Clinton News-Record, 1958-10-16, Page 2IPACI � TWO. CLINTON T*TEWS-RECORD THURSDAY, OCTOBER 1.6, 1948
Clinton NewsxwRecord * _ _ CHRISTIAN MARRIAGE
and DIVORCE
From Our Ear�� Fele
T.H CL►NTON NEW ESA. THE CLINTON NEWS•RECORq (By JANET SJAARDA, member of the Christian .Reformed
Amalgamated 1024
O E o Published every Thursday at the
'9 9 Heart of Huron County 1011[
a Clinton, On Population 2,902 '110f •Kx"
0
I A- ,L, CC)LQ.UHOUN, Publisher
4#
V LPt4 WILMA D. DINNIN, Editor
STJBSCRIPTION RATES: Payable in advance --Canada and Great Britain: $3,00 a year
United States and Foreign: $4,00; Single Copies Seven Cents
Authorized as second class mail, Post Office Department, Ottawa
THURSDAY, OCTOBER 16, 1958
SITUATION IS SERIOUS
ONCE AGAIN growing pains are being
felt in our community, and most particularly this
Is evidenced in the need for more school accom-
modation.
The two room addition to the Clinton Pub-
lic School, now in progress, will quite probably
only answer the needs of the town for a couple
of years at best, then another addition, or a new
school entirely will be needed.
At the collegiate, the need is for six more
classrooms, a home economics room, a shop
room, and a gymntorium. This is only three
years since $180,000 was spent to put on a six
room addition.
1
.The need is being felt all over ontario.
Right nearby the Goderich Collegiate Board. is
facing the need for six rooms and a gymnasium.
Their present school which was designed to ac-
commodate
scommodate 475 students, now houses 500. Within
four years they expect a totai of 660 students.
In Exeter, the high school board is asking
for an addition of five or six rooms. They are,
accommodating 610 students, and expect that
by 1962 there will be 800 attending the school.
However the cost may be felt, it seems
that the cost must be borne.
If the building of more classrooms is post-
poned, now, the only result will be overcrowding,
poorer instruction, and students less able to meet
the demands of .an ever more complicated world.
One suggestion has been made in the
county, and has been considered with some ser-
iousness: that is that there are enough students
along the Blue Water Highway and in the Zurich
area, that another building for secondary school
education might be the answer. If. by taking
up the students in that area, some from the
Exeter High School District, and some from the
Goderich and Clinton Collegiate Districts, the -
pressure on the existing institutions would be
lightened, then it could be a good idea,
In any case—whether the answer is found
in building additions to the present buildings, or
in erecting another school in the area, the addi-
tional classrooms must be built. Economy will
not be found in the policy of "putting off 'till
to -morrow".
THE JOB OF HOMEMAKING
HAD THE pleasure of eating dinner with
a charming group of ladies yesterday. They were
the delegates from Women's Institutes through-
out Huron County, who came together for the
purpose of learning how to conduct the 4-H
Homemaking Club meetings of the coming sea-
son.
These are the ladies who take it upon
themselves to instruct the young folk of the
community in the type of work they will need
to be accustomed to Iater on in life. In the 441
Club work which gets the most publicity, the
instructors are men, and the talk is of gilts,
calves, best head of grain, clean beans and milk
production. But the 4-H Homemaking Clubs are
busily at work learning how to rovide the meals
which make farm life interesting and healthful.
There is no . bar, however, in the Home-
making Club work, to urban folk. Whether
young girls live in town or country, they are
made welcome. In this there is an advantage:
everyone has a kitchen and a sewing rooxn; only
farm folk have a barn to raise livestock and
fields for growing grain.
In fact the homemaking clubs do not stop
with the work of the house, In the summer
season, if enough people want it, the club work
includes gardens and the growing of flowers and
vegetables. The homemaking clubs take on two
projects a year, while the agricultural clubs
have only one.
In most cases, the instructors in 4-H
Homemaking Clubs come from the memberships
of the Women's Institutes. They volunteer for
the task, and in most cases stay at it for several
years.
