The Huron Expositor, 1950-03-10, Page 3t
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e ,:r l.•.t
#CarmelPresbyt raa ,Churc
Iensail, Scene of Recital
NEWS
OF HENSALL Nicol inti'odueed each number.
Following are the numbers pre-
sented: Piano silos, Bryan -Bon-
thron, Nodule Passmore, Joan
Kerslake, Sharon McBride, Marilyn
Mousseau, Mary Ann Ronnie, Di-'
anne Ronnie, Bill Fink, Carol
Brown, Wayne McBride, Bonnie
Kyle, Billy Brown, Ronald Row
cliffe, Elaine Bell; vocal solos,
Don Bell, who sang "Mother Mc -
Pupils of Mr. J, L. Nicol, A.C„
0.0., were heard in recital Friday
evening, ,March 3, in Carmel Pres-
byterian Church, Hensall.. It Wap
largely attendedby parents, of the
pupils and friends. Rev. P. A. Fer-
guson, minister of the cburob, pre-
sided for the opening session. Mr,
CEMENT
BLOCKS.
Immediate delivery
HURON' CONCRETE
PRODUCTS
'Phone' 684 Seaforth
(MADE FROM 100%, WHOLE WHEAT)
. here's whole wheat
in its most popular form!
We need whole wheat in our
.diet, health authorities say. It
.contains vital food elements.
.And NABISCO SHREDDED
'WHEAT is made from 100%
whole wheat/ You can serve
this delicious, toasty cereal a
different -way every morning.
Tomorrow, enjoy NABISCO
SHREDDED WHEAL with
iam or honey!
4;E
'—
1Zotlfe ilt Disculiflt itt Ener
Nee
u mf
t e Y 1 045
V
Cree" and "Danny Boy. Mrs. Wm.
Brown -sang as her solo, "Bless
This House," followed with a piano
solo; vocal solos, Shirley Bell, her
selections being "0 Lord, Hear My
Cry," composed by Mr. Nicol, and
"Golden Slumbers."
Hurondale W. I. Meets
Mrs. Percy Passmore was
hostess for the meeting of Hur-
ondale W.I., with Mrs. A. Morgan.
and Mrs. E. Pym as co-bostesses.
The program was under the direc-
tion of the committee for aistori,
Sal research and current events,
convened by Mrs. W. Sims. Mrs.
Rundle presented the motto, "If
you have ceased to smile, you have
lost out in the game of life, no
matter what your bank account
may be." ,Mrs. Lorne Oke read an
article of historical interest con-
cerning wooden. windmills. High-
light of the program was a • trav-
elogue by Luther Penhale on a
trip to Australia, taken by himself
and Mrs. Penhale, which was very
educational.. Roll call was re-
sponded with a recipe for cream
as a substitute for butter and
shortening in pastry, cakes, etc. It
was decided to hold another euchre
in March. Mrs. Frayne favored
with violin selections and :Mrs,
Earl Mitchell gave a reading.
Luncheon was served.
Bank Marks 50th Anniversary
This month marks the 50th an-
Iniversaiy or ttiO Malsell It ranch of
the apk oR Mp>itreat the Wee,
a„r.ing . drat beet opened by the
oleo is Bank ,on Nial'ch 1, 1990,
lanbse inently the private bank 'of.
1► acArthur Cs Pe. was purc'based,
,lir, Henry ,Arnold, a Member of the
latter firm aentening Management
:of the combined busineseee, and
continuing in thin cal acity. after
the merger of the Molsons Bank
with theeBauk of Montreal in 1924.
Mr. Arnold, upon retirement, was
followed by W. A, Houston and L.
R. Coles, in that order, the latter
being suceeeded•in 1934 by W. B.
A. Cross, who retired in 1948 after
14 years incumbency. The branch
is presently managed by John K.
Irvin.
