Clinton News Record, 1945-07-19, Page 2PAGE
smommussiis
THE CLINTON NEWS -RECORD.
•
our toy tolephonc
can't talk over Y than tete in-
strument
tantuin-
hut the reason you ts more t m cable hares status complicatedto link
is l,ecansn 't It takes Wire, of other app
a mass telephones which
sna tel itsclef. with
and other have
exchanae equipmentdie' million telephone materials 1c
Dae telephone with These malty phav
make tap: the Bell ag to vent. That's why- stoday
beoa going for telephone service
ire wolfing „•,Y;,:
It will take, time and money, and manpower tee carry anti
the iarge•acale construction'' and improvement :program
We'Ve planned for afters the war.
Take our dial conversion 'program alone: Almost .three-.
quarters • of ow telephones.in service are now of. the:,:
• dial' type. But 'that still leaves thousands of telephoxiee
and eiuchange, equipment in ',scores. of 'conxmunities,'to be
changed, over..
After the war' '*hen equipment le again:obtainable,• the
jolt will take, years to complete.; And this kit just one, of.
several• projects• which, spell jobs not only for all' out pre• .
sent einployees, ;both • at
Bonze and overseas -but for
additional workers, - too.
THE HAPPENINGS I1 CLINTON EARLY IN
THE CENTURY
SOME NOTES OF THE NEWS IN 1920
THE ,CLINTON NEWS -RECORD
July 15th, 1920
Mr. James Johnston of Taylor's
Corner, Goder eh Township, has par.
chased the ,Roweliffe place south of
town for $1506: It is his intention
to go into poulty raising quite Ma
tenaively, He sold his own." Wit,
,
are rdf- well -improved land` .with
£itst class buildings for .$360p. Mr,
Johnston is a son-in-law of Mrt
Johnston of Clinton and we welcome
ham; und.his good wife to the toms
mann .
t111►hitbsivorititng at a jointer in Mr,
A. Seeley's shop) one; day last: week,
Mr. O. W. Potter had the misfortune
to' have the little' finger of his right
hand severed at the .seeond joint.
The following Clinton students
were success fu1 with . the Faculty, of
Education: Mises ,Harriet Cantelon
and .,Elei}or. Ketnp• o,nd• Kessrs. Ii.. R.
Kitty, W. G. Sloman, W. V. Crich and
rwrac
BCQ
rNE Ill K'.oi: ToBACco'
�t DOES'. iastp
• ,epod••in ,a pipe.
companied by her little mice Gladys
Nellie, has been renewing old ae-
quajiittatiees in town.
Mr, '.and Mrs. Edward Miller and
heap boys 'o€• Ham•ltan, ase spending
the ° week with the fortner'e mother,
Mrs. J: Miller of. town.
Mrs, Ward and son Douglas of
Woodstock who have ;been visiting
at Joseph Wheatley and other
friends in "'town,' left on Thursday
afteiatoori foe Woodsto.k.
Miss Eva; Carter. and Grace Wal-
ker left on Monday for Alen College,
St. Thomas, where they will be at -
L. J, Wannan,; and Misses Rutb Y. tending summer school. They are
,MeMath, and Elvira M. Churchill. deegates from Ontarie street league.
i ' The following were •successfulin A. A. Combes who has been
pawing their Normal examinations: Principal of St. Oatharines Colleg-
Misses Myrtle Crich, Alberta M; bele for several years has resigned
.Jackson, Florentine A, , Marg'e's, omtig to di satisfaction over the
hello M. Roberton and Doreen natter of alai••j; He was form..rly
Stephenson, a 'member of: the Collegiate staff
Imre.
Coberatulations ' are extended to Miss, Mi T, Mackay left on '!'rtes.
Miss Edita"J. McCaughey, who has 'day lar her Mother Mrs, 'Jessie
been' successfulin passing ' with ,Hacks, and wishes to thank the
honours her piano examination and Clinton ladies fox their kind -hos-
obtaining her .A. T. C.' M. pitality. •
Miss Edith,Jennison and her guest Mr. and Mrs. Milne nod daue ter
ars. Fred Mason, visited Wingham of Myth were in toovnlast Friday.
friends fop a day or so. The Dr. was on a committee seeing
Mr, Harold Manning has ' gone to about a corner stone of their Mem-
London to take a position with 'the oriel Hall to be laid on the 28th of
Sherlock -Manning Co. July.
Miss' Dort Bat
.}
Dorothy 'tlifl' is visit•n
y.
Mrs. ,Aa 'Monis is al -sending a 6
actuate of weeks as the her grandmother Mrs. .Chas. H.
guest nd her,
Barthff in Toronto.
daughter Mrs. X. 'D?rutnmond 'of
Detroit.