The job they do is teriffic, and cannot be
overestimated.
We enjoyed immensely, our dinner with
these lovely ladies yesterday, and expect to
enjoy their company in the future, at their
achievement days, and at future leadership
training schools.
ANOTHER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL
A DESIRE for a school in Clinton for
elementary instruction, separate from the Pub-
lic School, has been made known by the nyemb-
ers of the Clinton Christian Reformed Church.
congregation. They have -formed the Calvin
Christian School Board, and are making the
initial steps which may bring about such a
school.
There may be those who dislike the
idea of splitting the town insofar as primary
education is concerned. It seems particularly
unwise on the part of folk recently come to
Canada, and who have yet to master the English
language.
But this, no one can argue: the people of
the Christian Reformed Church are a good
people, a Christian' people, and they are proud
of their freedoms in our country which they
have chosen for a home. If they feel that our
public schools do not fill the needs of their
Christian faith, then perhaps we should give
some thought to making our public schools bet-
ter, rather than criticise them for their decision
for a Christian school of their own,
FARMING 1958
(The Printed Word
EVERYONE KNOWS that being a farmer
is a difficult life. The farmer has to get up
early, early in the morning to milk the cows.
And he has to milk them again in the evening.
Down in Vermont, where folk are hard-
Working
ardWorking but independent in their thinking (they
probably get this from their neighbours across
the line in Quebec's Eastern Townships) there
Is a farmer who will not go along with a thing
just because everyone says it must be so. He
does not like getting up in the morning, so he
sleeps in every day. In fact he does not get
the cows milked until nearly noon, And since
he has learned to like old movies on TV, it
is no problem at all to stay up until midnight
to milk them again. The cows, bless their con-
tented hearts, go along with him in his new-
fangled notion,
A Canadian agricultural expert who
knows cow -milking, both theoretical and practi-
cal, admits there is no biological reason why any
farmer's cows cannot be conditioned to this
type of conformity. But he hastily warns that
not everyone is that fussy about TV. And who
but a person of singular determination can go
on watching old movies night after night. What
happens when he tires of Clara Bow but still
has to stay up to milk the cows 7
DON'T UNDERESTIMATE FARMING'S IMPORTANCE
(Adapted from Kincardine News)
AGRICULTURE REMAINS, as it has
from the time of the county's initial settlement,
the principal industry,
What town dwellers sometimes overlook
.is the fact that their prosperity is dependent on
'that condition prevailing on the farms,
When returns from agriculture are good
sb is everything else, When farm prices drop
to the point where production costs exceed rev-
enues derived from agricultural pursuits, then rir.
one can have prosperity.
For too long the farmer has been getting
the short end of the customer's dollar.
Currently there i5 an investigation into
price spreads across Canada and examination of
tes is m '
What has been so far revealed i nd a the al -
or portion of the dollar has been grabbed up by
-the middleman.
To offset this, farmers have organized
on a co-operative basis, both in buying and sell••
Ing, But it must be remembered the profit
motive must prevail here, Co-operatives cannot
operate at a loss any more than can the farmer,
manufacturer, retailer, or anyone else, for that
matter.
The returns from various types of crops
and different varieties of livestock indicate there
has been a revolution on the farm, It has come
about quietly and without any bloodshed or fan-
fare.
Crops which once were a major item are
being abandoned in favor of new type.
These changes in the country have corres-
ponding changes in town,
Better conditions have to start; with the
farmer; the t
y cant start
with Cite consumer.
When they do, then it will be better for
all concerned in Huron's principal industry and
for all of us who are so dependent on it:
40 YEARS AGO
Clinton. New Era
(Thurs.day, October 17, 1918)
At a. Joilat rneeta ng of the Col.
i'eigiatet Instataute Board and Public
School' Board held on Wednesday
to iconsider the, reported preiW-
ence of krnfluenza, it was d0cldteld
Mat ,albtlhaugh no epadeanirc exists
as, yet in Clinton, sullfioient to
warrant closing of thee' schopPs.,
still the attendance Thad fallen to
,about one hatlif the average, due
to :the Prevalence of coal ts• aandthe
anxiety of !parents to keep ibhe'ntr
children away from, infection. The
boards daditd'ed that .good wank
could .not be ,dome under these
aondlians' and a resolution, was.
passed ordering ,the school`s .clos-
etcl until,' Gotaober 28.