Death of Miss Violet McClymont
The death occurred in Clinton
Public Hospital ore Sunday, March
5, of Miss Lillie Violet McClymont,
of Varna, a former well-known
Hensall resident, who passed away
in her 52nd year: She had been a
patient at the hospital for the past
five weeks. •She had also spent a
number of weeks in Victoria Hos-
pital, London. Miss McClymont
spent some years in Hensall where
she was employed as a practical
nurse with the late Miss Mary Mc -
Ash, returning to her home about
a year ago. While here ehe was
an active member of the United
Church, being librarian of the
cre ar
choir, stewardship se t y of the
Evening Auxiliary, secretary of the
Wohelo Class, and during the war
she was a very active Red Cross
worker. During her stay in Hen-
sail she took an active part in
every good cause of the church and
other organizations, always will-
ing to do more than her part, and
nothing was too much trouble for
her. When able Miss McClymont
took an active part in the United
Church at Varna. Surviving are
her aged mother, who is 88 years
of age; two brothers, Fred, of Var-
na, and Ernest, of New York. The
body rested at the Bonthron Fun-
eral Home, Hensall, until Monday
morning, when it was taken to the
teeMartle
•••••••
CHICKS
Peat Moss and Cozeo Litter
Co-op Chick Starter
Co-op Grow Mash
Chick Grit and Shell
Howard's Stim-a-Tone Tablets
Semi -Solid Buttermilk
Fortified Feeding Oil
Seaforth Farmers Co -Operative
PHONE 9
Malting Barley
We are again contracting acreage for
The Canada Malting Co. • "
SEED SUPPLIED
Contact -Us'
Geo. T. Mickle and Sons
HENSALL, ONT.
Phone 103 Nights 133
THIRD ANNUAL
SEED FAI R
Sponsored by
" HURON COUNTY CROP IMPROVEMENT
ASSOCIATION
Friday - Saturday, March 10-11
CLINTON COLLEGIATE INSTITUTE
$500,00 IN PRIZES
Educational Displays — Specials and Trophies
Special Programmes Friday Evening and Saturday Afternoon
Auction Sale of Ten -Bushel Lots of Grain Saturday Afternoon
Junior Seed Judging Competition Saturday Morning
EVERYBODY WELCOME ADMISSION FREE
Entries close- March 7, 1950
ltt
NOTICE
TOWNSHIP OF TUCKERSMITH
The Township of Tuckersmith requests
the general public not to park motor
vehicles on the Township Roads, in
order to facilitate snow plowing opera-
tions, and notice is hereby given that the
said Township will not be responsible
for any damages caused to vehicles
parked on Tovl#nship Roads by such
operations. •
E, P. CHESNEY,
Clerk,
- Township of Tuckersmith'
76
;
it
(Continued from Page i,):'
forth; Burditt Magwoo 1. T il¢eaz
dine; slay Corniabi, §tratford; Leen
Johnson, Clinton,; Bill Forbes;
Stratford,
Ladies' Roubles
Preliminaries—Friday, March. 10,
7 p.m.—Marilyn and Doris Elliott,
Stratford, vs...Pat Troutbeck and
Mary Box, Seaforth.
First Round—Friday, 7:20 p.m.:
Eileen Hodgins and Bernice Hen -
ie, Exeter, vs. Winnie Marshall and
Vivian Sandey, Stratford; 7:40.
p.m., Maida Mueller 'ala, Lillian
Southgate, Seaforth, vs. Doreen
Mulford and Dorothy Cladding•,
Stratford; Betty Linley and Doro-
thy Wright, Stratford, ve. Alice
•Malcolm and Florence McCallum,
Kincardine; Betty. Jackson. and
Agnes Mason, Clinton, vs. Dean
Morley and Ada Dinney, Exeter;
Shirley Brown and Mary Russell,
Stratford,, vs. Lois Connell and
Florence Symons, Clinton; Marg-
aret Atkey and Kelly Ball, Clin-
ton, vs. Jackie Zinn and Mary Rid-
dell, Stratford; J. Watson and M.
Roberts, Kincardine, vs. winner of
Elliott -Elliott and Trowtbeck-Box,
Men's Doubles
First Round, Friday, March 10,
8 p.m.—Bob Dinney and Doug.
