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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1957-10-31, Page 34 4 NQ Decision Y` An•n.ouncemenfs r • , on't Close CJn H' meter S4it' ••• Centralia CARDS Jan a Says ' , e: A�s.pookyHa 9"'en'PArtYfnritefatally of the Jate 'k'ictarla down Yetill the :$x75,000tag-; the• birth of a son, Robert stay, sincere thanks 'to their relatives Continued Froin :Page l avhich had been made in build' held C at South Huron Hospital. Oeto- and friends for their• hind ex- •n ro.,„,ilies in file Ausable 3V1#« d h b t. bar 23, 1337- tt brother for socia ptr!seiprts of sympathy and beau- teished, tag training in kiai'vards tivas'tngs, • decorated Suitably foe the ucca- nd M a Jane. . a e of to t.1 I • t f pts shifted t A e i tributes e 1 d o tile w s h' bt t Co. .. I The e i t1 U c final i, telt 1 C At a s .til l ro 6k t u .f a G e' NATO . od elm p oclots ' 8p , 4 rizw— n n x � r sic s 1 � � f an Ai • tAn 'Tuesday evening when d is. l en , Arthur 5' ifr ISIRTHS10 fHoid Box Sochi. .At 'Spooky Party d• AGS OF THANKS No decision has been 1 d d i1CHNTHFad--- Mr. and Mrs. Ray n e file feral of box social was Guenther, Dashwood, announce. Deafa, dine wish to express their r Meier damage ease against leu— e in avers c urc . aseinen , t Hedging.. (.landeboye. announce the ;birth of a, .son. P'a'ul Thom- as, at St. ,Joseph's llnspitat. . London, .October 17. 1957 ---- brother for Laura and Patricia. .t1fl:lIl1F1' --- Air. and Aire. 1;d win Miller. ILA, 3 kiseter, a:nnprrru'e the birth .pf a 'daughter, Bar- bera wean,' at Victoria Hospital, London. October 24, 3937—a sister far Brian and; Barry. WEIB1t ---Cir. and Mrs. 'Lloyd Webber, :FIJI. 1 1W'oodham, an- ncunce the birth of a son, Ronald Howard, at South Hu- ron Hospitai, Oetob.er 24. 1957 a brother for Clifton and Craig, , . DEATHS VAN CAMP --At victoria Hospital, • London, on Sunday, October M7, 1957, Harriet .Alice Davies, of Exeter, beloved wife of the late ,. James Alexander. Van Camp, in lie has, Lound sweet rest at her seventy-sixth year. last. $pm,i. Airs, itiiiliant ea Ben, Iiia memory is as sweet today r•eeen sad bereavement. Special said they had.been given no in-' if flying training, is abandoned arrived iii ttanaraa in ,1'ttly atld jt ' ;,tanks to Rev., B. Watts?, Mr. .dication of when .the 'ud eneilt; at Centralia it lea b.ecome a'. is. expected that their traintn ILavew C G,I'T, entertained the T. Harry Hoffman, .sir, Gordon. S l + �'g ; C.G.I.'I'. .qf ;latllgs fit. United Eagleson, the pall bearers and will be given. I ground training school. It a1- `will be completed during 1858. the ladies of the church. .0 51 The case was heard. in July by; ready has a pre-flight school and I Although The original NATO "' Cl}urckl. To all. the neighbours and two Members .of the Ontario; there have been ruiners that the' aircrew training scheme is 1 All 44 1I!1$. were in costume generatis generously 1 have heour 1ped. re SO aiuilicipal Board.. i .officer :training school. at Lon• ; r.ea.ching its final stages, the j .and .Pat Gann, :Robin Smith. and trouble,sbotlil�at ithe time recent a don will be .mov.ed herd. , RCAF Will .continue to train .air- Jacq'ieline, Hanna were ]:edged aye [dent and a t the repairing of mayor Pooley, who said he - crew froze .some NATO countries. • the winners, the • barn roof; :also: the very generous donations of money, Mrs, JR amp Thank you all se very much..-- .P ports hopes to meet with Huron, made with countries which da not• square ;danelnS' were features of MrS. an u Prt. St Va;n. C Mr.and AAs Don Hulbert. ' IN MEMORIAM airs. ,Tatnes A. Van Can. , ? sable, what changes are taking , trauting •they I -•inquired• li was not alarmed over the re. These arrangements have been, Games, ghost stories and " lice Elston Cardiff soon and have .suffieienC training capacity the evening. ':"he leaders,. of Ca- IN - Born In England through hizil determine, i£ as- ()f their own to rovide all the. veil O.GJ.T,, Mrs, A.rt Wish• p p' smith, And MISS Mary Ann Er- IFAf,PXcle .In loAing inemot n1 l:or.ex example Wileassisted: b Program eon - our dent o 3" 7S, .of Exeter, died in Victoria Plane. 