WHI'lam Addison, Hulett, blas
,Purchased J. J. Rapsan's 'farm,
lot 8, concession, 10,. FIullett, and
will (get iposs essvon shortly,
All' !Schools and churches. arie
,dosed and all]: ,public gatherings
fotib'idd'en in Tuckersmiith townshhp
due bot influenza,
M.ilsis Mary .FingRand, B.A., Lon-
d'esb'ara, has hooked passage for
Korea on the, SS Siberia (J+apanes'e
Ulm) which: leaves 'San Franclslco
on December 19,
0
40 YEARS AGO
Clinton News -Record
(Thursday, October 17, 1918)
While dAming along the Kin -
burn. Roaid in Hullett on Tuesday
alight, T. Glazier oif the Huron
Road met an auto. He saw it com-
ing all right and pulled out well
to the side, but the car ran into
ham, breaking his, 'buggy and fling -
Ing Mian ,into a wire fence.
The wellconAng committee, a
number of citizens and the Ki4ltiie
Bandl wemit .down to the station
at 6.30 on Th'ursd'ay last to wel-
come Pte. ,Fred Sltomen, Ston of
J. SlMman df town, and Pte. F'ph.
Snell, st'on of J. Snell, Hullett,
who tarrived home that daffy on rook
leave.
Owlimig to so much influenza,
the Women's. Patriotic Society wall
not meet on F'rid'ay. The knitting
contest wild. be postponed until
further notice.
Persons, rising the Lilboary are
requested to •repart to the li rar-
Itan as to whether there is any
sickness in their homes and those
so, .0fecte,d are asked ;to return
beaks to be fuarAgated or destnoy-
eid, It ds ,eNpected that the public
wie11 respect these regulations to
curb the 'spread of infllu:enza.
Otherwise the Library may have
to- be closed,
25 YEARS .AGO
Clinton NeW$-R.ecoro.
(Thursday, October 19, 19$3)
Clinton Vesterd'W a;f t e r n ot;an
(gave Thidir Excelileocies the Earl
and Countess sof Bessiborough, a
warm welcome when they r4oppetd
ollf 1lgog enough to say T1Qw'd Do,
'(the tGavernor,General acrd his
suite. arriived about 5;50 and when
the tra`n tPuR d in Mayor Trewar-
tha and cot'umil were on tbe plat-
form, to meet it, while the, nand
played the Natlonalt Anthem, Pup -
115.. of the Pdhbo School. and, Colle-
giate, the Bloy Snouts, and Voter-
ans were rdlilt formed up In the
station yard!, and as many citizens
as could 'get standing room.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Thompson,
Detroit, Spennit a ,few dlays' vislting
their tcousians, G. N. Daws: +and sis-
ter, of crown, 'and' Mr. arnd Mrs,
W, G, Moffatt, London Road, On
their ,returnthey were accomp-
anled by Mrs, Harry Marsh, Royal
Oak, Mich., who had been, spend
dnig ,several weeks: In the neigh-
bourhood, .
The Collegiate a'uduitonivam was
the, scene sof the October meeting
of the Home and School Club. The
main topic of the evening was an
address by Dr. Oakes, who gave a
very ;interesting as well as in-
satructIv , •tabic on, "Communicable
Diseases". Thte musicaa part of
the program consisted of a solo
by Mrs. Hearn, accomipanieid by
Mrs. Agnew, and an instrumental
by Kathleen Cosens.
10 YEARS AGO
Clinton News -Record
(Thursday, October 14, 1948)
01intoaa's well-known, rflorlst ane
sportsman, Char.'les; V. Cooke; has
rabturned from, a !fishing trip to
Northern Ontario. He and his San
Kenneth C. Cooke, Stratford, were
wd,tJh ;his other son, 'Tom Cooke
South Porcupine', who, is with tbte
Ontario Government Forestry Ser-
vice, in the wilds, oif tt:htaat area.