Knowles, Exeter, vs. H. Nesbitt and
Joe Mayman, Bayfield; Gordon
Jackson and John Sorensen, Clin-
ton, vs. Robt. Rae and Don -Mul-
holland, Stratford; Doug Pryde
and Si Simmons, Exeter, vs. Dick
Box and Jim Southgate, Seaforth;
Don Morrison and Jack Edler,
Seaforth, vs. Bob Hale and Bill
Refausse, Clinton; Fred Miller and
J. Caron, Clinton, vs. Ray Cornish
and Paul Crehan, Stratford; Hal
Walsh and Don Symons, Clinton,
vs. John Mair and Geo. Bonar,
Stratford; Doug Grayer and Merle
Mode, Exeter, -vs. M. Mahood and
P. Aggerholm, Kincardine; Chas.
Johnson and Jack Stein, Clinton,
vs. Bill Forbes and Robt. Taylor,
Stratford; Hal Hartley and Dick
Atkey, Clinton, vs. Jack West and
partner, Stratford; Jud Armstrong
and partner, Exeter, vs. Jack Stur-
geon and Ernie Hovey, Bayfield;
Don Case and Bob Davis, Exeter,
vs. Neil Beattie and Ray Mulford,
Seaforth.
Byes—Jim Wrennick and Jack
Hill, Stratford; Stan Dorrance and
Geo. Hays, Seaforth; Len Johnson
and Harry Holmes,, Clinton; Bill
Grosch and Garth Mitchell, Strat-
ford; Burditt .Magwood. and M.
Baker, Kincardine.
Mixed Doubles
Preliminaries—Friday, March 10,
6:30 p.m.—Mary Riddell and Jim
Wrennick, Stratford, vs. Agnes
Mason and Len Johnston, Clinton;
Betty and Jack Stein, Clinton, vs.
Ruth Drake and Don Mulholland,
Stratford; 7 p.m., Doreen Mulford
and Ray Cornish, Stratford, vs.
Betty Jackson and Bob Hale, Clin-
ton; Joe Taylor and partner, Strat-
.
ford, vs. Margaret Atkey and Chas.
Johnson, Clinton; Margaret Mack
and Ernie Hovey, Bayfield, vs. Kel-
ly Ball and Dick Atkey, Clinton.
First Rbund — Nell Armstrong
and Bob Dinney, Exeter, vs. Doris
Elliott and W. Grosch, Stratford;
Margaret Mayman and Joe May-'
man, Bayfield, vs. Dorothy Glad-
ding and Jack Hill, Stratford;.Ruth
Morgan and Laverne Morgan, Bay-
field, vs. Betty Linley and Garth
Mitchell, Stratford; winnerof Mul-
ford -Cornish and Jackson -Hale vs.
Dorothy Wright and Robt. Rae,
Stratford; winner of Mack -Hovey
and Ball-Atkey vs. Vivian Sandey
and Jack West, Stratford; J" Wat-
son and P. Aggerholm, Kincardine,
vs. _Jackie Zinn and P. Chambers,
Stratford; Florence ,McCallum and
M. Mahood, Kincardine, vs. Flor-
home of her brother, Fred McCly-
mont, one mile south of Varna.
Funeral services were held from
Varna United Church on Tuesday
at, 2 p.m. Rev. Reba Hern officiat-
ed, paying high tribute to the life
of the deceased. Interment was in
Bayfield cemetery. The floral tri-
butes were many and lovely, and
included sprays from the Evening
Auxiliary and Wohelo Class of the
Hensall United. Church.
Miss Edna Walsh and Mrs. Mary
Buchanan will be hostesses for the
regular meeting of the Evening
Auxiliary which takes place in the
schoolroom of the United Church
Monday night, March 13. Miss
Gray will present the study, and
Mrs. Buchanan the devotional per-
iod. Each member is asked to
make the donation of an apron at
this meeting. A large attendance
is urged.
A meeting, under the auspices of
the Chamber of Commerce, will be
held in the council chamber Mon-
day, March 13, at 8 p.m. Mr. Dal-
ton, of the Hydro -Electric Power
Conversion Publicity, will address
the meeting on 'the conversion of
hydro from 25 to 60 cycles. The
meeting is open to the general pub-
lic of Hensall and district, and all
are invited to attend.
The Chamber of Commerce an-
nounces that the net proceeds from
the Kitchener -Waterloo Skating
Club in Hensall Community Arena
was $260. Net proceeds from 'the
carnival was $147.
A dance and floot show will be
held in the Town Hall on Friday
March 10, sponsored by Amber
Rebekah LO.O.F. Lodges. This will
be the last, dance of the season
sponsored by these lodges,
Members of Hensall W.I. have
held quilting bees. in the Legion
Hall and up to date have made 14
crib quilts, to be donated to the
War Memorial Children's Hospital.
