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Clinton News-Record, 1951-11-22, Page 8PAGE .EIGHT Autumn Weddings' • HASTY—CONGRAM A quiet and pretty wedding was solemnized on Wednesday after- noon November 1.4, 1951, at 1:00 p.m. in Dungannon United Church, when Audrey Isabella, elder daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Con- gram, con. 4,.Oshfield, was united in marriage to William Lorne Hasty, younger son of Mr:•Wllliam Hasty, Crave, and the late Mrs. Hasty. Rev. George Watt, pastor of the church, officiated. The bride wore a floor -length gown. of - white Chantilly lace; matching Juliet cap, and fingertip veil, and carried a bouquet of red roses. She was attended by the bride- groom's cousin, Mrs. Clifford Cro- zier, wearing a gown of baby blue 'nylon with matching Juliet cap and carrying a bouquet of pink car- nations. The best man was Mr. Clifford Crozier,, ; After the ceremony, the guests were entertained at the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs. E. Congram, Lucknow, For a' honeymoon trip to eastern Ontario and the United States, the bride traveled in a cherry red vel- , vet dress, with black velvet hat, seal coat, and matching accessories. e-e-t:e•se-o•o�s•o-r+�q-1 • McGREGOR—DODDS Caves United Church, Winthrop, was the scene of, a pretty wedding when. Rev, H, E. Livingstone united in marriage, Dorothy Mae, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. W. T. Dodds, McKillop township, and Frederick Alexander McGregor, son of Mr. and Mrs. Gregor McGregor, Tuckersmith,- The church was prettily decor- ated with chrysanthemums and ferns. The bride given in marriage by 'her father, wore a white satin gown fashioned with Med :bodice; lace inserts in the skirt and pic- ture neckline. Her finger-tip •veil washeld in place with a lace cap and orange blossoms. Her only.jew- ilery was a three strand of pearls, a gift of the bridegroom, and she carried a bouquet of Better- Times roses. . Miss Sean McVittie, Hullett town- ship, as bridesmaid, wore a pink nylon floor -length gown made with high neckline. She carried yellow roses and pink feathered chrysan- themums: Miss Betty Addison, •Hullett, wore pale blue taffeta and carried pink roses and yello* feathered chry- santhemums.. Miss Isobel Dennis, Bluevale, or - Nominations Goderich Township Nominations Meeting will be held in CLINTON TOWN HALL on Friday; November 23 between the hours of one and two p.m. Nominations will be for xi Reeve and four Coun- cillors for the -Township of Goderich; and for three Trustees for the Township School Area Board. The Election, if one be necessary, will be held on MONDAY, DEC. 3, at the following places, with the following Deputy Re- turning Officers and Poll Clerks: Wards Place Dep. R. Officer 1—Orange Hell Victor 3'alcdner 2—Cliff Sturdy's house Howard Stury 3—OIiver Hopson's Chas, Wallis 4—Arnold Rathwef's 5—Ii. McCartney's 6—R. E. Rowden's mea Poll Clerk Harvey Fuller Cliff Sturdy Reid Torrance St. Andrew's Girls' Club Names Group The Girls' -Club of St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church, Clinton, ap- pointed a nominating committee to bring in the 1952 slate of officers at the Dece;n'ber meeting. On the committee are Mrs. Frank Kutch, Mrs. Clarence Neilans and Miss Mabel Harvey. Plans were made to havea pot- luck supper and Christmas party on Wednesday,, Dec. '5, f' 'Arrangements were completed for the 'banquet- being served by the club to theClinton Fish and Game Conservation Club Nov. 21. Mrs. David Wilson, president, was in charge ,of the meeting, and Mrs. Thomas Morgan read the Scrip, Lure. The clue . hymn, "Unto the Hills," was sung, after which the Lord's Prayer was repeated in uni- son. Members extended a vote of thanks to Mrs. iMay Rance MacMin- non, who was guest speaker at the October meeting. .4. delicious lunch was served by Mrs. Wm, Mutch.,and Mrs; Royce Macaulay, hostesses. ganist, played Mendelssbhn's wed- ding march and accompanied' Miss Lorraine Smith, Meitillop township, who sang ;"O Promise Me," and "Because" during the signing of the register. Angus Brown, Tuckersmith, was best man, and the ushers were Don- ald Dodds and Donald McGregor, brothers of the bride and bride- groom, respectively. For the reception which followed at the home of the bride's parents, Mrs. " Dodds received wearing a - dress of beige lace crepe with brown accessories and a corsage of Talis- man roses. The bridegroom's Moth- er wore wine crepe with matching hat, black ,accessories and a. white gardenia corsage. The table was centred with a four -tier wedding cake, lighted tapers and pink and white baby chrysanthemums. Those serving were Betty Mont- gomery, Shirley Taylor, Marjorie McClure, Mavis Storey, Ruth Hayes and Grace Riley. Mr. and Mrs. Mc- Gregor left later on a, trip to Mont- real, the bride wearing a wine coat, black velvet hat, and match ing'accessories. They will reside in