winnipeg Rd.,
has been appointed the new Girl
Guide Captain.
Sgt. Burtwelf, Aylmer, visited
this weekend With Sgt. and Mrs.
Boyd and family,
Cpl.. and Mrs. V. A. Johnston.
and family spent the weekend
with friends in St. Thomas.
Bonnie Burns returned home
from a short visit. with her grand-
mother and aunt in Toronto.
F/S L. VT. Admits spent the
weekend as guests of Wele and
Mrs. W, Stewart, Vancouver, B.C.
F/1:, W. M. Gannon attended a
reunion of 407 (Demon) Squad-
ron in. Tgyonto on Saturday
evening.
Mrs. N. Wade held a party for
her daughter, Denise, and Kath-
leen Norris on the occasion of
their birthdays. e
Mr, and Mrs. H. Laughlin, Camp
Borden, were visiotrs of F/S and
Mrs, E. Hetcih, of 31 Regina Rd,,
for a few days,
Mr. -and Mrs. Scrutan. and Mrs.
Cook, Goderich, were Thursday
visitors of Sgt. end Mrs. T. La-
mont, 27 Regina Rd.
Danny Cooper, son of Cpl. end-
Mrs.
ndMrs. G. C. Cooper, celebrated his
first birthday on Saturday, April
7, attended by neighbouring
children,
The Victoria Boulevard Bridge,
Club was held at the home of
Mrs. G, Grant. Hostesses for the
evening were Mrs. H. Norris and
Mrs. G. Grant.
Billie Miller, son of W/C and
Mrs. B. G. Miller, enjoyed his
seventh birthday with several of
his boy friends at a party in his
home on Saturday.
F/L and Mrs, W, M. Garton
with their children, Ann end
Maris, spent last weekend in
Orangeville as guests of Mr. and
Mrs. G, H. Bryan.
Maxine Munro .held a delight-
ful party at her home to cele-
brate her ninth birthday. Games
and refreshments were enjoyed
by her young friends.
W/C and Mrs. B. G. Miller
and S/L and Mrs. G. Bury at-
tended a formal dance Saturday
evening in the Officers' Mess,
RCAF Station, Centralia.
Guests on Sunday at the home
of LAC and Mrs. B. T. Bushell
included Mr. end Ms. Walter
Bieckles and family, Lucknow,
Mr. and Mrs. Russell Bushell end
family and Mrs. Gertrude Bushell,
Kinlough.
0
Four -Footed Recruits
Come From USAF
The RCAF has enlisted five
four -footed recruits. The huskie
dogs have been officially tram-
ferred from the USAF to the
RCAF. The one -year-old dogs
were flown from Goose Bay, Lab-
rador, to Ottawa where they were
handed over to F/O R. .1. (Reg.)
Goodey, official commanding the
RCAF's school of survival at Ed-
monton, Alta., which conducts its
courses at Fort Nelson, B.C. and
Cambridge Bay, in the Arctic.
The dogs will be used by the
school of survival as pack dogs
in the summer and sled dogs in
the winter, In addition they will
be trained to work with ground
search parties.
The four -footed recruits will be -
flown from Edmonton to Fort
Nelson, B.C., their new base.
Feeding the dogs on the journey
from Goose Bay to Fort Nelson
will keep F/O Goodey busy as
a meal for each dog is four cans
of dog food. The contents of
each tin are devoured before the
next one can be emptied,
Editor:
F/S A. M. MACKENZIE
Assistant
Station PRO
No.
23
RCAF Graduates RO Course No. 21
(By F/O B. C. Osborn,
Station PRO) , •
Group Captain G. A. Hiltz,' AFC,
Group Commander, Reserve
:Group. Toronto, presented wings
and addressed seven proud new
RCAF officers on'Ftnidiay, March
6..
After one year of intensive
training, these Flight Cadets have.
won their commissions and earn-
ed the coveted wings of the Radio
Officer. Lt is a distinction of this
course to have each graduate a
previous member of en allied
ground trade in theAir Force.
F/C J. Puller, Beausejour,
Man., was nee Honour Scroll
winner, topping ;this course and
passing with. credit. He saw ser-
vice as en Air Gunner during
World W
The reviewing officer, G/C G.
A. ' Hiltz, enlisted . in the Air
Force in 1938, served in the
braining field from the outbreak
of war until 1943 when he went
overseas to command 410 Night
Fighter Mosquito Squadron. Since
1945 he has commanded stations.
at. Drage svilile, Borden and
Greenwood, N.S., as well es serv-
ing in various staff positions at
AFHQ Prior to his present post,
G/C Hiltz was on the directing
staff at Air Force College, To-
ronto.
List of graduates is as follows:
F/IC N. Hetherington, Brandon,
Man.; F/C G. MacKay, Cran-
brook, B.C.; F/C E Myatt Ver-
RCAF Photo Clinton
dun, Que.; F/C R. Nickerson,
Clarks Harbour, N:S.; F/C F.
Pearson, Toronto; FIC J. Puffin',
Beausejour, Man.; F/C L. Reed,
London, Eng.
Following the graduation ex-
ercises, the newly -commissioned
officers, with guests, were enter-
tained in the Officers' , Mess. las
the evening, a formal dunce was
held, completing the activities of
a busy and ampoetanit day in
these young men's lives
MUSIC FESTIVAL
DRAWS DISTRICT
ENTRIES GALORE
The, tenth annual Huron County
Music Festival is scheduled to be
held in North St. United Church,
Goderich, from Monday, April 16,
to Thursday, April 19, with a
closing concert on . Friday even-
ing April 20, by prize winners
who are selected by the com-
mittee.
Clinton and RCAF Public
Schools will be taking part with
several grades participating, as
well as special numbers as trios,
etc. The RCAF Male Chorus also
will contest, and the Collegiate
Girls' Chorus, Male Chorus, small
vocal ensemble, end mixed chorus.
