Clinton News-Record, 1964-10-22, Page 3Next month you'll be able to DIAL Your Own
Long Distance Calls from. CLINTON
with
DIRECT DISTANCE DIALING
Direct DiStance Dialing is Eelrs way of
helping you keep in Much With people
. . with 4 new and easy method of
reaching a distant telephone. .With
1243D, you Will be able to dial most of
your Own Long DiStance nuinbers any-
where across Canada and the 1.1.S, as
easily as dialing locally.
Long Distance phoning will he easier'
than you ever imagi ned with DDI).
You'll Settle bUsiness matters in Min-,
utes by—melting the mixes With friend-,
ty, personal two-way conversation. Or,
you'll enjoy making an out-of-town rela-
tive happy with a heart-warming Long
Distance call,
You Will find b])b is fast, easy b
and funi
Lang bistarice he next best thing to being there BELA
MON., TUES., WED. — October 26-27-28
SEAN CONNERY and LOTTE LEYNA in
"FROM RUSSIA WITH LOVE"
(Adult Entertainment)
Coming * "THE LONG SHIPS"
Starring Richard Widmark and Sidney Potier
AT PARK THE SQUARE--GODERICH
THE Showtimes 7:30 & 9:30 p.m.
NOW PLAYING — October 22-23-24
GLENN FORD and STELLA STEVENS in
"ADVANCE TO THE REAR"
VIES
Saturday Afternoon — Oct. 24
$ It s Dog's Life"
Doors Open at 2 p.m. — Show Starts at 2:15 p.m.
AIDMISS1ON:' Adults 50c, Children 15c
DROP YOUR CHILDREN OFF AT THE LEGION
MOVIES 'AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THE
MODERN SHOPPING FACILITIES UPTOWN
Sponsored by Ladies Auxiliary to the Royal
Canadian Legion Branch 140.
Thurs., Oct. 2Z, 1904,011NA Hews-Record - Pope 3
it? .Oh, 'You dotet. WPM in trying to :114 !IThe with a phonate
that case, bus; naVe'to write yanked Pff the wall. Or
a dull,' insipid book about dull, the time I was beaten o p 13.7
41$04. old things that realiy , tow' old men
haw...mgd,
Boy, are you ever going
beibored reading about the time
the two :nine-year-.old girls -cor-
nered me 'the .tropliouse and
kissed me, Or the time T fail
in We- with 'the Brazilian; girl
in the doad of a Canadian win- •
ter. Or. ..the time 'the Old:
Eattleallo --chased me through
the snow *,,n her dressing-gown,.
•
BACKACHE
Whop kidneys Nit to romove
one as AO(ds nod wastes,
sack. ohM,tIffi0 iePIMD—
disfurberl root often may
Dodd'e iOPpay Pills
stiroulato kidneys to format
iNtY. You fool boner, oteep
hotter, work batter. as
Is Your Name On The
VOTERS' LIST
CLERK'S NOTICE
Of ,First Posting Of
Voters' Lists for 1964
Municipality of the Town of Clinton
County of Huron
NOTICE is hereby giVen that I have complied with.
Section 8 of the VOTERS' LISTS ACT, and I have posted
up in my office at Clinton, the 15th ,day of October, 1964,
the list of persons entitled to vote in said Municipality
at Municipal Elections, and that such list remains there
for inspection.
And I hereby call upon all voters to take immediate
proceedings to have any errors or omissions corrected ac-
cording to law, the last day of appeal being the 29th day
of October, 1964.
Dated at Clinton this 15th day of October, 1964.
JOHN LIVERMORE,
Clerk of the Town of Clinton.
42-3b
Allokratf&glat
GODERICH , ONT.
DANCING EVERY SATURDAY NIGHT
FOR THE YOUNG CROWD
This Week — Saturday, October 24
"LITTLE CAESAR
and THE CONSULS"
DANCING 9-12 — ADMISSION: $1.25 PER PERSON
Catering to Luncheons, Weddings, Banquets, Etc.