They Blow In, .by rpdra.n•e and dis•
covered a lake where no white
man is. belilwed to have i'isthed be -
Tore. Arad the fish were rea.115
,biting, judging from the wonder.
6 ul catches of pickerel and, puke
they made.
Lt'sCatletdoani'a, Eastern O:ntaric
champions, and Crtinton Colts,
Western Ontario Cha'mip'tons, An
the altl-Ontario Intermediate "C"
champitonsihi;p for 1948, The Ibest.
of -five series satarits here on Stat•
u2:day afternoon, October 16, in
the Community Park.
M. and Mm. P•emy Atkinson
and two. scans, Carlyle and Gerald,
'Blarri'e, Spent the, h.altiday weekend
with 'thtear parents, Mr. alai Mrs,
H. W. tCharleswarth, Clinton, and
Mr. and Mrs. Atkinson, Exeter.
SUGAR and SPICE
(By W. (Bill) B. T. Smiley)
I've been following the recent
move. toward some kind of church
union with baterd breath. Now that
it appears to be pe,teri a out, as
tat always : does, Intl unbate my
breath and ,give you my ophviotn on
the wha'l'e tMntg,
* 1, *
Protestant Christendom invaria-
bly meaninds me of the character
in a Stephen •Leaoock story, who
leaped onto his horse tatted rade
off hi al`s ,direction, A Jew knows
whiat hes as. He's. a Jew. A Buid-
dhisit knows, aye's a Buddhist. A
Cathoilic knows he's R.C.
41 :R *
But eek a Protestant ChTistuan
to what rdMgdoust loath he stub-
geriibes• and h'e'da not say either
"tChriatitan" ar "Pratesitant". He'll
tek you :he'ts Chturch of England
Or Jtehovtah's Witness, Or a good
Pre'sbytearitaant (all Presbyterians
are. "goad" Presbyteii ants) , Or a
Latter Day Saint. Or a Hornerite,
Or any of a myrdatd of other
denominations and sleets.
I knlow one small town that
bm stls of its godliness because, mt
has.. ton or eleven churchtes, all of
diff -event demmyAnat ons, ,for a pop-
utliatiton .of ,2,000. Now thfts aright
be un a tfinet community of 2,000
made up entirely toff eccentric mil-
alu' anaires, Surely It is the heightt
sof foAv (stn a Lawn of ordinary
working pleblxle.
It .las: like a im;ant telling you he
has ten houses, can't ,afford) furmi-
snare icor any of diean, 'can't heat
thein', 'has a tdevAi of a time pay -
Ing the taxes on, ,them, (but won't
lot anybody else live in 'them be-
cause One• likes to live inany one
,hie has to minto. ,and, it's ta. free
country attd Nvthy sivaua dila ltte and
If he teann rhise ,the money, he's
gn;ing to tbtttW some more,
Nowhetre hos, the, diversification
of gospel initerrptrettation run, sto
nam>pant as laid this continent. Pro-
tesUanitisan In, North America 1,415
become ea contugod with deornto-
cracy +thAt, it has; deiml;opedl moire
dem'omitnattans than, the 11rench
have political
panties.
Now thi;ts is 4.11 very well, up
to to polint. Freedom to worship
.ist you vk%! So is, rine wfilt• mc, and
f my noxt-door, uclghibour wtants
to ,gloat: ups al, ,dawn, guy out in the
.nacltytaa+d !and; hrtmrit��r iUislncwwd cit
lie ti;round 1st; the ior,ill diiee4on
to
oaf lV£erca, amore power 11im,
,w �,
But Pratmulanttism was atnL*4v a
strong :and, heady -brow. Men sac-
tr1f ced for it, 'died for it, seeking
.that very ifreedonn. to worslidp as
their nnirrdis, and hearts directed
them. To see it watered down, ln-
tgreddetnts added or 'thrown away,
watered land dtivided and diluted
,unttid no +two cusps taste the
same, is (like wtattchisng a vigour-aus
giant of a youth turn into a quav-
e0inug, forgetful )old Oman.
