Clinton News-Record, 1961-06-22, Page 13?'vii News-psora-Thurt,r lune At 15061
Track and Field champs
Recorded in Hullett
Grand champion at the fNhett Township public
schools field day an Monday was Marlene Dolmage,
of SS 3, the Cgnstance school. Marlene recorded a
perfect count of 15 points, coming first in each of
the five events, The relay team from her school, also
placed. first in the junior class, and second in senior.
Marlene earned the Huron
Expositor Championship cup
for this achievement. Runner-
up was Tony Verburg, SS 8,
who won the senior boys cham-
pionship with 13 points, Med-
als were presented by Harry
Tebbutt, clerk of Hullett, for
the township.
Results of the meet are as
follows;
Senior Girls
12 and over
Race, Audrey Duizer, Mary
Mellwain, Dorothy Jamieson;
ball throw, Linda Andrews,
Audrey Duizer, Barbara Mc-
Kay; high jump, Audrey Duiz-
er, Betty Hallam, Deni Gerrits;
running broad, Betty Hallam,
Deni Gerrits, Audrey Duizer;
standing broad, Deni Gerrits,
Audrey Duizer, Joan Moon.
Champion, Audrey Duizer,
SS 10, 11 points.
Intermediate Girls
11 and under •
Race, Elaine Dale, Jill Golds-
worthy, Susanne Dale; ball
•
throw, Joyce Roe, Patsy Ball,
Elaine Dale; high jump, Elaine
Dale, Jill Goldsworthy, Linda
and Denise Radford, tied; run-
ning broad, Elaine Dale, .Johan-
na Walinga, 3111 Goldsworthy;
standing broad, Johanna Wal-
inga, Elaine Dale, Joyce Roe,
Champion, Elaine Dale, SS
1, 12 points,
Junior Girls
9 and under
Race, Marlene Dolmage,
Marie Trewartha, Kathy Dale;
ball throw, Marlene Dolmage,
Maureen Miller, Nancy Nott;
high jump, Marlene Dolmage,
Kathy Dale, Brenda Archann-
bault; running broad, Marlene
Dolmage, Kathy Dale, Joan
Preszcatar; standing broad,
Marlene Dolmage, Joan Presz-
cator, Karen McEwing.
Champion, Marlene Dolmage,
SS 3, 15 points.
Juvenile Girls
7 and under
Race, Kathy Schneider, Anne
Bakker, Elaine Vincent; ball
throw, Betty Jean McGregor,
TOWNSHIP OF STANLEY
Notice to Property Owners
DESTROY WEEDS
NOTICE is ,hereby given' to all persons in possession of
land, in accordance with the WEED CONTROL ACT,
1960, Sec. 13 and 19, that unless noxious weeds growing
on their lands within the Municipality of the Township
of Stanley are destroyed by date of June 30, 1961, and
throughout the season, the Municipality may enter upon
the said Iands and have the weeds destroyed, charging
the costs against the land in taxes, •as set out in the Act.
The co-operation of all citizens is earnestly solicited,
Weed Inspector Mr. Alex Chesney,
Township of Stanley.
24-5b
i
Jenkins Municipal Drain
Tenders are hereby called for the construction
of the Jenkins Municipal Drain. This drain consists
of 8,000 lineal feet of open drain, the excavation
and spreading of approximately 7,160 cu. yds. of
material, the removal of certain brush, willows and
timber, and the lowering or installing of 3 steel
culverts, Further information may be obtained from
the undersigned.
All tenders must be submitted on the approved
tender form; be clearly marked as "Tender be in
the clerk's hands by July 1st; and be accompanied
by a certified cheque for 10% of tender. Lowest
or any tender not necessarily accepted.
R. E. THOMPSON, Clerk,
Township of Goderich,
24-5-b
Howdo I save
When it comes to saving here's a trick worth knowing.
Avoid writing cheques against your Savings Account.
Impossible? Not at all! Just open a Personal Chequing
Account at the "Royal" and use it fer paying bills.
Then you can keep your Savings Account strictly for
saving. The bank calls this the 2 -Account Plan. -.a
sure-fire way to save, It makes sense, It's business-
like, And it's easy ...Why don't Colt give it a try?