1t Was 1*ti'. Cardiff lYllo til$ .by the end :of this i lraipPr, who bra stied awayr'op a: hospital, London, on .Sunday,. *'secured t •h a sta.telnent from year trainees are expected to :ar- vcner, Mary Shaw, arranged file her t1, 1934. October 27. She had been a'. Pearkes that the station would ,.rive from three NATO gauntries ientertainment, not close, to receive training through a pa- ssim weary hours and days of tient since' early in September' modified version of :the scheme. rain' , when she fell in the .city and ' The mayor said. he did not in -r, His troubled nights are past, aA three-year arrangement calls f And in our aching hearts, we' fractured her lip. She was Ina- tend to recommend any official' �, ^ rn Band proving and expected to be ho protest front for the RCAF to provide Iain 0rrn Band .me � p s ont the town until: more in 4011,1411Y soon when she died unexpected- det details were g for 55 aircrew from 1 ly Sunday morning. a eknown fie eas not were 30 from the Netherlands. 1 .She Was th f I being considered because formerly Gertrude. Zuefie, in . As in the hour he passed atya. St. Joseph's Hospital, Thursday, we Cannot, Lord,. 'Thy' purpose October 24. Funeral sPrvieea in ,See, But all is well that's done by Tit P a. —Ever remembered by lila. sister 1dada and. brother Theodore. 31' C a.r.m e l 1 resbyterian Church, •lensalt, Saturday, ,October 26. CARDS OF THANKS We 'wish to thank everyone 'who .cheered • Danny with cards gifts, •flowers and visits while a. patient i South Huron 'Hospital. Sigma �L Special thanks to T)rs. Read and eta Ecker,, nurses and everyone who helped with Mary at home.—Tray, ll Doris sand .L)anny Shoebottom. Installs al« The family of the late 'Mrs. The a n n ti al pledge ritual Pledges OVilliam rt. Bell wish to express banquet of Beta Sigma Phi was sincere. thanlla to relatives and held at Armstrong's restaurant friends for the many kindnesses, cards and flowers Sent. during Tuesday evening. her illness and inr floral tributes The, new p 1 e d g e s installed and cards following our bereave- rnent,. Special thanks to n.+iigh- were M. ., Noonan Amos, •Kixk- bors who helped in so many ton, Mrs. ,lack Ratz and Mrs. ways; to Bei•. S. Xerr, to . the Cliff Russell„ Ship -lie. Bonthron funeral home; to Mrs. • 7iarold C. Bell and choir. ale President Jean Taylor conduct. Our sincere iba.nks to everyone ed the ritual assisted by Mrs. Thank you, --portion and 'Walter Geiser, 11 Mrs, If, C. Fletcher and Spencer, sic Mrs, Terl Jones. ...eine, Ipm,lllllllli filch Ilb10,,m11111111mt,11111UMimi 1,11,1II fifi I11/111,t111a11m1U11llllmmb i 3 who so kindly remembered nor- Jelin Goma'n, Mrs. Melvin titin during her recent ill Ne e d A Muffler Let Ua•Install An P Muffler With A Written Two -Year Guarantee! Hunters Duvar & Sons Linitod Phone 38 xa 7/filntlititpmt,itmrnmmlltltmmtummUinlrttmttliftrr,mnmllllltltimultlllll,mlllll,m,mll,Pm IIItIDmlimllitlllt,. Exeter the I surprised that changesOemuak, 65 from Norway and O al Seniors a e former Harriete e Alice D vie n new government was led e t • Under .arrangements :concluded a J s a d was born in p g d o I F cut down expenses last year, the first .of 360 German : , irst meeting for the reorgan- London, England. At the age of ono o e ses since this was i air force personnel to be trained . ization of Exeter Citizens Band nine years she came to Port elecO th Planks on which, it was , by the RCAF are. already in Can Hope in Canada and later to! I ads. London where s h e married) As for flying training, the James Alexander Van •Camp, mayor said it has been common They farmed near Belgrave for ` knowledge here foe many years several years and then moved " that the weather in this' area isI Your .Library to London. For Mr. Van C.amp's i not as suitable for the program 1 _ C health they moved to Exeter: as that in the west. I Continued Froin Page Brit • will be held Monday, November 4, in the town hall, Band Com mittee Chairman Cecil Wilson 5 announced this week, . I The committee has received approval front • council to re- organize the senior band under alp? It was published m April the leadership of James Ford, wheie Mr. Van Camp was en- Even if the flying training was l9 