Kippen W.I. are planning to give
enjoyment and pleasure to the 92
inmates of the Huron County
Home, •Clinton, Wednesday, Mar.
15. The members are also laking
along 103 .boxesr'of treats for the
inmates and staff. With a' mem-
bership of 35, each members will
fill three boxes each.
Rev. Mr. Oliver, of Byron, oc-
cupied the pulpit of the United
Church Sunday and will continue
to take the pulpit in the absence
bf the minister, Rev. R. 'A. Brook,
who is rectiberating after a ser-
ious .operation in St. Joseph's Ho„-
pital, .London. Services will be
held Morning and evenitig an noel.
Centralia
(By I,N.S., of Ottawa Journal)
To say -that the R.CA.F. Flying
Training School at }Nentralia is
having its ups and .downs ie' not
merely to refer to its 800 takeoffs
and landings each day.
These training . operations do
make it the busiest airfield in
Canada today, bar none.
The ups and downs also come
about this way. During, the war
this flying school,- 26 miles north
of London, was merely one of 75
air training schools in the British
Commonwealth Air Training Plan.
Then when the Germans surrend-
ered, Centralia became an odd sort
of place giving airmen special
courses for the war with Japan,
courses in tropical medicine, geo-
graphy, survival on a. raft. When
the Japs followed the Germans in-
to defeat Centralia found- itself
with its own survival problem, not
on a raft but on a bleak stretch
of : countryside and wind-swept
fields with no flying and no train -
ing
raining and nothing to do but move
the moth balls around- the aircraft
and maintain the roads and
tar-
mac. The station was officially
closed. '
By April, 1947, it occurred to the
Government of Canada and a lot
of other people that maybe peace
wasn't here to stay --and so the
great hangar doors slid open
again, like elephant ears, and the
droning resumed overhead. The
crickets and gophers and two -leg-
ged loafers withdrew before the
advancing airmen. It was "con-
tact” all over again, again and
again and again.
Today Centralia is the only
straight flying training school the
R.C.A.F. has for incoming cadets.
It has five courses stirring about
in its "establishment" at one time,
one graduating every eight weeks.
Output is about 30 each course.
Course length is 40 weeks, involv-
ing 165 hours in the Harvard, 45
in the Expeditor and 30 in Link
Trainer.
Also at Centralia is the Instru-
mental Flying School. Here quali-
fied pilots are trained to fly by all
the advanced gadgetry the U.S.,
the L.K. and Canada can think up.
They zoom around in clouds by in-
tent, they go up in the murkiest
weather, they grope by radar and
land by radio. This is an eight
weeks course, the ,output about 20
each time. -
Another school connected with
Centralia though not at Centralia
is the Radar and Communications
Flight at Clinton, 20 miles away.
The Clinton school uses Centralia
as its flying base and uses. Cen-
tralia's planes and pilots. It trains
radio officers, signals officers and
radar technicians.
'It' is to this latter Communica-
tions Flight belongs the famous
flying classroom, that weirdly
equipped Dakota with 12 sets of
instruments where sit 12 students
who can conceivably steer the
poor ship every way but whose
mistakes are only "academic" and
suffered in terms of figures rather
than fatalities. There's always a
real navigator up front playing for
keeps. -'
Centralia has also its own Main-
tenance Wing in charge of servic-
ing and repair of aircraft. Every
plane and every piece of plans has
its place in the Wing's scheme of
things. All checks and overhauls
are done regularly so many hours
and minutes. The repair shops
look more like a hospital clinic or
scientist's laboratory and you get
the idea that if you were to try
to walk off the station with a bolt
in your pocket five sirens would
scream bine murder. '
There ,are still other things go-
ence Symons and Gordon Jackson.,
Clinton; Mayda Mueller and Neil
Beattie, Seaforth, vs. Lucy and
Harry Holmes, Clinton; Pat Trout -
beck and Stan Dorrance, Seaforth,
vs. Dean Morley and Jud Arm-
strong, Exeter; winner of Riddell-
Wrennick and Mason -Johnson vs.
Eileen Hodgins and Doug Pryde,
Exeter; winner of Stein -Stein and
Drake -Mulholland vs. M. McLeod
and M. Baker, Kincardine; Ethel
Mode and partner, Exeter, vs. Lil-
lian Southgate and Geo. Hays, Sea -
forth; M. Stewart and B. Magwood,
Kincardine, vs. Mary Box and Dick
Box, Seaforth; winner of Taylor-
patrner and Atkey-Johnson, vs.
