HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1955-02-10, Page 111
f.
4
•
4
,
4
1.
4
e
1
4
r
1
ley
,
.P,Iq,MilWOM44A4AU1U1M1uAn.MWIAWAIIII0111HAAIAR IMI MAWMAA,.4110011Wimm114.1AMAtA1r1!IIRIA1111.1,1MAMIMNMl1
v Check ).tvith-
Riv+erside PoultryCo.
.A .... to ..make sure you are receiving TOi' PRICES foir
your live poultry before selling by phoning;
COLLECT
or Kemal
l
-r-2
London
74230
1
'"
1 , li 1A 1 1 1 1
�, 1 IU 1 11 1 1 1 1 11 11111 11 11 1 1111111111 111111 4 11 A 11 A l 1 IA ,nitlll 11 t f/H1, 1 1
,YI4AIA.A . AL IAIIAAI p11A1, A. qlA to A .. A. A . A 1 U..A! ! .A .A ! ! ! 1111! AAM 1 . !VOA 1 ....! /l. IIS
MORE PEOPLE .RiLIE
ON .G000YEAR TiRES
THAN ON ANY
OTHER KIND
See us for
safe, dependable
GOOD EAR
Tires.
We've got a complete line or
Goodyear tires. in a wide
range of prices, Ask us about
the famous All -Nylon Super -
Cushion, -
JIMMY
H AYT E R
PHONEDAY 91
NIGHT 84
DASHWOOD, ONT.
GENERAL GARAGE SERVICE
NIIAum imp 111 iiimOHIO i i,um�g
Contentment •
. •
1 •
Phone:
Office 24
Res, 162-3
Now I lay me down to snore
Insured by several thousand more.
If -I should die before 1 wake
My wife would get her first real break,
But should -1 live for twenty years
Aly spire and 1 would shed no tears,
But we'd. retire, fish and rest
Back come our bucks with interest.
When aged,we will keep our house
Not' go to live with daughter's spouse.
We're 'thankful for the great endurance
Of the man who sold us life insurance..
W. • Herman Hodgson
"The Insurance Man"
Representing
CANADA LIFE
ASSURANCE COMPANY
•
Illl/llldlll,slitll/t/11Afiltt111,11111111111111141iiiii,ml
Remember Your Mdle
Valentine
With A Gift Of Quality
Clothes . from V l alper s.
Valentine Special!
20% Off Dressing Gowns
A .beluite aIeutieie (sift $arOins
Savlke-Row Suit Sale Continues.
VVALPER'S
PHONE 81 EXETER
ThE TIME$ADVMATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, :FEBRUARY 10, 1055
Report '011
Grand Bend
By MRS, E. IgEOW. N
Personal Items
iQreenway Loyal Orange Lodge
No. 219 has planned a euchre
party and :box social in the town
hall et Grand Read on February
14 at 8,30- p.m.
ROY. M. M. Irwin, padre of Ip-
perwash Military Qaznp will 'be
®bowing pictures •on. Japan and.
Korea at the' evening service in
the United 'Church On Sunday,.
February 13. Rey. Irwin will also
speak to the Mens Brotherhood
of the United Cllarooli,on Tuesday.
evening, 1! ebruary 15.
Little Larry iowalcgrand-
son
hu,g
tan
-
spn of Mr.and Mrs. Wellwood
Gill, is a patient in ;South Huron
Hospital with a throat infection,
Mr. and Mrs. ,John Kowalohuk,
Exeter visited with Mrs.' Nowal-
chuk's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Wel-
On Wednesday evening, Allan
Phile and Graham Farquhar were
invested in the .Boy Scouts and
received their scarves, After the:
Presentation the boys were en-
tertained by their leader, Mr.
Edwaz+d Stephens to refreshments
at Mr. Glen IDesjardine's.
Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Desjar-
dine and Mr, and Mrs, Orval Far-
rell spent Friday in Stratford.
Mr. Douglas Gill has purchased
the house formerly owned .by Mrs.
Sarah Hamilton, and occupied by
Mr. Richard Hamilton.
Several army families have
taken up residence in town dur-
ing the past few weeks.
Miss Sheila Finan , London,
visited the parental home on Fri-
day and Saturday of last weep.
OS'LM Donald Love, son of 1Vrr.
and Mrs. Ross Love, is home on
Leave for two weeks. Donald has
been stationed at Cornwallis, IN.S.-
'but on his return,will be station-
ed at Stadacona,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Corbett and
AL of Hensall spent 'Phursday
with Mrs. Corbett's parents, Mr;
and Mrs. Albert Morenz,
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Turnbull
left on Sunday for a few weeks'
visit in Tampa, Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. John Riddo•ch
and Douglas of •Sarnia spent the
weekend wjth Mrs. Riddoch's
mother , and grandmother, Mrs.
