HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1959-07-02, Page 7c;E couple save girI
after fall in pool at GB
A Centralia RCAF officer and
his wife have been credited with
saving the life of a two-year-old
girl who fell into the swimming
pool at the Cal'onial Hotel, Grand
Bend, Monday afternoon.
Sqdn. Ldr. Barry Dragon.
clothed in his uniform, jumped
into the pool to retrieve Susan
Klopp, two, daughter of hotel
owner Harold Klopp and Mrs.
)Bopp.
He had just returned from
work la the trailer which he had
rented in Red Gable Court, ad-
joining the hotel. Seeing the
child floating face -down, he leap-
ed the fence between the two
properties.
He applied artificial respira-
tion until his wife, a registered
nurse, took over. hirs. Dragon
later applied the village's re-
suscitator to take water off the
child's stomach.
Dr. V. Gulens, of Dashwood,
ordered the girl to South Huron
Hospital for nhservatinn. She re-
turned home Wednesday.
The resuscitator was purchas
ed two years ago from funds
raised in a public subscription
spearheaded by Cpl. Neil Cham-
berlain.
Drill for water
A $5,000 contract for test dril-
ling for water in Grand Bend
has been let to the International
Water Supply Company, Limited,
by the Ontario Resources Com-
mission.
Reeve James Dalton said this
week drilling will commence as
soon as land options have been
secured.
"Geologists tell us there is an
excellent chance of securing a
plentiful water supply," Mr.
Dalton stated. "If so, we will be
able to avoid the costly pro-
jects of tapping into the London
pipeline or of installing our own
pipeline from the lake."
Council has authorized an ex-
Pastor9 ives
final sermon
Rev. Harold J, Snell, com-
pleted a 12 -year pastorate at
James Street United Church on
Sunday. A. large congregation
filled the church at the morning
service and said goodbye to one
who has endeared himself not
only to his congregation but to
the citizens at large. 1
Mr. Snell's farewell sermon
was the same that he preached,
to the congregation on the ossa
cion of his first coming to Exe-
ter.
A solo was sung by Mrs. J.
Goma.n.
Mr. Snell was inducted into j
his new charge,- Riverside;
United Church, Oakridge Acres, •.
Tuesday evening by the Middle- I
sex Presbytery. Among those'
who assisted at the induction was
Rev. Alex Rapson, of Hyatt Ave.
United Church, a former min-'
ister of Main St. Church.
Rev. S. E. Lewis, who comes!
to Exeter from Collier Street
United Church, will be inducted
into James St. Church Friday
evening at 8 o'clock. The service
will be conducted by Rev. James
Semple, • Egmondville; Rev Syd-
ney Davidson, Brucefield, and
Rev. Thomas Pitt, Varna.
Lions bring
circus here
On Wednesday, Ju x
ter Lions Club will bring to this
district its first live circus in
over two decades.
Carson and Barnes, billed as
America's third largest wild
animal circus, will present af-
ternoon and evening shows at.
Exeter Community Park, Itis
just completing a run through
Michigan.
Tuesday it plays in Grand
Bend under the sponsorship of
the Lions Club there.
Headliner of the show is Col.
Tim McCoy, hero of over 300
western movies and 100 TV
programs, who will perform
sharp shooting, fancy riding and
other western. tricks.
Also given top billing le Dave
Hooper, 25, one of the world's
youngest wild animal trainers.
He will perform in a specially
built steel arena. Hoover was
.started on his unusual career by
an uncle in England at the ten-
der age of 12.
Star' animalwith the show is
,losky, an 11,o00 pound elephant
claimed to be the largest per-
' forming elephant on tour in
North America today. A special
40 -foot steel semi had to be
built to transport the animal.
The show also boasts aerial-
ists, •clowns and a menagerie of
wild animals,
The publie will be allowed. to
visit the show grounds at 10
e,m. Wednesday to watch the
.feeding and watering of the ani-
mals and to see the elephants
erect the big top.
penditure of up to $5.000 for the
.drilling; however, it indicated it
would consider approval of a
further $2,50() if this appeared
practical.
Council will issue debentures
through the OWRC to finance
the project.
TV star performs
Sylvia Murphy, first of a
series of ('anadian. TV stars in
appear this summer at Lake-
view Casino, Grand Bend, enter-
tained a crowd there Tuesday
night.