Bernice Henle and Si Simmons,
Exeter; Lois Connell and Don
Symons, Clinton, vs. Ada Dinney
and Doug Knowls, Exeter; Gwen
Wood and John Sorensen, Clinton,
vs. W. Forbes and partner, Strat-
ford.
Senior Men's Doubles -Draw will
be made at opening of tournament.
,ser
SN
FOR DEAD
ANIMALS
COWS - $2.50 each
HORSES - $2.50 -each
HOGS over 250 lbs.
Iea. - .50c cwt.
According to size and
condition.
Phone Collect
WM. SPROAT
Seaforth - 655 r 2
Ingersoll - 21
William Stone Sons, Ltd.
INGERSOLL, ONTARIO
hi
: O
ing en, at ,Clentralia,,but this is'be-`
coming an inventory. T.eet'» get
back to the question g malzpower;.
The whole RJC.A,F. today . bas
what it calls an establishment of
18,72$• -•-that is• what. Parliament is
willing to pay 'for, Actually its
strength is about 4245.
Recruiting is not up towhat it
should be. In consequence, Cen-
tralia
entralia is not training as many pil-
ots as it is authorized , to train or
as it is equipped to train, or as
the R.C.A.F. wants to train.
There are several types• of
trainees. The standard or princi-
pal type is the young Canadian
who applies to the air force and
wants to be a pilgt. If he meets
the requirements he is taken in,
put through his 40 -weeks course
and given a six-year comisaion
in the R.C.A.F. At the end of six
years (dating from entry), he will
likely be obliged to return to civvy
street, though he goes, on the
strength of the R.C.A.F. reserve.
The R.C.A.F. will retain some of
these men after the six years to
keep its over-all strength. But the
proportion kept will not be large.
Then there is a scheme of giv-
ing flying training during summer
holidays •to university students,
and another for taking in young
Canadians for just long enough to
teach them to fly and then letting
them go into the R.C.A.F. re-
serve upon graduation. These two
schemes bolster the Reserve, keep
the age average down; yet they
make it possible to avoid extend-
ing the establishment of R.C.A.F.
and, incidentally, the coat to the
ratepayers. Both these types of
training are done at Centralia, and
to Centralia also gpes a sprinkling
of Rs.Cs.A.F. flyers for refresher
courses.
This is all, obviously, but a pass -
ng •glance by a civilian at the Cen-
tralia air station. This reporter
wasn't there long enough to go in-
to the -training process nor would
,he likely have understood it if he
had. But the visit was long en-
ough to discover a happy station
and a keen bunch of officers and
men. Centralia isn't the only R.C.
A.F. spot in the country, although,
as I have said, it is the only one
teaching flying. At Summerside
navigation is taught, at Trenton
there is armament and administra-
tion and ground courses, at Camp
Borden there are aircraft trades,
at St. Hubert there is a jet squad-
ron, at Chatham and Greenwood
there is operational training and
coastal work, and here in Ottawa
there is all the brass and head-
quarters and at Rockcliffe there is
Transport Command and Photo-
graphic Survey.
But out at Centralia, where the
wind blows hard and the planes
fly high, wide and sometimes not,
so handsome, there is something
of the old tair training plan spirit
in the air. The boys walk in and
the men fly out and from that un-
ending circuit on foot and over-
head Canada is getting its little
supply of trained flyers. Come an-
other war and these few will be
the acorn from which another oak
will have to grow.
WINTHROP
The W.A. of Cavan Church, Win-
throp, are holding a socialafter-
noon and quilting in the basement
of the church on Thursday, March
16. The quilts are being made for
European relief, and donations of
clothing she asked for at this
meeting, or may be handed in lat-
er. The ladies are asked to bring
donations for auction basket, and
tarts and cookies for lunch.
•
Scientific Safety
Scientific knowledge of the .ef-
fects of pasteurization indicates
that the sugar and fat in milk are
not affected in the process. I•t is
also established that -the proteins
are rendered more easily digestible
and that the calcium and phos-
phorus are just as readily absorbed
as in raw milk. Loss of vitamins
A, B and C is small. Insist on
pasteurized milk. It's safer.
ifE
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