Mae Holt and Mrs. Geromette.
Mrs. Thomas Desjardine held
a quilting 'at her home on Tues-
day viten •the .ladies of the Church
of God quilted a missionary quilt.
Mr. and Mrs. Don Hendricks
and Mrs. Eddie Gill spent Satur-
day in London. ,
We are .sorry to reort that Miss
Doreen Baker is a patient in Vic-
toria Hospital, having undergone
an operation for appendicitis on
Saturday.
Mr, and Mrs. Leesum Desjar-
dine, Ian, Miss Eda Kiefer of
Exeter aiid 10, and. Mrs. Merton
Desjardine and daughter were
Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Byron Desjardine,
Mr. and Mrs. Ira .Stebbins left
on Sunday for a few • weeks' trip
to Tampa, Florida.
Mr. Ozzie .Qdbert of London
spent the weekend with Mr. Dale
Philo. t
M.and Mrs. James Wilson of
Parkhill visited with Mr. and Mrs.
W. J. Holt on Wednesday..
-Miss Darlene Desjardine •.spent
a few days last week with her
sister and brother-in-law Mr. and
Mrs: Gordon Smith in- Exeter.
Mrs. Gladys Scott, Mr. and Mrs.
Donald Scott, Mr. Warren Pat-
terson and son Gary, were guests
on the weekend with Mrs. Wm.
Patterson. i
Mr. and Mrs: Alvin Bossen-
berry, Mrs. Myrtle Bossenberry,
and Miss Agnes Campbell of Det-
roit left on Wednesday for a two
weeks' trip to Florida.
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Desjardine,
Mr. and Mrs. Clifford .Sheritt,
and Mr. and Mrs, Kenneth Mc:
Gt`1;gor spent Sunday with 'Mr,
and Mrs. Alex, Sparks in. Bay-
'
tleldY
`Fir, and Mrs. Roy Baratoa 'bf
Detroit spent the • weekend with.
Miss Mary Yeo.
Mir. and Mrs.. Thoinas Desjar-
dine, Grace, Mr. and Mrs. " Verne
Ridley and Jean spent Saturday
in London.
Message From
•
ippen.
By MRS. A. GACKSTETVER
Personal Items
Mrs. William Windor left the
village this week for a holiday
in sunny Florida.
Mr, and . Mrs. -Henry Gackstet
ter, Katherine and Henry, of near
Hensel", vleited on Sunday eve-
ning with Mr. and Mrs. A, Gack-
stetter.
Mr. Arthur Anderson was able
to be in the village last week
after several weeks of •illness.
Miss Marlon Thomson, Clande-
boye, spent the weekend with 111 r
parents, Mr. and 1V1rs. O. N. Thom-
son.
Mr. and Mrs. 'Leith Westlake
and Elaine, of Zurich+visited last
week with Mr, and Mrs. A, (leek -
stetter.
Miss Merle"Diekert, of London,
spent the weekend with her paar
erste, Mr. and MTS. Norman Mc-
kert,
Mr. and Mrs, A, Parsons Ylslt-
ed on Monday with ilia fornier's
father, Mr, Robert Parsons, yin
t Outh I•Iuren• .Hospital, Exeter.
Mt. John Cochrane and Mr.
/antes Forrest vidited on Monday
With Mr. John Forrest •ln ,Chin-
tort Hospital.
Purchases ]Rouse In Exeter
Mrs, Prank Bruce, of Cromarty,
has purchased the red brick dwel,,.
ling on the corner of Htiron and.
Aildrew street formerly °counted.
by Mr. George Wright.The truce
farm tit 200. acres has been Vit..
Chased by Mr Wykeltel. An auc-
tion •sale of the •fart /took and
affects was hold i'eeatitly.
Fire C.estroys. Home
.0f Crediton..Farner
The brielt farm Aquae of , Mr..
Harry Van Q001i was destrpYed
by tire in the .early hours of F'xl-
day morning.. It started in a
woodshed at the rear of -the;
dwelling, •
The fire was first 410te4 sly,
a neighbor, Alien Pinkbeiner,
shortly atter midnight. Alarms-
were
Alarms-were sent out and neighbors, to-
gether with residents and Rire-
fighting brigades from Crediton
and 'Pashwood, responded, but
were unable to halt the ;blaze.
Furniture and clothing in the
front portion of the house were
Vet i contents o,th
salve ed C nte. e
g leu a i s f
rear rooms were destroyed,
Mr. and Mrs. Van Qeeh arrive(;
here from Holland less than ono'
year ago And purchased the farm
from Joseph Finkbeiner. They
have one Child, born one month
ago, and are living at present
with •relatives. •
Worlda
Service Day •,
World Service Day was • ob-
served in the Evangelical Church
on' Sunday with W,'S.W.S. presi-
dent, 1Vlrs. E. Wenzel, presiding
at both services. 'Rev. 4. N., Molir
gave a fitting address at the
morning .service and in the. eve-
ning, the moving picture, "We
Beheld His Glory;�1 was shown in
full .color+ to a large audience.