Three other headliners are to
appear at the Casino this month.
The Hanies Sisters will appear
;Wednesday, .July 8; "Cousin
(.'lem" Gordy Tapp Wednesday,
July 15, and The Rhythm Pals.
Wednesday. July 22.
The Casino is sponsoring a
teen town ball each Thursday
night.
Crowd fills resort
Ttemperature .iii the 90's and
high humidity sent people flock-
ing to the lake area over. the
weekend. Grand Bend played
host to one of the largest crowds
in its history Sunday.
Maximum temperatures climb-
ed steadily from Thursday's 77.2
' to Sunday's 91.2. A cold front
, Tuesday brought it down to .66.7'
Wednesday but it climbed back
, to 85.3 Wednesday.
Humidity hit a density of 88
percent early Sunday morning.
Despite the size of the crowd
at. Grand Bend, it was an order-
ly one, according to OPP Cpl.
Neil Chamberlain.
j Another big crowd invader) the
resort on. the July 1 holiday,
Union asks conciliation
over wage differences
Less than three weeks after surance claim. Included also
it was certified, the union at, were six paid holidays and $2,000
General Coach, Hensall, applied life insurance, 'the spokesman
Tuesday for conciliation in its said,
contract dispute with the cam-; During the same period, basic
pang. swage rates hate been raised by
The decision was taken follow -1 72 percent including an ineen-
ing a three-hour meeting at the tive system established by the
plant Monday night. j company. This plan, which rec-
Both .c o m p a n y and union ognizes extra production, has
spokesmen said considerable pro- meant an average of 20 cents per
gress has been made hut differ.; hour to employees over the base
ences over wages and closed 1 rate.
shop could not be resolved. ! Commenting on the union de -
The company spokesman said minds and negotiations, W. C.
the union is seeking wage adjust- , Smith. general manager of the
ments including a 40 -hour week, company, pointed out that as
with the same take home pay, part of its continuing program to
plus a 20 -percent increase. This create more favourable working
means, he said, an overall in- conditions and additional in-
crease of 52 cents an hour or an' crease of 10 percent had been
increase of 43 percent on the pre- granted allemployees as well as
sent base rate of $1.21 an hour. the addition of the seventh paid
He also indicated the company l holiday. These increases came
opposed the closed shop clause into effect the latter part of
requested by the union which • April.
would require all employees to I
join. "We have a number ofl
employees whose religion does
not allow them to become mem-
hers of such organizations and
we feel their rights should be t
respected," he said.
Application for conciliation has;
been filed with the Ontario?
Labor Relations Board. It is
expected a gov't mediator may'.
begin talks with the two parties
in about two weeks.
The company, a leader in its'
field, produces three m a i n r' Earlier the same day, 'the
types of units including mobile; MacNaughton family witnessed
homes, industrial units and. tra- . the trooping of the colors of the
vel units. It has been successful 48th Highlanders at the CNE.
by the introduction of new me - f Mr. and Mrs. MacNaughton,
thods in levelling off the produc-: were guests in the enclosure :for '
tion flow so that employees, to' the running of the Queen's plate I
an increasing extent, have been; Tuesday afternoon,
assured of year-round employ George Ellis, editor of . The
During the winter of 1958-59, Goderich Signa -Star and presi- i
General produced more units dent of the Ontario Weekly
'Newspapers Association, a n d 1
than the tproduced by the; Mrs. Ellis were guests at the 1
Thiss has meant that men who;
nextx largestgl manufaeturers. civic dinner Monday night.
otherwise would he laid off have; Officers of the Exeter OPP
! been kept working the year-, detachment will assist in the
round, the spokesman said. ! queen's tour of this area Thurs-
General Coach a wholly-owned day and Friday. Thursday PC's
i subsidiary of the parent plant In Cecil Gibbons and George Mit-
Marlette, Mich. began operations shell will guard railway cros-
s in Canada in 1953 with the pur- sings for the royal train. Friday
chase of Clipper Coach at Hen-, they will assist in the escort of
sail. At that time the working royal tour vehicles through this
force was 38 men. During the area on their way to Port Mc -
past six years, the company has; Nichol.
grown and now has 155 employ Cpl. Neil Chamberlain, Grand.
ess. : Bend OPP, will take his police
It has introduced a company, boat to Sarnia to assist in the
insurance program for men as policing of small craft along the
part of its compensation which' St. Clair River when the Queen
paid out on the average to each' meets her royal yacht there Fri -
employee in 1958 $106.05 per in -I day.