Think what a+fine thing it would
be for a stmtall town to have one
grand, mew iprotestarnt church, with
a great atuditoritum below for cmn-
mtunity banquets; draima presentatt-
dans and other gatherings, in p'laic'e
of leaf, to ,dozen: churches, with
leaky roofs, oubm;oded heaftg sys-
teims and dingy basements.
Wouldn't it be tgrand; df mstl -the
womeds. tongaanizadonrs of all the
churches were banded Into one
large one, erveryone working to-
g%-Ahter? Think oif the welfare and
missionary, twoatk that could, be
done. Wbuldn'lt .the tongues and
,fingers, ,fly, and the tea flow in
gallmis? The church would be dive
with tantilvdrty and' pnaA!r talll
throughthe,week, not just a
gloomy zgpua'chre of a place,
haunte dt on. Sundays, by a smatter -
Ing, of boreal! faitthfuls.
* � w
THi;nlc of the great thdtng it would
be to have tall' the mdrdstbm wotrk-
hig together, eialch dolnrag what the
did best. The g>oioad organizetr Mto
Is no preacher wouldbe pout to
organizing. The tyjpeis: with, an urn-
li"ted tolerance for meta Land syn-
tpathy 'would be ,put to visdidiinig
ipartishtonom. The goodd speakers
could deliver goad sreman;onst pre-
pared by the, .good ith'iavlwrs. The
thteanty Parsons could be Steered
gently into leading yourth, groups
and such.
xt >a yr
1V1':attterdtalily and sptiri•tUally, . the
town, Would' be mil& ,ahead; of all
the ptiatesttw t denominations! set
(titre itio their presenit edifices% threw
tatmy :their Orejuctaice's, built one
church and set out as Cittiistttitans
,to work and worship ttogeither.
At ;this, junlctUae, some smamat-
Alec is tgtoing to 48k: "Hoon heillet
yiaotlahe tokkon With all. due
modesaty, I submit, ray qualiflea,t-
ions, I once had' 'Perfect +aittend-
ance At Suntloy School:. Before
tho drink and wild women got ane,
t wigs presl;clotntt, tfor four years, of
a Young nren's Bible Chas's, Since
L got marnicd, I have been, dmg-
,4ed to c1mr-ch on. quite- a few oc
,r,,Wcrnts when ith:e weather was un-
wltablo for outdoor activities. ,
Young People, Clinton)
When T was• a youngster, I often
wvnderad' zvlrout the A'grgwn tuP
worad", I wandered what the
grown-utps, saidand, did about their
eaaaitdng world of romance?'.. Now,
many of :us are old enough to
etuter ttb'is world and most of us
are. '4160 ,finditvg out that ,this
g'rowrn-up -life isn't a. !path of roses
as' we thatd thought it to be. Every
day ,there are new QestponsiibINties
tGa accept, new ;decisions to be
made, ;new Problems to be solved
and this so.'called "wanaderfua
world oif ,romanee" has lost some
of :its bright lustre through heart,
break, tdisatppoin'bment, jealousy
and sesfIs mess',
From early adolescence, a gitrl
is tattracted to and- by the op-
posite ,sex, Around 13 to 15 it is
,ustialay "hear -worship" when she
,'Idolizes one, ;outstanding person;
la minister, teacher, movie star or
sonn'e (big boy around church, or
school. From, 16 to around 19 a
,girl endoys compardonshtiap with
quite 'a numfber -of young people
:around her awn !age, After that,
sihle concoiTtrates alit her arttendblan
upon tante 1person,, ,usually quite
ordinary 1'6ke herself.
IADst of us are well acqual'inted°
with the subject of dating. The
(boys we date should, preferably
be. from our -own faith and our
.own age. Every giro likes to be
seen ,with to well -ma nnetred boy,
clean, and cheeriful. In turn, a -boy
:does not like to be embewassed
in private or public by the girl
ht- is with.