Mrs. A, °Geiser and Mrs. 14. Hey
favored with a Vocal' duet.
W.S.W.S. And. Ladies Aid
Mrs, Joseph Finkbeiner was.
hostess for the meeting of the
W,S.W.S.:and L.A. •of. the Evan-
gelical Church at her home on
Thursday evening.
Mrs. I•I, Schenk was in charge
of the devotional period and Mrs,
Clara CDejong read the scripture
Mrs. Ed Hendrick and Mrs. M,
Feist reviewed the :study, book
and Rev, Mohr played selections
Local Mutual
Elects Feeney
The seventy-ninth annual meet-
ing of the Usborne & Hibbert
Mutual Fire. Insurance Co, .was
held at Farquhar on Monday with
a, fair attendance of memibers,
In his address, President Nil -
limn • A. Hamilton reviewed the
1954 operations which resulted
in net increase in surplus of $14,-
714.68, bringing the surplus bind
to $158,468,09., -
;Loss experience in 1954 was
generally favourable and the flat
rate of 15 cents was unchanged.
Wm, A. Hamilton and 1Vlilto1
McCurdy were re-elected Direct-
ors for three-year ternrand Newt-
on G. Clarke and Allan MaeDoug-
ald were appointed auditors.
A resolution was passed that
the company engage the services
of a fully qualified electrician as
inspector of .fire hazards.
Following the general meeting,
Martin Feeney was elected presi-
dent and E. Clayton 'Colquhoun
vice-president. A, Fraser was re-
appointed secretary -treasurer. '
OA his record ,player.
Mrs. 31. Wenzel presided for
the. business. Plans were made
for World Service Day and for'.
the World Day of Prayer being
held in. the United Church on
February 25. -
The February meeting of Credi-
ton Women's .Institute will be
held in the Community •Centre on
Wednesday evening, February 1..
They will hold a euchre party on
Friday evening,
Personal Items
Mr. Samuel Wein, who suf-
fered ed a stroke at is home h o e s
i
at
week, is a'patient in ISoutb Huron
Hospital.
Mrs. Adeline Traits, • a former
resident of 'Crediton, now of De-
troit, is a patient in Receiving
Hospital, Detroit,
Little Julie Schenk, of Ancas,
ter, is visiting with her grand-
parents, Mr, and Mrs. Hugo
Schenk.
Miss Maleeta Schenk, of Exeter,.
spent a few days last week with:
14r. and Mrs. H. Schenk,
Special ,.iaWeekp �
ssists Blind
"Concentrate on the powers.. the.
B11nd have left, not the vision
they have lost" advised Mrs, W-
E. Bending, president of the Can-
adian Council of the 'Blind, .or in
the words of White. Cane Week,
February G to 12 "Put the accent
on ability, not disability.'1
The white cane signifies the
desire of blind men and women:
for independence and social re-
sponsibility. On the street, 'with
the white cane to guide them,
they can frequently travel alone.
Their freedom, however, is con-
ditional to some extent upon the.
courtesy of sighted people, The
white cane becomes a silent nip-
peal for friendly assistance in
crossing busy streets or in re-
gaining a sense of direction which
has been temporarily hist.
Not only in his travels but in
his everyday activity the blind
person Is striving toward inde-
pendence. Blind people have en-
tered almost every field of em-
ployment and have been succes-
sful. Through the C.N.I.B. nearly
1,300 blind people were employ-
ed in Canada last year,
Assistance•to the carrier of the
white cane has grown tremendous-
ly since the first white cane week
it 1946. However there are still
many Canadians who, though
friendly by nature, are at a loss
to know what to say to a blind
person or how.,to go about of-
fering aid To anyone who would
like to help, •C.N,I.B. says: "Let
the white cane introduce you.
Remember the ,blind cannot see
you..,, .The first move is up to
yon„
The ptarmigan, a species of
grouse, is the only game bird
that remains in Canada's far
north. through the winter.
•
New Citizens
Win•
Poi -
.peers
Among the 39 people, -•-largest'
group on record ---to receive their
Canadian citizenship mere. at aa,
speelel session of aunty oourt.
at ii•oderieh last week were a
number •of district residents.
Iturpn'ra xiew, judge, Frank:
Fingland, administered the oaths
at aibegjance--•.•his tint perform•+•
ante of this .duty.