MPP attends
royal dinner
Huron MPP C. S. MacNaugh-
ton and Mrs. MacNaughton,
attended the Province of On-
tario's civic dinner in honor of
Queen Elizabeth and Prince Phi-
lip in. Toronto Monday night.
Johnny; —"Grandpa, will you
please make a noise like a
frog?"
Grandpa: — "What for. tiny
boy?
Johitny;—"Why, pa says we'll
come into a fortune when you
croak."
Magic Markers.
The Slick )sign writer
for Only $1.10 at
Tiimes.Advocate
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Phone 99
Exeter
a
Ski
522
!�I
Ip 1959, King Features Syndicate, ]nt'., World rights reset -o.
"Young man, 1 don;:; think it's proper for my laugh•
ter to be going out with an unmarried man."
1
ION). Rw, 11,.,u d. llw,dle.t. Inv Wnrldser,
"Have you considered separate vacations?"
Town
Topics
Mr. and Mrs. David Millar, of
town, Mr. and Mrs. David
Henry, Cla.ndeboye, were in To-
ronto last Sunday. Mrs. Millar.
and Mrs. Henry were attending
a reunion of registered nurses,
Mr. and Mrs, Wilfrid Shapton
and Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Rowe
spent the weekend in Port Hur-
on with Mr. and Mrs. Manford
Belling and Mr. and Mrs. A. W.
Rowe.
Mr. and Mrs, Ray C. Mills,
William
Canada
ference
St., are attending the
Life Assurance Co. con -
at Atlantic City.
Breaks hip
Mr. Alfred Coates fell at his
home, Albert street, on Tuesday
morning and x-rays at South
Huron Hospital revealed a
broken hip.
C:rodit:n Public School
award honors fo 36
Principal Mrs. Ruby I Molitor, l Beverly Sims, Bonnie Sims.
--Acldileen Morlock
notmced thee following promo-, JUNIOR .ROOM
tions at the end of the school w
year. 1 grade 2 CO 3—Bonnie Clarke,
Honor standingwas attained Byron 1 Clarke, Katy Eberhardt,
Shirley Elliott, Robert England,
by 36students. Glenn Finkheiner, Muriel Elan.
ville H, Murray Glanville, Ron-
SENIO.R ROOM ald Grasdahl H, Sharon Hodge
(Alphabetical Order) , 111 Dale Lamport H, Russel
Gn:Bn, Pfaff, sk,
Art Brandrade8 H,
9— JohnKenBrocketh,eDonder- Grade
Teddy 1 to 2S—kBainnerrbara Attfield
aid Colter, Richard Colter H, H, Charles Boulianne•- H, Glenn
Joan England, Douglas Lightfoot Cooper, Fred Coughtrey, Bill
Kenneth Moon, Joan Smith Dietrich H, Ross Elliott, Brian
Zl' Finkheiner H, Donald Fuller H,
Linda Haugh 11, Murray Hodge,
Glenn Hodgins, Burton Moon,
Bobby Parsons, Kevin Pfaff, Di-
anne Shapton, Randy Smith, - Times -Advocate
—Gleno Tripp
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:Crediton Public School, has an- I
Grade 7 to 8—Brenda Bocock,
Wayne Brunzlow (rec,), Jacque-
line England, Sharon Faulder 1-1,
Marilyn Galloway, Wayne Glan-
ville, Dennis Lamport, James
Pfaff, Marion Yariey H, '
Grade 6 to 7 --Judy Boulianne
1l', John Brown H,. -Kathy Buxton
[-1, Marina Coughtree, Donald
Dundas, Margaret Fahner, Sand-
ra Faulder H, Gerald Finkbeiner,
Karen Finkheiner H, Margaret
I-Iaist }l, Betty Lou Jesney, Elyse
Lamport, 11,• Dalton Noels (rec.),
Marlene Noels; Jacqualene
Sharpe H, Clare Skinner,
—Ruby I. Molitor
INTERMEDIATE ROOM
Grade 5 to 6—Honors, Sandra
England, Johnnie Elliott, Caro-
lyn. Glanville, Cynthia Pfaff;
pass, Fred Brock, ,Patsy Clarke,
Joyce Glanville, Bob Haist.