THE ROYAL BANK OF CANADA
THE BANK WITH 1.000 FRONT BOORS
Clinton Stanch .,,., ,...., O. L Engelstdct, Manager
Goderich $ranch ................. H. G. Spring, Manager
Joyce 11411044, lane V1.0,1 ett;
..bigh hump, Joy4 ' .1-1411m, , Alm
i3akker, Betty McGregor; run-
ning bread, Joyce Iga11aln,,
KathySohneidex, Betty Jean
McGregor; standing broad,
Joyce Hallam, Betty Jean Mc-
Gregor, J`ee Bylszna,
Champion, Joyce Hallam, SS
90.11 points,
Samir Relay, SS 8, SS
SS 11.
Junior Relay, SS 3, $S 11,
SS 1.
Senior Boys
12 and over
Race, Tony Verburg, John.
Saunderoacle Trevor Moon;
ball throw, T Verburg, Bob
Bromley, Kenneth Wright;
high jump, Randy Babcock, K,
Wright, T. Verburg; running
broad, T, Verburg, J. Saunder-
cock; standing broad, T. Ver-
burg, J. Saundercock, Bill Mc-
Clure,
Champion, T, Verburg, SS 8,
13 paints.
Intermediate Boys
11 and under
Race, Jeffrey Shaddick, Dav-
id Preszcator, Peter Wester-
hoot; ball throw, Robert Wil-
kin, Johnny McKay, Tinimie
Bylsma; high jump, J. Shad -
dick, Billy Lapp, Herrman Ger-
rits; running broad, J. .Shad -
dick, 3. McKay, T. Bylsma;
standing broad, J. Shaddick, H.
Gerriits, B. Lapp.
Champion, J. Shaddick, SS
11, 12 points.
Junior Boys
9 and under
Race, John Goldsworthy,
Mark Arthur, Bill Whyte; ball
throw, Bruce Bromley, Jimmie
Anderson, Douglas Bylsma;
high jump, B. Bromley, Donnie
Jewitt, B. Whyte; running
broad, John Sutter, B. Brom-
ley, M, Arthur; standing broad,
Daryk Ball, D. Jewitt, Wayne
Arthur.
Champion, B, Bromley, SS 8,
8 points.
Juvenile Boys
7 and under
Race, Bert van den Dool, Ian
Hulley, Kenneth Anderson; ball
throw, B. van den Dool, Barrie
Bromley, John Gibbings; high
jump, B. van den Dool, I. Hul-
ley, B. Bromley; running broad,
John Bylsma, Nelson Dale,
Dana Bean and B. van den Dool
tied; standing broad, B. Brom-
ley, I. Hulley, K. Anderson.
Champion, B. van den dool,
SS 1, 10 points.
Senior relay, SS 8, SS 3,
SS 11.
Junior relay, SS 3, SS 11,
SS 1. '
Farm Union
Plans for Events
Hahnesville Local of the On-
tario Farmers' Union met in
the Holinesville school, Mon-
day evening, June 12. Secretary
Mrs. Edgar Rathwell read the
minutes.
Items of interest and coming
events of the OFU were brought
to the members attention, a-
mong these being the National
Farm Union joint board meet-
ing in Winnipeg at the Marl-
borough Hotel on July 17, 18
and 19; the Farm Labour Sem-
inar on June 17 and 18 at Unit-
ed Automobile Workers' sum-
mer school in Port Elgin. There
was a good presentation of OFU
members at this meeting.
The OFU picnic will be held
July 24 at Seaforth Lions Park.
Everyone is asked to bring a
basket lunch and their own
dishes. Beverage will be pro-
vided.
First 4-H Club
For Apple Crop
With 13 members and pros-
pects of more, ithe first Ontario
4-H apple club was, organized
this spring in Durham :Comity.
Objects of the club are to dem--
omts'teate the value of good cul-
turial practices and to focus at-
tention on costs. Marketing,
Storage, grading and packaging
are `other ~topics that will be
studied. The overall 4-H objec-
tive of developing leadership
and providing training in good
citizenship will of course apply
to this new project as well.
For project work, members
will prune at least four trees
in the home orchard, keep scost
records an at leash 'one arae of
orchard and will co-operate
with the parents in the spray-
ing and overall management of
the farm orchard. At achieve-
ment day next fall each mem-
ber will exhibit two half -
bushel lots of (apples of differ-
ent varieties.
The club es being sponsored
by the Bowntanville Kiwanis
Club.