Majority of those receiving
certificates, 15 persons, were from
Poland, Thirteen were • from the
Netherlands, one trent •Turney,
fudge Fingland recommended
for citizenship 12 others who had
filed petitions. They must. wait
E na a o tette
r ti va r wa,
0 1 ro 1 fit
pp rn
Anions those :presented witk
citizenship were; Maas van Wier-
en, Richard,., Bogaert,. of the
Hawaii district; Alexander Woj--
kowski, Exeter; A, and Clover-•
diva M. lelikweert, ? iricton; An-
drew Blemmaert, I1ay Township..
Recommended for citizenship
'were: Ed w a.r d e. n d Alberthe
Weesjes and Mary ••Podolen, of
Kirkton; Harm van Wieren,
1, Hensall. • -
An old Indian took his watch
to be repaired. When thejeweler
took the back off, a dead' bug fell
out.
The Indian, astonished, ex-
claimed, "Ugh! . . . No wonder
watch" stopped ... engineer
dead!".
7 flee AAllMAA14A41 eme•eno41AMlNAAeusio/1meok11Al14esei A[tNA1inopippeel4lAL1!
1
rnpin...i.nxl HWln nr.
AATAMANAAMNAAIAAA41MAI .AEWMA
White Elephant
See Our Table Of
Odds at Ends
Of Hardware
25 To 50%on
LINDENFIELDS
Phone 181 LTD. . Exeter
a
*or
spoil
1pltiqloto morn mHollisltl/A4Iti1 iilUQmto* linsane! l pulllllilInsu nmpie a nto1 arnamm ingstmmnti
IRiLsuperGiant2lki.v
with new"Printed"RobotChassis
Full 270 ,sq. tn. picture! 20%
bigger than other 211'. Aluminized
screen for twice the brightness.
18 tube, Transformer operated
chassis, with "Printed" Circuit.
All -Screen cabinet, 3" less in
depth, 5" less lop to bottom!
Side mounted control knobs. ,
The Conquest Model 1•'2502X2
See It Today At .
Slightly higher in all -woof! cabinets
TRAOUAI R
HARDWARE
QU/UL/TY ,4T r't9/R PR/C615
?NONE 27 EXETER
A GENERAL MO
Whe you want to Go
-ybuhe gonna Go
No ifs, ands or buts about it.
When you give`the gun to a 1955 Buick with Dynaflow Drive*,
you move.
In the instant you push down the pedal, you get the action you've
called for --immediate getaway from, a standing start, or immediate
safety -surge out of a tight spot on the highway.
- It's notmagic, this thrilling and pulse -quickening response—though
it feels like the closest thing to it.
It's a princiyple of the modern airplane, brought' for the first time to
its; autoniottve transmission.
Twenty "variable pitch propellers" inside the Dynaflow' unif itself
canchange their angle—like the propeller of the airliner an change
its pitch from take -off position to Bruising position.
And whist this brings to you-uat the wheel of a '55 Buick—is the
!nearest thing to flight /nn wheels. par better gas mileage in your
normal driving and cru><sing. Spectacular response when youwant;it
for quick getaway or emergency acceleration.
But all this, Mind you, With • the absbbtte smoothnessthdt is donstant
in Dyna(low Drive.
Nurely,: a demonstration of Variable Pitch Dynaflow 15 a Buick
unitise this year. Well be happy to do the hon45ts • and show you,
in the doing, what a whale a a buy you ttiake here. Drop in this
week, won't you?
*Ylynajtow ntivk xr staliekted ail R 4dm41ker3 notional di atiitrd t»s1 on mbar Serie•1,
BUICK ALONE • OFFERS YOU
ALL THESE THRILLS FOR '55
• Bold NOW $,yltng
• New Color -Toned Interiors
• Wide -Room Comhin
• 'Complete 4 -Series
price Range
• Variable Pitch DynaftoW
• Highest V8 Iiersopowers
in Buick history
• Advanced
Million Dollar Ride
ORS VALUE
PLUS CANADA'S CHOICEST SELECTION
OF MODERN FEATURES AND EQUIPMENT
• ovaiaUe oil moot medal* as staltdaril or
extra -Coit Cptioes
Safety Power Steering
Nick A1r Stopended Pdwet 5roikes
EleCMt=Powered, 4 -Way Front seat,
Window Lifts and Radia .Antenna
Redfiner Speedometer
ted Seiretit Giese
Nettled Rear Seat In Estate Vllatton,.
1`Wo-Tofe rind tri-%tte Sxterier
5 Calor Cheires in C'etted title tops
Dual -Wit Heatfntl
Wire gamete
Prrli�ltdnga Afreeniiitioltir
mW!, of the year
isuick .,,.
Zurich •
PEARSCN MCTOR SALES
Sales Representative: Broderick Bros., Exeter
Ontario