London, conductor of the junior band. Officials feel the two organ izations will complement each other in that the junior band. will provide players for the senior and the senior will pro- vide a stepping stone for young- sters who graduate from the junior organization, Mr. Wilson •said; that if there was • enough demand, evening c1a'sses will be held for adult ,beginners. Some of the.instruments of the former band are being made available and arrangements have been made for the rental or purchase of new instruments, gaged ed in market gardening. He removed from Centralia) ia) the The second voluine "The New died• seven years ago. Since then inayer said he .doubted . zf the; World" has also beent Mrs. Van Camp has made her station would be abandoned be- ! library since earlyinh s year home with her daughters, cause of the huge 'investments y She was a member of James , The New World Street United Church while in 1 This volume carries forward Exeter and Colborne United' /q,llan. Westcott Church in London. She was a member of the Wenn*Assoc Barley Winner cation and the Woman's Mission- ary Society, Parkland, the new variety of Lucie of Mary, Surviving are two daueliters, malting barley, made its debut And then comes Queen Scots. u en Miss Mary of Exeter and (Irene) in the Ontario Barley ContestGood e Mrs, I•larold Yates, London, by scoring a yield of 67 bushels Bess with the galaxy of great two grandchildren, Jane and per acre. This record was estab- courtiers who surrounded her — Susan Yates, and one . step- fished by Ed Wallace of Bells Hawkins, Drake, Frobisher and London. granddaughter, Mrs. Jack Smithp Corners, who last year had the Raleigh, 'Under James, Sir Wal, winning yield with O.A.C. 21 'tel Raleigh was beheaded. Funeral services were con- variety.. In September, 1620 the May - ducted by Rev. H. J. Snell at The contest is sponsoredby dowel set said — Forty-one of the R. C. Dinnev funeral home the Barley Research Institute, the more responsible members on Tuesday, with. interment in which provides $1,000.00 in prize drew up a solemn compact which B.lvth cemetery. mope aid is administered b is one of the remarkable docu- Pallbearers were Albert Coul- 'the Field Crops Branch of the nlents in history.' These men tis WT. Van Cam.n. Clubs Ontario Department of A i founded the tiwn of Plymouth. Such was the founding of New England. bnation of yield, field crop, and Charles the first caused trou- quality, of the threshed sample. anale and was finaat lly beheaded, ion quality, Ten prizes are awarded in n full swing.e Cromwell teinerged each 0f two regions—Region 1, supreme but his rule was inse- west of Toronto; Region 2, east cure until death came. of Toronto. Sir Winston titles his chapter on Charles II "The Merry Mon- arch" but the Popish Piot upset his debauchery .monarchy. Final- ly after an age in which Eng- lish ships brought her power to the far ends of the earth and Mi. Goodfellow announced the acre. Third to tenth rites ~vete i the advent of Will.iain and 'Mary p in 1688 leaves us on the thresh - spring vote Thursday following i awarded to. Ed Byers, Tara; I hold of the march to world power a meeting with members of the Clinton Magee, Flesheiton; Allan 1 of the English people. Hog Producers Marketing Board. He said there had been consid- erable,. opposition to the plan as protest meetings news - the destinies of the English pec• ple and' great characters of our heritage play their parts. Henry the Eighth is the first titan, then comes the dark dramatic inter- in. Nethery and Frerl Cook, ngiien - all of Belerave, Gerald McFalls ure. Placings db not depend and Gerald Glenn, entirely. on field, but on a corn - and Vote — Continued From Page 1 producers were not given an op. First prize ($100) lit Region 1 -portunity to vete upon it, He went to Leonard Kuntz, R.R. 4, said .belied' "openly violated the Mildmay, with A yield of 53.7 act by selling, hogs - to Canada bushels per acre and second Packers Limited without deduc- prize ($50) went to Alvin Mc - tions for the Marketing Board I Cutcheon, R.R. 2, Woodford, and had gotten away with it." with a yield of 54,6 bushels per Westcott, Centralia; Allan