V
THE' 1CLINTON NEW ERA
July 15, 1920
`Mrs. Thos. Hawkins is visiting, at
Detroit.
Rev. R. B. Stevenson and family
were, callers on Tuesday, at the home
of Mr. and Mrs. W. S. Devens.
Miss. Pearl' 3, Potter who has been
teaching' in' Wceton, Sa k., for the
past year is home•on vacation.
Master ,Tack' Murree, son of Mr.
Murch• of town: broke his al -m above
'the wriet:,wTiile climbing up a ladder.
Mrs. Jennie Taylor .of. London ae-
-r_
GET THE FACTS ON
G000 EAR
ALL-WEATHER
Drive' in ... let us show, you the
Goodyear All -Weather diamond
tread with its famous 4 -way non-
skid traction; design. •
All theskill and experience that
have made Goodyear 'The Greatest
• Name in Rubtser' is built into All.
Weather track tires. With tires still on
o rigid ration basis, it is more than
ever of utmost importance -to buy
only the best... Goodyears,of courser
COMPLETE
TIRE SERVICE
Shell Service Station
Reg. Ball, Clinton, Phone 5
W'Vlien the Present Century
Was Young
'THE CLINTON NEWS -RECORD
July 20, 1905
F. It Chant and Harold Wiltsie
of the Sore eign B nk at 'Toronto
and Milverton, respectively, are
home on their holiday:.
M. El. East who has spent the
past few months in Kern's piano
factory, Woodstock, has returned to
bis old seat in o.f. here.
Dr. George Beacom of Mt. Forest,
was in town on Saturday and bought
a eouple of driving horses, from R.
Jenkins and Ed. Joh•'ston, resttxe
tively, otic of which is for his own
use. The doctor is one of the stal.
wart sons of Citizen David Beacom'
and is a chip off the old block.
Revs. Chas. and •Ro':ert Floo.y
were visitors in ' Blyth and vicinity
last week. Their old home is en the
13th concession of Hallett, near
Blyth" and their old friends were
glad to see them once again, after
an absence of so many y.ars doing
minist•riai work in Uncle Sam's
Domain. These gentlemen are bro.
Caere of Mr. E. Foody, Toronto and
Miss M. Floody of Blyth.
Mr. Herb Bean of Toledo Ohio,, is
spending a , couple of weeks under
the parental roof.
Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Stephenson of
the Goshen 'Line, Stanley, spent
Thursday evening of last week with
Mrs, Johnston of Rattenbu'y street
east 'and next morning left for
Viuden, - M=an., to visit their sons
who are farming hear that places
Master Fred Bu Noy of Detroit,
nd George IVlaffat of Winghanr, the
formed• a nephew ani the latter s
oousin of Mrs, David Steep, flame
to Clinton, to celebrate the Glorious
'Pwebfth.
Weed Control'
An eight-year in'x,ed farming rote-
ams .oyer
a-Lion'ever a period of: yearsen the
Dominion Illustration Station farms
n northern and. ea-teln Manitoba
hit; reduced •wild ` oats, sowthistle;
mustards, ' stinkweed, entre other. t
annual weeds to a point whore they a.
l
are no longer a anentice: T1n seguenee
of crops °in this rotation is---summer-
fallow .grain, grain, hay,pastute„sad
fallow, "grain; •grain. Pestititeg for
one year in eight is Nearing one -of i
the most effectual practices for: weed
control �o
r
u::�r_:s., L .9th 19
wa'�f lJ 111 il�j �, ,l ll�l{ 1
j� I�I' 1I! :' �il
Iimijsl�
l ilPl Et
i,°piil)i,'!bilk
', 0 I i
l�lro�'i
il�yi#01lrI11l
r11,
die 1, It I, 41',x.
• Spinnkry; GeOrge> Wilbur;
• C.
id
Presenf and Chief Executive Offi-
"Qt;, Bank of Montreal, Montreal;
Quebec-.
Born Yarmouth, NS., April • Srd,
1889, son.. of ,George N. and Jose-
phine (Doty) Spinney.
Entered service,_ ea . the Bank at
Yarmouth, 1906; later ransferxed
to Edmundston, Quebec, Hamil-
ton and -, Montreal 'branches, res-
peetively; appointed ,Secretary- to
-Geismar-
-Geismar-Manager, Head ()Mee,
1915; Assistant; to General Man -
ague, 1922; Assistant General Man
ager, 1928; General': Manager,
December, 1936; President, De
ember, 1942.