,Some (boys seem to have the
Idea that manners, make thein, hook
lake "sissies". ,Manners show the
respecit anid consideration we ,have
for each other. We can, show our
lave biy kindness and, •thaughtful-
netss. which t a;s the Chnistt an prin-
dpal'e of lolAng one another as our-
selves,
.Inevitably, the questionof kiss-
!inig and nedung will coarse up.
Every girl has- ata make Cup her
mind ,cif she is going to be "harts,"
or "easy". The, .Chtnisdan glad', how-
ever,
owewer, should have enough respect
,for her ,body, the temple of Gad,
to beep away from. regular "spark-
ing" sessions with every second
guy. Kissing ,should !be an act of
:affection not ;of desire, therefore,
if w'e meet; and Clove one certain
person, it wila, not lead to .diifficul-
ties, (because the person who truly
+laves you wsill:l1 have enough respent
for you not to degrade your bony
or reputation,.
Sometimes soave of us axe s'ear-
eidt we are 'b'eing left out. Most of
the Cather ,girls have !boy -trier s
whiffle we are still all by ourselves.
Just remember, at tis, not always
the, prettiest ,gird that marries: first;
or ,the girl that marries- does. nat
always marry the tbes.t. In, these
things, it is .Wise to take adrvantivge
ofour beautiful faith and ask Gad
+fon what its best.
If a girl Junes, someone very deux'
to her :an •' asks, why things hap-
pen. that way she should remem-
ber that God plans, for the very
best dor sus. Usually momtents: olf
despair and, sorrow work towards
a happy 'future. The girl who. re-
members this ,and staW, "Thy will
be done", wlill. be a happy said
cheerful- person. Cheerfulness is
next to Godliness.
After the coturtship and tine
errgageanent comes marriage, an
institution sof God 111xn>self, when
a girl' matures ants a compbete
Won=. There 1115 not a more won.-
dertfol ocoupati!on ,for a woman,
than, tto be a wife to her huobatld
ande. mother to her c'h'il:dren.
She h!as to be a source of love,
devotion,, understanding, forgive-
ness, ,comfort anti happiness, This
Wt no ,mean task. The 91x1 who
marries with! the vdM that now
she can 9'u'ther jdb, relax, and
be pampered by'love and afilPeation
by her busiba:nd wiijl be ril&lPy
awakened to Vlfe.
Egnr:alay wrontg ds thetm'an who
rtliiankst that once he has his own
twife, he- can come Land go as lite
pleases.
There ds ,nothing :more discour.
aging to •a man who has worked
wand all day, t'hlan.- to be nagged
mba bel;piinlg with the dishes. In
th!e same waay, a woman who has
spent all day ,alone, does not like
ha hook at the (back of a news-
paper or, ra grouchy face aril• even-
ing, LittRe, tUitnigs, of ithbttghttfUi
,nese makea big!diftference !be-
tweern a happy or said marrialge,
Whent the first years, of honey
mioonti'ng wear off, the real deep
love will 'be tested, Since both
are human swath human faults and
tdbiects there tare bound to be mis-
und'erstatnidings.
A haPPRY anarried couple close
'to me, ,gave we this ,advise: Pray'
Pray every right for lave and
understanding for eatch other.
Could, you t1*& of a better way?
You can :pick up any magazine
today ,and it :wall halve an article
or +column In it concerning love,
marriage, dlmorce, ettc., but not one
will, earniestay say: Bend your
knees ,together and pray to God
for tguidance. The family that
prays together, stays together.
Because so many C11iristiran
,people have ,realized this, fact the
,percentage of }divorce rates are
much Mower :in tChristian homes
than an non-Christian homes. Da-
voroe is considered wrong in our
church, unless on the ground sof
adultery and, even then At is ativis-
abQe to stay together .and try with
God's heilip tot make a home for the
children InvoWetd. However, there
are. cases when it becomes un -
be iratbae. Tor a woman to ItIve with
a maaii, who, is tusuailly dl1runk, ab-
uses. his wife, beats his chiltdmn
and swears at Gad. A woman clan
pray for such a. man., try to help
hien. and ltorok rafter his chrldren,
but when btadt gets worse she may
certainly live separately from him:
until he realizes, his, ,faults.