For Rental Information or Reservations
Dial 524-9371 or 524-9264
' ' 't," , ,.:*►7,4 * -Itzi, ;'4"
' • 4 4 • y. AND spico,;,
by Bill Smiley
Here's Truth Wilder Than Fiction
A PENNANT FOR THE KREMLIN
By Paul Molloy
PUBLISHED BY DOUBLEDAY, TORONTO
This latest offering by Doubleday is another
`gasser' by Molloy who earlier wrote the best-seller
"And Then There Were Eight". It's an "extremely
fictional" story of the year the Russians inherited
a major league baseball team.
The Russian inherited 'the
team—and a chain of hotels—
from eccentric American mil-
lionaire Armistead E. Childers
.who frequently was enraged by
what he called the "warmong-
ering" attitude of the United
States.
On the day he .got so stirred
up about it all that he changed
his will, he died quietly in the
rear seat of his limousine on
the way home, a wide smile
across his face.
The Russians, of course; gave
the hotels to the employees, re-
naming the chain "The People's
Hotels", but they kept the
Chicago, White Sox team "to
show those Capitalistic fans
how to play the game,"
The ball players consider go-
ing on strike—until. they learn
they will share the gate re-
ceipts in the true spirit of
Communism.
A newly-appointed Commissar
of Baseball enters the plot
with his violet-eyed daughter,
and astounds the baseball pros
GLOVE COMPARTMENT AUTO BOOK
By Ralph Stein
(Auto Editor, `This Week Magazine)
PUBLISHED BY RANDOM HOUSE OF CANADA
Here it is in one handy, compact package
which will take up no more room in the glove tom-
• partment of your automobile than a package of
cigars or a ham sandwich, and Which Will prove to
be of much greater use than either or both.
This is the wine...
— —
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A Clean Life!
BY. OFFERING YOU
ALL THESE SERVICES:
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(2) Clean-Only Dry-Cleaning
(25c Per Pound-10 Lbs. for $2.00)
At Our Plant-166 Beech Street:
Our Dry-Cleaning Dept. is managed by
Ray Garon, a graduate of the National
Institute of Dry-Cleaning, Silver Springs,
Maryland, U.S.A. We employ the most
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—Let us advise you regarding special
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FINISH WASH — THRIFTY
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DRY WASH .., (11c Per Lb.)
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(4) Garment and Shirt Rental
This Service includes Dress Shirts, Work
uniforms, Coveralls, Etc.
(5) Coin-Operated' Laundry
These facilities and our Cash and Carry
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at 63 ALBERT STREET.
(6) Fur Storage Vault
We give complete insurance coverage.
(7) Minor Repairs & Alterations
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Three,Hour Service
Special Attention When Required.
gkevarsitryzs
Brucefield Woman
Wins Sales Award
nal •which can be hung out the
Side window of your bar if ever
you are in distress. in large
red block letters on a white
background, it reads "SEND
AID."
W. G. CAMPBELL
13ox 859 -- Ph. 486
teafortht Ont. ,
I've decided to write a book.
Net because I want to.. Not be-
cause .I have a message, Not
becattse I .think anybody will
buy iit. But because a fellow
has dared me' tO,
He was a publisher. I told
him t1.14-wropls of people—nay,
thottsands—had asked me when
I was going to produce a hook-
Made up of my columns. This
Was a big, fat lie, of course.
I think the total of the queries
Was between twelve and thir-
teen.
He was nice about it, if a
little • oteely-eyed. He !agreed
that there'd be a big sale,. if I
bought the 1,000 copies i prom-
ised to, buy; to give away to
my friends. (They'd be getting
about 120 copies each, alt that
rate, but 'they could give them
away to THEIR friends.)
He agreed that' the whole
thing was a great idea, For
some other publisher, But he
sort of took the steer out of
selfesteem when he came
out with the logical statement,
""If a book is worth publish-
ing, it's worth writing,"
This 'is the sort of thing
publishers sit around thinking
up, when they're not worrying
about some of us great writers
getting away from them.
Which they don't seem to spend'
an „excess of time doing. Un-
fortunately, writers can't flash
back with, "If a book is worth
writing, it's woritzh publishing,"
Mainly because it isn't true,
What's the book going to be
about? Well, that's still on the
secret list, because I don't
know. But after looking over
a few shelves of books at the
local library,. I know that pub-
lishers will print almost any
kind of garbage.
