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Clinton News-Record, 1961-07-13, Page 4 AIMMII•1101.140111011r LET'S BE FRANK .:11SY YOURS TRULY PIN?' COOT Meer • .8MXPer Zlfe. 4 regOlhae EIOTii.'stpisifciCiPliti. COUNT ON Gkisf, UINE AT nosoNmxtupAiCTEVAIErtvict . CN SUMMER TRAIN FARES in Canada are the lowest in years. You get a big, friendly discount for the second adult in your party... and the third ... and the fourth and so on ... when travelling beyond a basic minimum. On rail coach, the discountfor those travelling with you is a big 40%. GENEROUS REDUCTIONS also apply on tourist and first class when two or more adults travel together. ASK ABOUT otlier discounts on Ctrs all-indUtive travel to Western Canada and the Maritimes. GO eN...together... and save. For information and reservations contact your nearest C.N. agent. C.J\J SUMMER DISCOUNT FARES save you money when two or more travel together! MNCanadian National Wed at Benmiller Mr. and Mrs. James Melville Radford were married on July 1, in Benmiller United Church. The bride • is Dorene Georgina Treble, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Treble, RR 5, Goderich, and the groom's parents are Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Rad- ford, Londesboro. (McDowell Photo) St. Andrew's Has Picnic in Lions Park at Seaforth The congregation of St. An- drew's Presbyterian Church, Clinton, held their annual pic- nic at Seaforth Lions Park on Wednesday, July 5. In charge were the Rev. Dr. D. J, Lane, Mrs. Robert Homuth, Mrs. Mervin Lobb, William Blacker, Clarence Neilans and Mrs. Royce Macaulay. Winners of races were: und- er five, girls, Geraldine Strong, Ruth Ann Neilans; boys, Leo Horbanuik; five to seven years, girls, Grace Strong, Joyce Neilans; bays, Scott Macaulay, Mike Graham; sev- en to nine, boys, Scott Mac- aulay, David Graham; girls, Leita Horbanuik, Patty Strong; over ten, girls, Mary Jean Neilans, Bonnie Homuth; fast- est girl, Mary Anne Hymens, Jeanette Lobb; ladies under 40, Phyliss Strong; Mrs. Neilans, Mrs. Macaulay and Mrs. Ho- muth, all tied; over 40, Mrs. Lobb, Shoe races, boys, Mike Gra- ham, David Graham; girls, Joyce Neilans, Patsy Fletcher; kick-the-slipper, girls, Brenda Homuth, Bonnie Homuth; boys, Clarence Neilans, Mike Gra- ham. Pony races. boys pony and driver, David Graham and Bill strong, Mike Graham and Scott Macaulay; girls, Bonnie Ho- Muth and Mary Jean Neilans, Jeanette Lobb and Patsy Flet- cher. Softball throtvs, boys, Bill Strong, Scott Macaulay; girls, Patsy Fletcher, Regina Herban- uik; women's, Ruth Neilans, Phyliss Strong; men, Clarence Neilans. Relay races, clothespin, Clar- ence Neilans' team; high jump, Clarence Neilans' team; fill the milk bottle, Mrs. Homuth's team. Chicken Barbecue Londesboro United Church July 25 SUPPER 5:30 to 8 o'clock Rain or Shine $1.25 Per Plate Children (6-12 years) 65c 29b HARRY WILLIAMS III12•6633 R41 CLINTON EATING OILS-GASOLINE GREASES 41001t0111., N 1St OD , Clinton Memorial Shop T. PRY OE and SON ciAKroN EXETER SEAFORTH Open Every Afternoon PHONE HU 2-9421 At other times contact Local Representative--,Tom. Steep HU 2-3069 24tfb SORRY! Phone Number in last week's adverfismenf for FINK'S Plumbing 84 WELLINGTON STREET should have read HU 2..7682 Please accept our opologies for this error and for PLUMBING, HEATING and ELECTRICAL Service Call HU 2-7682 16 Years Experience — Good Service 28x BEATON HITS HOME TODAY IN THE TELEGRAM BEATON CARTOONS Edmonton, Winnipeg, Ottawa, Calgary and Vancouver. Beaten syndicated cartoons bare appeared in major somsrapapers across Canada. Now, time pr•v•cativ• Beaton Cartoons are exclusive in TN, Telegrams. en Canada's Most Quoted Editorial Page DAILY IN THE TELEGRAM Kirkton Community Association Annual Garden Party FAIR GROUNDS Kirkton, Ontario WEDNESDAY, JULY 19th, 1961 Snappy Girls Softball Game —6:00 p.m. Budding Stars Juvenile Programme--7:30 p.m. (Chairman, Gerald Paul) Sparkling Professional Programme —9:00 p.m. (Master of Ceremonies, Lee Paul) Ample Facilities for Refreshments and Seating Free Supervised Parking on Grounds Police Protection Adults, 75c Children, 25c COME AND BRING YOUR FRIENDS 411111INNIMIIMINIP. Real-Cor roominess ...real-car convenience yours with Envoy's four big doors, with the spacious Glamour- crafted interiors that hold five big adults In relaxed comfort! All yours at Envoy's low, low price! Loads of features ...features that many cars in Envoy's class don't have! Like the 19.3 cu. ft. trunk (car- ries all the family's luggage!), wide rear windows and many others. All at Envoy's low, low price ! Envoy economy just starts when you buy! This peppy Econo- Powerfour-cylinder en- gine gives you amazing gasoline mileage, yet has all the "go" you need when it's needed ! Yours at Envoy's low, low price! FOR 1)011 eitE D0111111 ilavoy Special Sedan For every dollar you spend on an Envoy, you get more real car per cubic inch ! You can tell this as