OUR
TV' RADIO I►1E
IS BOUND' TO RING THE BELL
FOR AT TV -RADIO soRYIOE
s E sxCEL! Q
MERRILL TV
SERVICE
/15 Vla'T:OR1A STREET
rie HU /-7021
•,. .. Phi .,. .... . ,
Boys Sports Champions in Hullett
Champions at the Monday field meet held by Hullett rural schools are from
the left, back, Tony Verburg, SS 8, senior; Jeffrey Shaddick, SS J.J., inter-
mediate; front, Burt vandenDool, SS 1, juvenile; Bruce Bromley, SS 8,
junior, (News -Record Photo)
Auburn Obituary
William Haggitt
(Auburn Correspondent)
Funeral services were held on
Monday aafternoon, June 19, at
the J. Keith Arthur funereal
home, Auburn, for William Hag-
gitt who passed away last Fri-
day in Clinton Public Hospital.
He was in his 67th year and
was the son of the late Anthony
Haggitt and Laving Axlldley.
Bonn tart Blyth he spent his
early life theme and then work-
ed for many years in Detroit.
He was a member of the Aub-
urn Orange Lodge. His fellow
lodge members attended in a
bad on Sunday evening at 9
o'clock and a memorial service
was conducted by Edgar How-
att. Wilfred Sanderson, masher
of the Auburn lodge was in
charge of the service.
He is survived( :by two daugh-
ters, Mrs. Gordon (Donna)
Powell, Port Albert, and Rose
Marie, salt .home; a]so three
grandchildren; two sisters, Mrs.
Eppie Carrick, Goderich, and
Mrs, Lula Stoll, Detroit, and
one brother, Jim, Teeswater.
His wife who was' the former
Ruby Cater predecea.5ed' him
five yeers'dgb. r
The funeral service Was. in
change of Rev. T. Richer& of
the Dungannon, and Port Albert
United Churches with burial
taking place in Blyth Union
cemetery. Pallbearers were Clif-
ford Brown, Gordon Chamney,
William L. Craig, Harry Beadle,
Robert J. Phillips and Norman
Wilson.
In lieu oaf flowers, the neigh-
bors formed a fund with dona-
tions to be used for Rose Marie.
Friends were ~present .from De-
troit, Stratford, London, Luck -
now sand neighbouring towns.
Goderich
Township South
(By Mrs. J. R. Stirling)
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Charles,
Flint, Michigan, attended the
funeral of the late O. Cole and
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Grant Stirling.
Mr. .and Mrs. Ben Mitchell
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Bert Schilbe who also
attended the funeral of Mrs.
Cole.
Mr. Alda Gray was in Lon-
don one day last week,
If you can't get behind a
movement for the good of the
community, the least you can
do is get out from in front of
it.
Controlled Acreage Not Complete
Solution For Low Price Problem
(By J. Carl Hemingway)
The highlight of the Zonle
meeting of the county Federa-
tions of Agriculture of Bruce,
Grey, Huron, Perth, Welling-
ton and Waterloo was the panel
discussion chaired by Gorden
Greig on the subject "How can
Farmers Improve their In -
came?"
E. Biggs, assistant deputy
minister ofagriculture, mark-
eting division, painted out that
farm organizations ,arid market-
ing boards had definitely help-
ed the farmer. While the iiarm-
er's income is not what it oh -
midi be, he ,felt that it would
have been much worse. Mr.
Biggs stated that the cheese
marketing board perticularily,
and also the tobacco marketing
board had been beneficial.
When asked if he would be
willing to include the whine
bean board and the wheat board
he started' that he was not fam-
iliar with these as the others
but would certainly inic'l:ude
them as being good.
When asked the reason for
their success Mr. Biggs ag-
reed that it was due to their
ability to remove or control
surplus product.
From this we might conclude
that the answer to the income
problem can be found in acre-
age control as in the case of
tobacco or in producer subsid-
ization of exports as in the
case of the other products.
But let us not be over -enthus-
iastic,
Acreage control as practised
by tobacco producers is much
too expensive for wheat, oats
or barley and the effectiveness
of equalization funds as limited
by outside forces such as inter-
provincial mnovernent of product
and imports.
Some suggestion of product-
ion control seemed' rather hope-
less after Dr. Patterson's state-
ment that sheep producers are
little, if any, better off than
beef producerss,
We only produce 30 percent
of the lamb that we need and
only 25 percent of the wool yet
even in :this highly deficient
industry, prices are not (attrac-
tive. The support prices fixed
by government which com)tro]s
uniports to that level is so low
that Canadian farmens have
little interest in increasing
their flocks.