Tuckersmith Guests were present from Winthrop Listowel, Clinton, and other centres Clinton JI Votes Funds to Greece Clinton Junior Institute held its monthly meeting in Clinton Dis- trict Collegiate Institute on Tues- day, November 13. The meeting was opened by sing- ing the "Institute Ode," followed by the Lord's Prayer. Roll -cal was answered with: "What Mission Field would you choose if you were a missionary?" Isobel Gibson gave the secretary's report, and Several business bat- ters were discussed. Doreen Mc- Guire was appointed delegate to attend "Leadership Training School" to be held at Stratford November 24. It was agreed that $10 be sent to Greece to help the needy. Miss Sybil Courtice, guest speaker for the evening, gave an Interest- ing talk on a few of her experi- ences In the Mission field of Japan. Miss Courtice then showed the A Rathwell E. Trick girls some of her keepsakes from H McCartney rtes Pearson that country. R. Bowden E. J. Trewertha The meeting was then brought 46-47-b to a close, and the girls met with e...+....+.+; the boys for the "joint" meeting, CLINTON NEWS -RECORD The Duke at the Throttle In the midst of the Royal Tour the Duke of Edinburgh took the throttle of -one of the Canadian Pacific Railway's giant "Selkirk" locomotives, largest fn the British Empire, for the steep pull up Notch Hill in the :Canadian, Rookies. In the pose of a typical railroader, Prince Philip is shown here in the cab of the locomotive et the end of the run, o-r,�-a-te �-a• News- Of Hensall Carmel VMS Meets The Women's Missionary Society of Carmel Presbyterian Church convened in the schoolroom of the church Thursday afternoon for its November meeting, Program was arranged by Mrs. Malcolm Dougall. Mrs. J. Forrest read, the scripture lesson, and Mrs. B. Edwards offer- ed prayer. Miss Dora Alair read the story of the hymn, "Blest be the tie that binds," after which the hymn was sung. President Mrs, C. S. Hudson presided for the busi- ness meeting, and gave an account of the executive meeting held in Clinton. Plans were made for the Christ- mas meeting at which meeting election of officers will be held and tea served. Mrs. M. Dougall pre- sented the topic from the study book and read a letter from a mis- sionary in Formosa.. Plans to Retire John Passmore, superintendent of the Hensel! Hydro System for the past 35 years, will retire from active duty with. Hensall PUC on January 1, 1952. Mr. Passmore came here from Stratford on December 1, 1909, where he had been engineer in the Stratford Electric Power Plant for five .years; also doing his studying at night until he had acquired his second class Engineer's Certificate and also his Electrical Engineer's Diploma. He purchased the Hen- sall Electric Light Plant from Thomas Webb, ' thinking hydro power would never come to a small village, but it did in December, 1916, and 'In January, 1917, he was appointed superintendent by the Council and has served in the ca- pacity ever since. The following are a few of the Reeves he has served under: G. C. Petty, Owen Geiger, Thomas Hudson, Alex Smith, Robert Higgins, William Skinny men, women gain :5,10,15 lbs. Get New Pep, Vim, Vigor What a fbriill Batty 111fibs nit out; ugly hollows 91 05: nook. no"longer 0ornwny, body loses halt - starved, slokly bean -bele". look. Thousands of gide, women, mea, wb0 never 00u1,1 gain before. fire new proud of enmity. healthy -looking battles. Tiley Manic taleepminl'Vlgor building, OOdny-building iron,'viittamin 13)t, tonics, cenrich bl Invigorators. appetite and el000tl0n so 100,1 sista yon more strength and IlotIrlohm0nt: part flesh on bare boors. Don't/oar getting 000041, Stop when yob's° gained the 6, 10, 15 or 20 leg. you need for normal wolght. y5nebltranw°igTrlittle. Outage "Oct Taes tor ovigor end added pounds, Nile Very flay. at all druggists• "The proof's in the' eating" ..: . AGREE THREE SMILING GENERATIONS Good cooks are proud of their favourite recipes. And when they find utensils that cook food well, preserve flavour and quality, and clean easily, they're proud of them, too. That's why so many homemakers write in to tellus about their aluminum utensils. Aluminum has been. a 'Canadian kitchen favourite for half a'century. So many mothers do more than teach their daughters to cook; they teach'them to use good utensils, tool Aiuna,rym Pompehy of Oanme. e% ,'at. of Snfomaeloa. 17' 0nono Life a,udi„g, . 