So, if it's garbage they want,
I'm going to make up 'the big-
gest literary garbage pail that
has ever been set before the
public. It's going to be cram-
BANK JOB
By Thomas B. Reagan
PUBLISHED BY DODD, MEAD AND COMPANY
Don't start this book unless you have the entire
afternoon or evening free to read it from cover to
cover . . . you won't want to put it down!
Hensall Operator'
Plans Retirement
After 29 Years
HENSALL — Mrs. Pearl
Shaddick, a telephone operator-
here for 29 years, will retire on
Nov. 15 when the changeover
to dial telephones takes place.
Mrs, Shaddick started , her
long telephone career at Clin-
ton under the late manager
Mri. Clara Rurnball, and 'Chief.
Operator Miss Lily Kennedy.
For the past 15 years she
has been the night operator
here'—and never too busy to
provide the correct time and
/the 'hockey scores, when re-
quested.
Messengers Meet
About 40 members of the,
Brucefdeld Messengers met Oct
4 for the' October meeting.
With the help of several mem-
bers a -chapter of the study
book was reviewed.
The balance of the meeting
was , spent in preparation for
the Messenger family program
which will be held Nov. 15, and
Glen McGregor distributed cop-
ies of "World Frier ds".•
And 'Promotion
11/4-.s. Roily S'zwaba o' RR 1.
Brticefielti, local -representative.
for, Studio Girl-Interaational
Cosmejibs of :Hollywood,. this
We* was awarded tile Prgan...-
itten'a Golden. _Cretan Award
of AehleveMent. :and netified!
Of 'her PA/Motion to Area
Meeting,
Announcement of 'the Golden
Crown Award was :made by
Harry F, Taylor, president .of
the cosmetics organizatlion,
from the firin!s -executive of-
fices in Hollywood;
Mrs. Szwaba is also a coup.-
seller for the firm, and re-
.cruits and trains other women
in the field, She, is. married to
Ted Szwaba of. Brucefield, and
is the mother of three children.
WIll Lecture
She belongs to St. Paul's
Church, Clinton,• is a member
of the Women's Auxiliary of
Clinton •Legian Branch 140,
and a member of the American
()rebid SociertY.
In her new capacity of Area
Meeting Leader she will give
lectures ,and training in the
area of skin care:, hair care and
make-up before other Studio
Girl representatives in tibia
area.
She also will be appointing
and training three mere llocal
Women as beauty advisers for
:advancement in Studio Girls'
expansion program,
Buying Hints
Things to look for in buying
apples, say the Ontario apple
growers: apples displayed in a
cool place, -evidence of careful
handling no cuts or bruises,
medium ito large in size. Colour
is not a good indicator of taste.
Some sweet apples, like Green-
ings, are green when ripe.
Odour indicates maturity
even better than their hard-
ness or softness. For example,
Spies are quite hard when ma-
ture, Macs are firm but not
hard; both smell delicious when
they are eating ripe,
mead with sex,, violence,. della-
quent teenagers, Corrupt poll.-
ticians, dope fiends, alcoholics,
doctors, q)W-iiQyP4, IIQW to raise
prize 'zinnias, favorite recipes,
and •all the other ingredients
of the .most :successful books,
It will be autobiographical,.
of course. At first, I thought
that might be a little difficult,.
as I've- led rather a sheltered
life. Then I realized that all.
I had ta do was .decorate
things a little. Gild the. Billy
so to speak.
Thus, !instead of going to
'high seltoel and being the
football team and going steady,
in the hook be the loader
of a group of teenage terrorists
who get their kicks. out of set,
ting fire to nursing homes, un-
der the influence of heroin.
Instead of joining the air
force, and becoming an officer
and a fighter pilot and having
a ball most of the time, in the
book I'll be .an army priVate,
intellectual 'and embittered, un-
der the whip of a' sadistic cap-
tain,
- Instead of spending a year
in a sanatorium, -loafing, laugh-
ing, playing chess and reading,
in the book spend a year
in a mental institution with a
gang of perverts, alleles, junkies
and a 'd'octor straight out of
Edgar Allan Poe.
Instead of 'becoming a week-
ly editor, writing about sewers
and such, in the book I'll be
an ,advertising executive with
three mistresses; no morals and
an unlimited expense account.
Instead of becoming a docile
English teacher peddling meta-
phors and similes, in the book
I'll be a famous television per-
sonality with great talent and
no scruples, who poisons the
minds of his listeners with clev-
erly disguised racial prejudice
and completely undisguised
commercials about armpits.