soon as you set eyes on Envoy—the sleek ColorlVfagic styling, with the most colorful color schemes in its class, the prestige building "real-car" look, the luxury interiors. And when you get down to basics, well . Envoy drives mote easily, handles more steadily, gives a smoother ride than many cars much more expensive! See your Envoy dealer ... see the economy car that gives you more real car for your car dollar! (Whitewall titres optional of extra sot) MANUFACTURED FOR GENERAL MOTORS PRODUCTS OP CANADA, LTD. et VAUXHALL MOTORS LTD. tUTON, ENMAND. PARTS & SERVICE FROM COAST to COAST LORNE BROWN MOTORS LIMITED 30 Ontario Street Clinton, Ont. Phone HU 24321 Automotive crafts-, mcinship is an Envoy hallmark ... borne out in such details as the carefulupholsteringand finishing of the comfort- able foam-cushion seats. Yours at no extra cost at Envoy's law, low price I ANOTHER GENERAL. MOTORS VALUE Why Northland Lures Famous fishing lakes in nor- thern Ontario bush country look like green tea that has been steeped for centuries, Calm, dark, sometimes shading almost to ebony in their great depth, their shorelines drop invariably from tree line to, the burial ground of old trees time and weather have cast beneath the waiter's edge, When I peered over the side of the boat to see the bottom. of Shoo Fly Lake, I realized only a native bushman could find the underwater gardens where water carrot grow. This is a favorite fodder of moose, whose herds are increasing in the hunting areas north of Cap- reel, Ontario, Pete Chenier, my guide during a recent fishing adventure, found one of these gardens for me. It was in a sandy bay and because I asked what the peculiar looking ob- jects were, seen floating on the water like dead fish, bellies up, Pete jockeyed the boat nearer shore, He explained, last year's growth that was not devoured by moose floats to the surface when the new crop germinates. Pete's nature lore was fas- cinating. While we 'trolled the bays and inlets he taught me how to recognize a "live" beav- er house and those that had been abandoned. My city eyes were soon able to spot beaver slides, which are paths worn through the woods to the wat- er's edge, where these indust- rious small animals haul the poplars they fell for eating and construction. I learned about the banker beaver too, one of nature's renegades, who finds a hole in the lake's bank :and subsists on the bark from pop- liar logs that drift by. These lazy types never make any ef- fort to join a house, or do their stint of building. Rain, which came down in spasmodic deluges, could not dampen our fishing ardour. Be- fore we left shore, Pete found a pair of plastic pants in the truck and offered them to me to pull over my slacks. They were about as manageable as a bowlful of jello on the edge of a volcano. Everytime I mov- ed they would slip to half mast, get tangled with pole and pad- dle and send Pete into hyster- ics. Most of the time I sat in the prow of the boat in ecstatic misery with small rivulets run- ning off my slicker hood into the tops of my fancy shoes, my line trailing far behind with a lure attached which apparently no •fish could resist. With be- ginner's luck I 'got more nibbles than a penny stock salesman, but womanlike, I Wished I had swallowed hooks with my lunch every time Pete removed the lure from a catch with a pair of pliers. I shuddered with un- sportsmanlike anguish when he hooked the fish through the gills and hung it over the side of the boat on a chain. Pete assured me I would ev- entually become accustomed to it. Sure enough, the fascination of waiting for that tug on my line wins soon greater than my dreaded anticipation of having to land a flipping, flopping, slithery hunk of fish flesh. Indian Fire Best Pete Chenier's eyes know the porttent of every cloud. A drizzle can be endured but 'when I heard Pete say, "Reel in fast", I knew we were head- ed for the biggest spruce tree on shore to seek shelter from a downpour. Peeling soggy bark from a dead birch, he quoted Canada's first citizens, "white man build big fire, burn face freeze backside; Indian biuld little fire, soon warm all throu-gh.,, My woodsman guide knows the danger of fire in the bush. He saw Shoo Fly Lake burned over in 1941. Each time we had to take shelter ashore to dry out our sodden selves, he took pains when the skies cleared to scatter the fire, douse it with water and wait until the last ember had died. Pete reveres the privilege of fishing and hunting in this northland coun- try. He never misses an oppor- Foam, 41'-'4401t00 Ntrws-Record Thum. July 13f 11901 NEWS OF HOLMESYILLE POTTes.pendent lget34409.7(7011 Grigg and Mrs, and Robert Jr:, All of Kitchen- er„ and Kenneth Bezeau of Lethbridge, Alta., were recent ,guests of Mr, and 1+//rS. Frank McCullongh, Shower Held Mrs. Harry Cudniore :and Mrs. Frank McCullough were hostesses at a shover honour, intg Miss Del Finlay, whose Marriage took place on