4.0b,,. o auto. sires o'%sloe se .onoo, ant.' ler ci, .051„ 1 hove weed eleminoe cooking itehoile for she pest twenty. roar genre and they orb eels an good an now. Our tautly or two earn and toy. now on oorn,d, nee Using example. of oho neutta retaining bonefite of tarda tacked Sn my oih,olnuu wore.' t' heertiieendore, the pooling 4ee11ije5 of Qualm= utonene +4 belies,. they 000 indlupne.ble for the modern token/ or. ,d We. Memos sato,.. Lots of fun; and the payoff is in cash!" We're talking about the MONARCH MONEYMAN pro- gram heard daily, Monday to Friday, at 11.1S in, the morning on 980 CFPL. My name's TOM BIRD and thanks to the millers of Monarch. Flour I'm able to offer you listeners cash prizes for our Question of the Week., Bo sure to listen, won't you! And send those letters and enclosures in tool ALUMINUM HAS BEEN FRIENDLY TO HEALTH FOR FIFTY YEARS ALUMINUM COMPANY OP CANADA, LTD. Consitt, William' Jones, R. E. Shad - dick, A, W. Kerslake. Grandmothers were the honored guests at the monthly meeting of Hensall Women's Institute held in the Legion Hall Wednesday night, November 14. Hostesses were Mrs. G, Walker and Mrs. C. Stephenson. The president, Miss Phyllis Case, was in charge of the meeting. Roll call was answered with "The best book I've read this year". Mrs, W. B. Cross gave the motto: "The only old person is he who nolonger de- sires to learn". At the business session, the secretary read a letter from J, A, Paterson, secretary - treasurer of Hensall School Fair Board, expressing thanks for dona- THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 22, 195:1 tion of $50 received from Hensall Women's. Institute, to aid the School Fair Prize Fund. Members favoured holding a euchre and dance in the pear' fu- ture, and the, following were named tocompl'e'te: arrangements, set' date, etc.: Mrs. F. Beer, Mrs. G, Arm- strong, Mrs. A. Mousseau, Mrs. H, Horton. G. G. Gardiner, Goderlch, public school inspector for South Huron, gave a stimulating address on the theme: "Whatwe are doing in schools with education today", Mrs; J. A. Paterson and Mary Ann and Dianne Ronnie appeared in costume and sang,. "I'll take care of you, Grandma", Miss M, Ellis Eacoured with a humorous reading, "The Runaway Grandmother". Mrs. C. Forrest expi'essed'thanks for the bank book presented to her daugh- ter, Sandra Joyce, Mrs, A, Mousseaii was awarded the prize for the, grandmother having the youngest grandchild. Mrs. Anna Walker moved the vote of thanks, Miss, Greta Lammie and Mrs. J. F. Blackwell are hostesses for the December meeting. Roll call will feature a special collection from members in aid of War Memorial Children's Hospital Funds, Mrs. R. J. Paterson will provide a demon- stration. Mrs. R. Y. McLaren will he guest speaker, Mrs. T. S. Sher- rittwill conduct carol singing, IVn, A million Canadians now have jobs in manufacturing. Ten per cent of these are in the primary textile indus- try. (The latest Dominion Bureau fig- ures are 1,080,000 in manufacturing and 104,000 of these in primary tex- tiles.) Besides leading all other Canadian industries in numbers employed in manufacturing, primary textiles also is away ahead in the size of its payroll. Itis up among the leaders in provid- ing jobs for women and in being well spread out through the smaller com- munities. Dominion Textile is a considerable part of this basic textile industry. Dominion Textile Company Limited MANUFACTURERS Of PRODUCTS //��r��`Y�r t 141 1;�/re�✓,rra , G✓J,,dibe �re%r�trl areacilf,, w .orrr�rubx �e xcd,•Y.fe �,r�enrur, sjlse4t'eY/ Qe' �/7w iAG Ra i raellAloverl ' a e;, Yf(xp4eo arae o9 ss,and lad pie soon .tic yaw- alt',, hang. 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Here is Chale and OP .n,0 T Training and experience in leadership are two of the most valuable assets yqtt can possess, no Rnatter what lifetime career you select. You may obtain both training and experience as a leader under a new plan whereby the Canadian Army is training young men with Junior Matriculation or Equivalent Educational Standard as Officers in the Active Force. But there is a .challenge in the standards you must meet — in the courses you take and pass before you can qualify for a commission. And, there is opportunity in the privilege of leading Canada's soldiers at home and abroad. ` If accepted you begin training at Camp Borden as an Officer Cadet to qualify as a Second Lieutenant in the Active Force. Ybu will receive Second Lieutenant's pay while in training. When you are granted a com- mission you will then serve for periods of 3, 4..and 5 years as you choose under the Short Service Commission Plan. At the end of this service you may apply for a 'permanent commission. To qualify you must bet—Single--'Physically fit — Between 18 and 25 years of age and have a Junior Matriculation or Equivalent Educe.. Lionel Standard. - -- APPLY TODAY TO THE RECRUITING OFFICE NEAREST YOUR HOME No. 19 Pontoons! Depot, Wallis House, Rideau and Charlotte Sts., Ottawa, Ont, No. S Personnel Depot, Artillery Park, Beget St., Kingston, Ont. - Canadian Army Recruiting Station, 90 Richmond St. W., Toronto, Ont. No. 7 Personnel Depot, Wolseley Barracks, Elizabeth Street, London, Ont. Army Recruiting Centre, 230 Main Street West, North Bay, Ont. Army Recruiting Centro, James Street Armoury, 200 James St. North, Hamilton, Ont. A4700.0 Listen to "Voice ' of the Army"— Tuesday and Thursday evenings— Dominion Network.