How -does it sound? You like
holdup. "The Head" has even
imported a booze-loving former
Hollywood rhake,up artist to,
study the characters hwolved
and to disguise them so their
own mothers wouldn't know
them,
. . . Except Some . •
He has brought along a rac-
ing car driver and a battered-
looking station wagon capable
of 1.75 miles per hour,an elect-
ronics specialist to assemble
two-way radios and the best
shot in the country — such a
good shot he can put a bullet
between the two bones of the
forearm without even nicking
either bone.
And all the possibilities are
checked into. The eventuality
of double-cross, is guarded
against, but there are just some
things no one can ever fore-
see .
with his complete knowledge
of baseball, gleaned from bubble
gum cards.
When the Commissar's dau-
ghter gets involved with one of
the , players, wheels Within
Wheels revolve as the Russians'
Washington Embassy puts her
and her father, and the team
under surveillance.
Mounting Suspense
Leading the plot at all times
is the World Series, in which
the Communist-inanaged team
presses closer to the pennant
alt 'the turn of every page.
The plot and its handling
makes for delightful, light read-
ing although suSpense builds
'throughout the book.
Molloy, father of eight child-
ren, Is a feature Columnist on
the staff of the' Chicago Sun-
Times: He has Won numerous
awards in the field of jour-
nalism,
It also tells what• to do in
case of accident, engine trottble
on the road, or how to deal
with major and minor injuries
or ilhiesVeS whik, travelling.
Ideal Gift Item
The/ book takes you from
Newfoundland to Alaska and
down to Central America and
includes charts on mileage
distances 'between U.S. cities,
and tips on driving in, Europe,
Mexico and Central America.
At $1.35, this handy helper
makes an ideal gift for anyone
who ttriveS or owns a ear .
after' you've tucked one away
in. the -emit compartment of
your own car.
Down Memory Lane
The above photo was taken about 1902 at Clinton, and shows the town's
first knitting mill, which was located on "commons" land, bounded by James
St., Gordon Terrace and. Matilda Street. The building later was turned into an
evaporator, for producing dried apples. • The mill employees in. the above pic-
ture, from the left, are: John Spalding, Tommy Britton, Lottie Slornan, Rena
Finch, Lily Reed, Dot Churchill, Susie Sileock, Lily Rands, Sarah Marshall,
Mary Livermore, Delia O'Donnel, Cindy Cornish, Martha Levy and Pat Spald-
ing, The original photograph from which this engraving was made, was loaned
to the News-Record by Fred .Slornan.
out to commit the perfect bank
robbery with every possible
chance of capture eliminated,
"'The Head", a perfectionist,
has imported specialists in cer-
tain fields of crime to his small
hometown in Oklahoma where
a half million dollars in small,
unmarked bills is just waiting
for the snatch.
His perfect planning involVes
his brother, the bank manager,
blackmailed into co-operation,
vvho is to be •sbot during the
"Bank Job" is a novel, and
has a basically simple plot, but
the tale is told with wizardry
and genius and the suspense
mounts as steadily and surely
as a summer storm.
Even after the climax—which
the reader can •sight from page
one — wine unexpected denou-
ments which sneak up on the
reader when he least expects it.
All The Angles
Bill Adams, known in crim-
inal circles as "The Head", sots
The boOk eontatinS everything
about and connected with mot-
oring from how to buy or sell
a used car to how to travel
with pets and Children, and how
to get the latter into a hotel
or motel while on a trip.
Other •tips include hew to
clean Foul' Car, change a tire,
how' to tow. a Car, holw to drive
an all kinds Of weather an all
kinds of roads, anti an explana-
den Of how your ear's engine
Wotks.
Distress Signal
Inside the back cover of the
'book is a fold out chstrets sig-
ra.ets do not 'coase to exist
because they are Ignored.
The greaWst ability de.
penclabilltY,
Book Review By David E. Scott
MUTUAL FUNI1S ARE
HELPING MANY PEOPLE
TO P1NANctAL SUCCESS.
(8) Pick-Up and Delivery Daily
(9) Same Day Service
When requested, Dry-Cleaning & Laundry
in at 9 a.m, can be picked up at 5 p.m.
LIMiTED