The meeting seemed to con-
clude that farmers must give
stronger and stronger support
BEATON HITS HOME
TODAY
IN THE TELEGRAM
BEATON CARTOONS
Edmonton, Winnipeg, OIt1Wa, ,Calgary and
Vancouvor c - •, Beaton syndicated cartoon*
have appeared in Major newspapers aerosi
Canada, Now, thoso I= h o v o c a t i v e Bartow
Cartoons Ara exclusive in The TeldgrMi.
on Canada's Most Quoted Editorial page
DAILY IN ME TELEGRAM
to their organizations and mar-
keting boards and add to this
the opportunity for further gain
by entering eche processing
field and thereby gain in any
profits in this industry.
By making use of all means
of removal of surplus product
an a national ibasis (and by far-
ming co-operative processing
plants 'to putt their products in-
to an exportable condition, far-
mers could assure themselves
of a price equal to the selling
price of exports. It will take
strong producer support to .ac-
complish these objectives but it
will mean a substantial increase
in income.
Motorists are getting so con-
cerned over the number of
males they can get per tank of
gas that the auto manufactur-
ers are •going to be forced to
enlarge the size of the tanks.
TOWNSHIP OF
TUCKERSMITH
Notice To
Property Owners
DESTROY WEEDS
NOTICE is hereby given to
all persons in possession of
land, in accordance with the
Weed Control Act, 1960, Sec.
3, 13 and 19, that unless noxious
weeds growing on their lands
within the Municipality of the
Township of Tuckersmith are
destroyed by July' 1, 1961,.and
throughout the season, the
Municipality may enter upon
the said lands and have the
weeds •destroyed, charging the
costs against the land in taxes,
as set out in the Act
The co-operation of all citi-
zens is earnestly solicited.
CHARLES EYRE,
Weed Inspector,
Township of Tuckersmith.
25b
,1•..,I.
MODERN and OLD TIME
Dancing
WEDNESDAY, JUNE 28
Mersey Brothers
Bayfield Pavilion
Dancing 9,30 p.m. to 1 a.m.
(No Slacks Please)
DANCING EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT
()ItE(1)11:17/MAIIYOCIPRIIEARTTERII
"NEAT" JUST RIGHT!
AND Wini OUR EINE€ WICf
YOU'LL DELIGIIT /
"SING A SONG'bF SIXPENCE
A Q6:4T4W I+N ECTRi
RIGHT NEARBY;("4* J
TOWNSHIP OF HULLETT
TENDERS
TENDERS will be received by the Township of
Hullett for the construction of two Municipal Drains
as described below:
The Bryant Municipal Drain
The construction of a main drain consisting of 2,636
lineal feet of covered drain, (12 inch tile), including 100
feet to be bored for the installation of 12 inch coated
C.M. Pipe.
"A" Drain, 515 lineal feet of covered drain (5 inch
4 Catch Basins and 1 Junction Box.
The Daer Municipal Drain
The construction of a main drain (2,350 lineal feet
of 10 inch tile, 990 lineal feet of 12 inch tile, and 10 feet
of 12 inch C.M. Pipe) and 1,940 lineal feet of open drain.
"A" Drain consisting of 784 lineal feet of covered
drain (710 lineal feet of 12 inch tile and 74 lineal feet of
C,M. Pipe).
tile).
5 Catch Basins and 2 Junction Boxes.
The construction of the Bryant Drain can be done as
soon as would be reasonable as there is no crop on the
affected land.
The open work an the Daer Drain could be done at
any time, but the tiled portion is in crop and would pre-
ferably be done later.
Information regarding the above constructions can be
obtained at the Clerk's Office, Lot 16, Concession 8, Hullett
Township.
Tenders on the above constructions must be accom-
panied by a certified cheque for 10% of the amount of
the tender.
The tile for the above drains have been ordered by
the Municipality for delivery to the sites.
Tenders are to be in the Clerk's Office by 12;00 o'clock
noon, D.S.T., July 4th, 1961.
Lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted.
HARRY F. TEBBUTT, Clerk,
R.R. 1, Londesboro, Ontario.
24-5-6-b
Congratulations.
to Ray Dupuis
on his
Grand Opening
BEST WISHES FROM
LIGHTNING FASTENER CO.
JUNE 27
at 35 Huron Street
from all the Jobbers
4days-Opening Specials-4days
Got
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ti
June 27, 281129, 30
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WORK BOOTS
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reg. $17,95
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FAMOUS KNOWN POLISHES
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Many
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Casts nothing
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browse around
Ray's Shoe Hospital
35 Huron Street
CLINTON