Director, Canadian Industries Limit-
ed, Canadian Pacific,•Railway Com-
panta The Consolidated Mining
and Smelting- Company of Canada,
Limited, The ''International Nickel
Company of Canada, Limited, The
Royal Trost Company, The Steel
Company of Canada, II/mite-I, The
Sun' Life Assurance Company of
Canada.
Chairman, Canadian Advjsoty Bard,
,Royal Exchange Assurance.
Chairman, Canada's; i rat ; Victexy
Loan, June, 1941, National War
Binance Committee, Oast, 1941,• to
Aline 1943, tyhen he became Hon-
marg. Chairman.
Governor,. McGill. University and
Royal VictoriaHospital-
Awards, Doctor of .Civil, Law—
s
¢radia University, 1942, Cetnpanion
of the Most Distinguished Geer
of• St Michael and St. George, 1943
Married, Martha: Maud Ramsay;
1916;.has one son and two daugh-
ters. His son died > from` injuries
sustaalied on a:tiye service with
. the Royal Canadian Navy in June
1945. •
Clubs, Mount Royal (Montreal); St.
James' (MontreaI); Rideau, Ot•
'Caw*. Toronto (Toronte).
Office, 119 St. James Street, Mont-
real,
Residence, . Braeside Place, West -
mount, Que.
Y --
RED CROSS NUTRITION NEWS
• Cheese
Now that Johnny is. dsinkitg his
milk, we want to make sure he is.
eating his cheese. • It too is one of
our most valuable foods and- should
have a prominent p -ace in' meals of
both adults and children, for the
best paediatricians now state that
even young. children can be given a
small amount of cheese in their
daily diet. Like milk, cheese is an.
almost perfect food and contains
many of the priceless food values
found in milk, in a compact, highly
delicious form. If desired, it. can
take the place of part of the daily
milk requitement, and a 1 -inch rube
of cheese is roughly,. equivalent in.
!attrition importance to 1 glass of
mile.
,Apart from its sales -value for
nutrition alone cheese istan agelere
favorite for flavour in its" own: right
it is_ not only a tid-bit, an enhancer
of ethey.foods, but it is an lntergral
part:; of many dishes. Because of its
protein content it rates in the same
clan's of food as meat, fish, poultry
and eggs, and to gain the fall value
01 it in the diet we. should give it its
rightful place in the well-baian^e l,'
meal, lather than as a cond'ment for
flavour only.
Considered front the standpoint of
food' value, flavour, easy assimila-
tion (for cheese is not hard: to di -
.gest) and economy, cheese is an
extel'ent food to use in lunch or
dinner . dishes. As cheese has already
beets • subject to heat in manufacture,.
•a•1ways add it to sauces; -etc., at the
Ismminute , so feather heat treat-
ment won't toughen it:
'When yottrea'ily want a '.`cheesy+”
treat instead of. 'meat for •.a change,
yott eani beat .this one for appetite -
appeal for' cheese has.ar happy faeul-
ty far.' blentl:ng .deliciooe1y with
ether foods.
1Dggsc :Floi en ti ne;
.3 asses. butter, or mild flavou elfat, 'd tbsps. flour, 1r/ c milk, 11/2c
gelated medium, cheese, salt and pep-
per, "spinach, cooked, chopped, 'sea
sea-
soned; ' eggs.
re
Make cam sauce with the bet-
el., flour and: 'tsvllt. Then aced 1 cup.
grated cheese, : `stir until e'heese
melted, season to taste;
Placea generetk amount of
thoroughly &^dialed 'spinach in each
shirred egg dish Make a depression
n the ,centre'ef each :and break; a
I
aw egg into it: Potu: 3 tablespoons
£
cheese sante around each egg
"Self -Propelled"
Another Move Forward for Agriculture
New. developments; in machinery have.
always; had a marked effect upon farm-
ilg , Tll9, reaper, the binder, the tractor
arid'power farming, equipment, and th
combine *have helpedifarmers do their
work lamer, quicker and snore profitably.
The latest develbpinent in farm equip-
ment,, the self-propellec'l combine- per-
feRtad by MAss; 7r-HAteRls prior to the
war, .has revolutionized harvesting. It
has also opened upnew, possibilities to
the itn ,gement engineer for developments
in other hypes of farm machinery that
will` bring increased .advantages in the
savingof'titrxe and labor.
With` the lVlns,3Zy,-1-1LRR1s self-pro-
pelled combine, one man with the grain
tank model can harvest sixty ams and,
upwards in, a day. Costs are less, too, ..
because one motor operates' the mecha-
nism and propels_' the •machine. Grain is
saved, none being knocked down and
shelled in opening thefield. Anyone who
van drive a car can learn to operate a
self-propelled, combine.