Need- ham, Ilderton; Thos. H. Green, Denfield; Wm, . Anderson, Strat- shown by t t t• ford; John Keiffer, , Mildmay, paper arficles• and a constant stream of critical ,correspond- and Herb. G. Weiler,. Mildmay. i An additional 3500 prize money ence being received by his de- I will be awarded to the Provinc- partment,cal Champions at the annual I convention of the Ontario Soil and Crop Improvement Associa- The Age of Revolution The next volume in the series is nw oreleased and is on order at your library. Watch for it any day now. It so happens . that publication of this book coincided with the visits of the Queen to Canada and the United States where she achieved diplomatic tion to, be held ,Tanuary 29 to trumphs on her own level, 31 next year, . Sir Winston was known through the two, great Wars • as chief architect of' the Anglo-American alliance, and he carries this thence throughout his account of this era. Be informed' of your ancestry by reading this series of books at your library. Town Topics Mrs. M... L. Parker, Barrie, and Mrs. E.: 0. Boddy, Kitchen- er, visited last week with Mrs. Charles Harris. Mr. and Mrs. • W. H. Stone attended the funeral of a cousin in Ingersoll on Sunday. T USANDS OF N[ -TOYS NOW ON DISPLAY — cHOOS[ NO • A Small Dtpbsit Will Hold Any Article Until-hrislntas' Lindenfields Ltd. EXPTER 100 4EAK5 ! £ 1Nteektiv teAft$MANSNt1' 1, '..& IttAbi1ita1 t'As Sags nF the Waal! g ti the Horses head hes& .hear old Mrs. Muer had ailways wanted an umbrella with e. horses head handlie, One day she decided to buy herself ono but ahs toads a sad mistake. Although she had oodles of money she bought one second- hand. On the a+ay home it started to rain. The utnbreila leaked and she could look right through it at the th underclo uds, A certain puffball which lay on the pathway home amid slyly, "Tried to sive motley, htiIl?" Exasperated, Mrs. Mugg hit the puffball a clout with her untbreIla and the horses head fell off: As it popped apart, the puffball said, "You only get what you pay tor". ta}I,YMen is tike flet'eeistit'. You .might buy one tins of insurance cheaper. However you must keep it!. mind that it is not the prcniiurxs •dict pay, but the lifetime bete you receive that decides the value ef your iriatiranee. Only your kcal independent agent can gine you template tns:lraitcs service. Over a lifetime 'yob could lose'Money en insurance by net using his counsel. :h a GINERAL AEGlt.t 1t L+reup W. M. Hodgson t" '-hti 11131)11111l;4i Miiie I p ON 24 tXtt'It , 1 • 'l>' i1 . Mvimito AAA.ACIPAMAIUMIWW1440104111, NAAt1alAWfilfithfi R.Myo.I441111014i4001444i;IAMAAWI4#4414 QED Dodge Next to a new 1957 DODGE, we Galt suggest ono. these many good used units. They are winter Mit viced and we recommend them as to road .condition and ,dependability, '56 DODGE REGENT V-$: 4 -DOOR SEDAN....:$2,O95' '55 DODGE REGENT 4 -POOR SEDANS (2) Each '55 PLYMOUTH 4 -DOOR SEDAN $1,6%1 $1,0* '54 DODGE'RQYAL SEDAN , ,. V8, blue, automatic transmission '$1,695 253 PONTIAC SEDAN, blue , ,,,,,,,.,,,,,,.. ,$1,Q95. '52 CHEVROLET TUDOR SEDAN. ,,,,A,,,. X45 '51 DODGE REGENT 4 -DOOR SEDAN Black $ 535 Don't Forget Your Prostone For Your TRACTOR and. CAR WATCH FOR THE 1958 NEW CAR SHOWING! Exeter Motor Sales PHONE 200 Fred Dobbs, Prop. NIGHTS 762-W or 769-0i, tlitmtteuit ltlminitttut11mt1lmmuitu tlitlltlmmtittltl natetmt1,t11muutlttmlltlltt,lulllum est not' the New 1958 STUDEBAKER 1s On The Way! See The Exciting New Studebaker This Weekend At Graharn JACK HEYWOOD, newly -appointed salesman for Graham Arthur Motors, will be on hard -to point out the outstanding new features offered by Studebaker on their 1958 models. SHOWROOM OPEN EVENINGS TO 1i30 P.M. Phone 210 . Exeter 1 ritten ny G Letters Latel ? ' N MR today's economic conditions, What 'you don't want from govornmentt, or can !o Without, will determine whether inflation is to be halted. In other Words, if is up to the people of Canada Themselves to determine what sort of future thy Will have. a Do your i" p• i'tsenta ivos in govorni tint at. all 1kvo'1s kriow What you don't War? Why.not write. and toll thorn? H STEIL COMPANY Of CANADA RtiMITtD MONTREAL OANANOQUE HAMILTON' OBIIARI:OROMONfO Y • i 1