Sat.ur, day, July 8 to Mr, Gordon, Howes, Clinton. The shower was held in :the Sunday School room of the Hohnesville United church, and the honoured guest was seated on a decorated chair, beneath to canopy of pink and White st, reamers and a white wedding bell, filled with confetti, A short program consisting of contests, with Mrs. Jack Yeo and Mrs, John Grigg in charge, and a humoroes read- ing by Mrs, Ninian Heard, preceded the presentation. by Mrs. H, Cuelmore of a blanket an electric mixer and a cup and saucer to the brideseleet. She thanked everyone for their kindness* and invited .all to vis- it her in her new home. To give the wishes of all to Del, Mrs, Bill Cox and Miss Rita Yea sang "May The Good Lord Bless and Keep You" ac- companied :at the piano by Mrs. William Yeo. Lench was serv- ed by the hostesses, assisted SQUARE DANCE COMPETITION SEAFORTH LIONS CARNIVAL Wednesday Thursday Friday August 9 10 11 tw-aty to impress anglers and hunters With the hazard of fire, Canada's Isolationists These northern camp opera- tors I wager, are the only Can- glen taxpayers who are not clamoring for bigger and :better road systems, They are con- tent to drive the lumber tote roads that lace the bush and would jar the molars out of a brass monkey. When they went access to a lake by a new route, they commandeer the help of native Indians and, blaze a new trail, A northern bush- man knows every pat hole on these wooded roads. In the spring when trucks that take anglers from one lake to an- other get mired they calmly cut down e. few poplars, jack up their vehicle to bridge the muck and are soon on their way. "The CN transcontinental line is all the transportation we need. It brings in our sup- plies, our guests and their gear," said Mary Chenier, who is the only woman camp owner I could discover in that region, "Our business would soon be ruined if good roads made it possible to gain easy access by car to these lakes. Ernest ang- lers and hunters are only sat- isfied when they can get away from civilization and wrestle with nature," If you could roll all the old cliches such as "last frontier. new horizons and pioneer spirit" into one, you would have a pretty accurate picture of Mary Chenier and her railway-fore- man husband, Pete, their char- acteristics and life in the back- woods. Though the opportunity has presented itself for them to live all year round in the settled railway junction• corn- funky of Capreol, Mary's love of the bush country is only satisfied when she is coping with encroaching nature. Some years •ago, when Pete was transferred as a section foreman from Felix to Capreol, they sold their camp at Shoo Fly Lake. Mary, who can fell trees, shoot like a man, bake bread and churn butter, hung- ered for the woods where she had learned to survive by her wits. That is why Chenier's Camp came into existence. Wh- ile Pete continues with his rail- way job, only guiding on his days off, Mary runs the camp. I could understand a little how she felt when I stood in that vast cathedral of trees and sky listening to 'the stir of wild life and learning something of the excitement of the kill, wh- ether it be fish, fowl or bigger game. Mary is content that the only evidence of modern civil- ization. in her woodsy world is a flag stop on a through railroad, The Ontario Safety League reminds you that the main function of your turn signal's is to indicate your intention to turn . . . not the fact that you are actually turning, be- cause this is usually selfevi- dent. Give your signals well ahead of your moves. 1 JMary as a Vagaboni.d Iilc IMOWEIV 444.11M1 1 Mr. and Mrs,. Manley Krea, by Mrs. John. ky, Michael anci David, and Reg. Killer. Mr. and Mrs, Robert Bezeatt Dr. .F. T. Bryans Dr, Frederick T. T3xyans, To- ronto, ear, nose end throat specialist, died Saturday, July 1, in Toronto General. Has:pita Born, near Brussels, Huron County, Dr. Bryans was a son of the late Mr. and Mrs. Ed- ward Bryans, a pioneer family,. He attended Listowel High School and .Clinton Model Sch- ool. 'and taught for four years in Huron County before enter, leg the University of Toronto. He graduated in medicine in 1911, and last month had at- tended the 50th anniversary celebration of his class in med- icine, His wife, the former Barbara McKelvey, died in 1951. He leaves a daughter, Mrs. G, A. (Catherine) Flalits, Toronto; 2 sons, Dr. Alexander M. Bryans, Kingston arid Dr. Frederic* E, Bryans, Vancouver; three sis- tem, Mrs. R. P, (Clara) Field, .Eva and Laura Bryans, Toron- to; and eight grandchildren. Service from the A. W, Miles funeral chapel, Toronto to Mount Pleasant Cemetery on Tuesday afternoon, July 4, 1961, CLASSES: Under 21 — Over 21. First six entries in each class accepted. $400.00 IN PRIZES PRELIMINARIES—Wednesday, Thursday FINALS—Friday Entries will be informed of Hour and Date. TWO CHANGES — Supply Own Caller Music Supplied SEND ENTRIES TO: WILLIAM BALL BOX 295 — SEAFORTH 28b