Good farm management employs tete
advantages of modern equipment to
speed up the work, save labor, increase
production and lower production costs;.
Itis easier to farm profitably with good
equipment. Your local dealer veal I - be
glad to give you full particulars about
the self-propelled combine and other
machines. in the. MA9sgy- r,,i line,
engineered and halt to meet tine ,deeds
of modern Tanning..
MASSEY-HARRIS COMPANY LI. ICED
BUILDER5 OF GOOD FARM IMPLEMEN7,5". SINCE 1.847
0 ,
and an , the, alined), sprinkle with,
,remaining, ,ehegse over the eggs,. and
.bake in a moderate .oven, 350 de-
grees, until the egg a,e.done.
(Any epmuirirs on food a^d pita
trition may be directed', to the. Nu-
trition Department, Ontario Division'
Canadian Add Cress Society, 621
Jarvis St, Toronto 5.)
v
WEEDS IN FLAX
Weed contamination in
Ilex crops
one ;of, elle most serious problems
pated supplies to an unu ',telly low
level. .he first wattage, di. 'the
apple 'crop': "iu lic,tes a reduction
from, the very large crop of 1944 cal!
52 per cent, or. 8,188,00 bushele coins
stared with 16,879,000 bushels-' in
.19444.. The pear crop, estimated at
557,000 bushels is expected to be the
smallest since 1935, seise- it ,r entree
petal ' that plum and prune' a'n it
:peaches will show a reduetforu of
2'4 per cent, owing to the smolt drop
in, Eastern Canada. Cherries, despite.
a large eron in BritishColumbia, will
also show a decline. Unlike tree
with winch fl'x growers have to faults, the small 'fruits ciroj$s ate, ail.
contend, Flan alapts• dp not shade the above tite 1944 level. ,
ground to the sante extent as grafin:
crops, and, in epnsequenee. weeds
Katie a geed• awe : to develop.
v
Hay Fever in Caws
Do cows have hay fever? As yet
no one has made a positiveclaimto
that effect, ' but the Journal 'of
Veterinary Reoea ch reports soase
:interesting v(eterin'aay e{xipeninyents
which prove that some caws are
sensitive to ragweed just like humeri
beings, In one g.oup of cows which
Was checked, forty per cent was
found .sensitive to ragweed pollen.
Research, in this direction is being
continued.
V
Tree Fruit -Prospects
Aecording to ari official report, the
total 'production of tree -fruits in
Canada this season will be much
below normal, Despite excellent
prospects, in British Columbia, the
poor crops in eastern Canada (the
result of adverse weather during' the
critical period:) have •brought antici-
TIE STRID2,4 BEAN
Strider is the name given tp tide
bean, originated in the Mortice tarrul
Division, Dominion EStperitnental.
Farms . Setvice, that has been undcer
test for several years. It .is a Dross
between Stringless Refugee Wax
and the little known but vety' early
maturing variety called 13rincess: of
Atrtoids. Strider isearlier maturing:
than St ingless Refugee Wan andi is
a true bush variety, produoest 0%ai
stringless, wax pods, and appsars.
as intended, to escape anthracnose,
infection. The seeds are white ama
vets desirable for baking purposes.
In o her words it is a .dual purpose
variety," suitable for u e as a. snap
poi bean and the ripened seedHs,
suitable for baking punt/tee-
n—sr—
Check
urpo,ee-
srCheck Farm Labour
Owing- to the fsot that the need
for maintaining food preiuctiba at
high level is sti'il eery great and
that farmers are still in urgent need
of }nen, suspension of call-up under
National Sele titve Service regula-
tions does not mean that men on
postponement .of military train
for employment in agrculture
now free to, engage in other Indus
Instructions have been sent
Deal employment oilfi;.es that
main on postponement to engage
agricutture;, who, ig working in
other industry.; is bo be eompu
directed back -to' the ferns lob.
• ver
SUGAR LOSS
eut/cij;zt,
Ekas't lose a`single jar of
those #xid pickles this
seadenx, pause of spoil-
age by inferior vinegar.
For shire results insist on
Canada Vinegar — the
choice of leading pickle
manufacturers and ex-
eneed home -canners.
A •favourite for over 80
Write for FREE Pick -
Big Recipe Booklet to
Canada Vinegars
ted, 112 Duke Street,
Toronto.
CANADA
Vinegar
Paateantised
Italian. Submarines Serving With Allies
Picture taken aE an ltttlian ba' e .7-0; wvi<li: the• Abdti d ttavies.c.-
where Italian submarines are opera-
theto"Sliotvs: Two Italiani
morales 'in harbour,