A very large group of children
and adults will be participating
also, and these from this district,
are 'to include: Franklin Yeo,
Christine 'Bridle, Alan Cochrane,
Helen Foster, Lynne Shipley,
Kathleen Rath well, Carol Wee
Hams, Mary E. Levis, Eleanor
Yeo, Jimmie MacDonald, Nancy
Newton, Kenneth Currie, Doug-
las Norman, Many Livermore,
Corson Foster, Sherry Cochrane,
Ruth Crozier, Jane Batkin, Nancy
Powell, Sandra Williams.
Stephen Brown, Marjorie Cur-
rie, Judy Ogston, Edith Jones,
Grace Harris, Marjorie Webster,
Ruth 'Clarke, Mavis Steepe, Doris
Cooper, Beverley Bores, Marlene
Jervis, Catharine Powell, Doris
Grierson, Larry Powell, Paul Mc-
Cool, William Shaddick, Phyllis
Lobb, Donald Grime, John Shad -
dick, Ruth Merrill, John Camp-
bell, Kenneth Campbell, Budd
Boyes, Larry Bertrand, Roger
Cummings, Bobby Marshall, Susan
Corless, Connie MacDonald, Pat-
ricia Vareleau, Hilda Ramsay;
Wendy Carpenter, Roberta Mac-
Kenzie, Frank MacDonald, Billy
Trick, John Sharp, Larry Dew,
Barry Powell, Billy Carpenter,
Ann Edwards, Janet Mills, Mar-
ilyn Miller, Donna Sharp, Bob
Read, Billy Murray, Merle Re-
fausse, Marion Grossman, Faye
Aikenhead, Gwen Griffiths, Diane
Miller, F a y Foster, Douglas
Fleischauer;
Richard Snell, Jane McCool,
Ile Grigg, Ruth. Glazier, Jayne
Mary Snell, Bert Boyes, and Ray
Gibbon.
0
GARBAGE COLLECTION
Effective immediately, the
garbage pick-up in Adastral
Park area will be twice week
ly, on Wednesday and Satur-
day, until further notice.
"First" Baby Reported
Born on Aircraft
The statement in the press re-
cently that the "first" baby had
been born aboard an RCAF air-
craft, really started something,
Phone calls followed by investi-
gation showed that there had
been, at least three previous cases
of te stork beating an RCAF
plane,
The earliest reported case took
place March 29, 1931, on a mercy
flight to•The'Pas, Manitoba, from
a point 214 miles north of that
northern Manitoba town. The
prospective mother had been pick-
ed up by the RCAF aircraft to
be rushed to hospital but the
baby was born before the air-
craft touched down at The Pas.
On that trip no nurse was carried
and the crew had to assist as
best they could. The crewman
Rf the plane, F/O L. A. Bailey
is now stationed at Hamilton.
0
The McKee Trans -Canada Tro-
phy award for 1946 went to Group
Captain Z. L. Leigh, RCAF.
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G. L. FALCONER
AGAIN HEADS
FISH AND GAME
George L. Falconer, Brucefield,
was re-elected president of Hurn
"ish and Genie Conservation
Club at the April meeting in the
Board Room, Ontario Agricultural
Office.
Other officers are: first vice-
president, C. J. Livermore; sec-
ond vice-president, Mitcheal .Mc-
Adam; treasurer, C. J. Livermore;
secretary, Glenn Lockhart; assist-
ant secretary, Joseph Murphy.
Directors named for a three-
year term were C. J. Livermore,
William E. Jervis and Glenn
Lockhart; for a two -yeas' period,
George i.. Falconer, Mitchell Mc-
Adam; end for a one-year period,
Jahn Wilson, Louis Freeman.
Committee chairmen are: Fish
committee, Earl Doucettt; property,
'Cliff Lobb; junior membership,
Rev. D. J. Lane; entertainment,
Mitoheal McAdam; conservation,
Wilfred Glazier; membership,
Jack Wilson.
A special meeting will be held
in the Agricultural Office Board
Room, Clinton, on Monday, May
7, when the Club will be pre-
sented with its charter by E. R.
Meadows, District Inspector Fish
and Wild Life Division, Depart-
ment of Game and Fisheries, Hes-
Members •considered purchas-
ing three acres of land for con-
servation purposes. The - club al-
ready owns 90 acres of land on
the '14th concession of Goderich
Township, all under .reforestation,
with 60,000 /trees having. been
Merited since the property was
bought three years ago.
Earl Doucett won first prize
of $10 cash for the membership
drive, Mitcheal McAdam, second, -
$5, and Wilfred Glazier, third, $2.
In the monthly bulletin draw,
James Vincent won $8. Other
winners in draws were George
Falconer, Earl Livermore and
Robert Elliott.
"Whatever's come over your
husband lately, Mrs. Baggers?".
asked Mrs. Raggleston, of her
neighbor. "'E does not'hin' but
sit an' brood on the doorstep
with 'is chin in 'is 'ands."
"'E's not broodin'," replied
Mrs. Baggers. "'E's practicing for
the local chess tournament,"
When you
add it all up...
WHEN you consider the men, women and ,
money -needed to operate 3,700 branches —
you see what is involved in looking after
the greatly increased demands made by busy
Canadians upon their chartered banks.
In ten years ... with bigger staffs and
higher wages, payrolls have jumped
from $40 million a year to $102 million
... taxes, federal, provincial and
municipal, have risen ffrori: $9.5 million
to $20.7 million a year
.. interest paid to depositors has increased
from $22 million to $57.8 million a year.
And these are only three of many expense
items. Yes, today more than ever, it costs
money to run a bank.
One of a series
by your bank