Mh rhoge ds a Mull -time career,
The smart career girl, makes this
Profession worth her while and
G!od has endawed every, woman'
with talentsto .cook, sew and add
the special warmth, ,that makes, an
egnvplty house an inviting home.
May we .g;dts. of today and women
of tomorrow stand flw a ,phrase,
"Be a Blessing" and, use our Cal-
etnats to the best of our abilities
and to the .glary of God.
LETTERS .TO EDITOR
ON PAGE FIVE
Business • and Professional
— Directory —
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ALVIN WALPER
PROVINCIAL
LICENSED AUCTIONEER
For your sale, large or small,
courteous and efficient service
at all times.
"Service that Satisfies"
Phone 119 Dashwood
PUBLIC ACCOUNTANT
ROY N. BENTLEY
Public. Accountant
GODMUC;H, Ontario
Telephone 1011 Box 478
45-17-b
RONALD 0. McCANN
Public Accountant
Office and Residence
Raftenbury Street East
Phone EW 2-9677
CLINTON, ONTARIO
50-tfb
,OPTOMETRY
J. E. LOXGSTA.inB'
Sours:
Seatorth: Daily except Monday &
Wednesday --9 a.m. to 5.30 p.m.
Wednesday, 9: a.m. to 12.30 p.m.
Thursday evening by appointment
only.
Clinton: Above Hawkins Hard-
ware—Mondays
ardware--Mondays only -9 a.m. to
5.30 p.m.
Phone Hunter 2-7010 Clinton
PRONE 791 SEAFORTB
CILANCY
Optojnetrtst -- Optician
(successor to the late A. L.
Cole, optometrist)
For appolutment phone $3,
06detich
--------------
REAL ESTATE
LEONARD 0. WINTER e
!teal Estate and Business Broker f
High Street Clinton
Phone nu 2-660
HAIR DRESSING
HARLES HOUSE OF BEAUTY t
v
Cold Waves, Cutting, and t
y i;
St lin
IQ
King St., Clinton Ph. 14U 2.7086 e
C. D. Proctor, Prop. S
14
INSURANCE
INSURE THE CO-OP WAY
Auto, Accident and Sickness,
Liability, Wind, Fire and other
perils
P. A. "PETE" ROY, CLINTON
Phone HU 2-93117
Co-operators Insurance
Association
H. C. LAWSON
Hotel Clinton Block
Clinton
PHONES: Office HU 2-9644,
Res., HU 2-9787
Insurance — Real Estate
Agent: Mutual Life Assurance Oa
K. W. COLQUHOUN
INSURANCE and REAL ESTATE
Representative:
Sun Life Assurance Co. of Canada
Phones:
Office HU 2-9747; Res. HU 2-7556
Salesman: Vic Kennedy
Phone Blyth 78
J. E. HOWARD, Hayfield
Phone Bayfield 58r3
Ontario Automobile Association
Car - hire - .Accident
Wind Insurance
If you heed Insurance, I have
a Policy
Tula: MeRILLOP MUTUAL
IFIUE INSURANCE COMPANY
dead Office., Sea,forth
Officers 1958: President, Rab -
rt Archlbald, Seaforth; vice- pre-
ident, Alistair Broadfoot, Sean-
orth; secretary -treasurer, Norma
effery, Sea6orth.
Directors: John H, lvtcEwwin'g,
tobert Ar'cMbald; Cihng. Leoar-
•ardtt, Bornholm; E. J. Trewatirtha,
Minton; Wan. S. Alexander, Wal -
m; J. L. Malone, Seafanth; gar
ey Fuller, Goderich; J. E. Pepper,
:rucefield; Alistair 13roadfoot,
eaforth,
+Agents: Wan, Leiper Jr,, Lond-
�boaro; J. P, Prueter, Brodh ►
eiwyrn Braker, Brussels; x
funroe, Soaforth.