Grade 4 to 5—Honors, Kathy
Boulianne, Barry Clarke, . Ann
Marie Dietrich, Ruth Hodge,
Barbara Lawson, Roberta
Sharpe, Betty Skinner, Brenda
Sims; pass, Bob Brown, Richard
Glanville, Bob Hodge, Leslie Jes-
ney, Billy McDill, Terry Pfaff.
Grade 3 to 4—Honors, Naomi
Bocock, John Dietrich, Gwen
Finkheiner, Gordon Jones, Ron-
ald Kenney, Charmaine Schenk,
Judy Smith; pass, Bob Coulter,
Nancy England, David Gibson,
Passmore picnic
at Exeter park
A P'assmore reunion was held.
in Riverview Park, Exeter on
Sunday with 80 in attendance.
A program of sports was in
charge of the Garnet Passmore
family, Sarnia.
Members of the family at-
tended from Detroit, 'Sarnia,
London and. Mitchell.
"What's thei.mafter with you?"
the - wife demanded. "Monday
you liked beans. Tuesday you
liked • beans, Wednesday you
liked beans; now Thursday, all
of a sudden, you don't like
-1 beans."
Libby's Beans
St. Williams New Pack
DI EP
BROWN
Strawberry Jam
Red Rose
Instant Coffee
Aylmer Corn CREAM
2
ZD -DZ, TINS
24.OZ. JAR
LARGE 5.OUNCE
STYLE
Margarine Golden Dew
Bare -Q Features
Hardwood Charcoal 5 Ib. 390
French Mustard, 6 -oz. 2 for 250
French's Barbecue Sauce
8 -oz. bottle 390
HP Sauce, 81/2 -oz, btl. 320
Mazola Oil, pint bottle 41g
Stuart House Foil Wrap, 12" 310
Heinz Hot Ketchup, 11 -oz, btl, 27g
Wizard Charcoal Lighter
16 -oz. tin ,.,,, 39g
Kraft Dressings, all varieties
8 -oz. bottle 290
Club House Pimento Stuffed
Olives, 8 -oz, cylinder jar 29g
PRODUCE BUYS
Sunkist 150's
Lemons 5
FD
19c
20 -ex, Celle Pegs
Carrots 2 25'
Lecel Grown
Cucumbers EACH1Oc
JAR
is-OZ.TNI
37`
43`
79`
25`
2L6,49c
Del Monte Drinks
New 30'9unce Tins .— Try Them
PINEAPPLE -GRAPEFRUIT 25¢
PINEAPPLE -ORANGE 31g
PINEAPPLE -PEAR 350
ORANGE -APRICOT - 35¢
David's T -Mix Assorted
Cookies PKG. 35g
Luncheon Meat
-Prem 12-0Z, TIN 43
Mother Parker's/.100 Off, 60's
Tea Boos 69
Sani Flush...27s
3S -Ounce Tin, only 430
Sauirrel-16-oz, ice bei( tar
P'nut Butter 5
MEAT VALUES!
Maple Leaf
Cooked Ham
LE, 83t
Maple Leaf Sweet Pickled, 2-3 Ib.
Cottage Rolls L1, 49c
A � H MARKET
Phone 532
Free Delivery
OPEN FRIDAY 'Ill. 9r SATURDAY DTII;, 19
tly. 36 1959 Pape 3
EXCELLENT CHOICE
OF DESIGNS
AND TYPES
See The Sample Book
At The
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'58 CHRYSLER WINDSOR SEDAN
She loaded, a steal . . . $2,995
'Stf EDSEL "CORSAIR" FORDOR HARDTOP
Automatic, radio, a nice one ................. $2,995
'57 BUICK "CENTURY" FORDOR HARDTOP
A lovely piece of merchandise! $2,595.
'58 FORD V8 WAGON
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'58 FORD V8 "300" TUDOR—a lovely green $2,295
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'56 FORD SEDAN—a gleaming black, a lovely
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'57 FORD COACH—choice of 2 $1,795
'57 FORD SEDAN—You're robbing me at .,$1,650
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'54 MERCURY TUDOR HARDTOP—loaded! $1,350
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'51 DODGE SEDAN—new motor ,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,, $ 495
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FORD PICKUP—hat rack
Lill Y 1 ..
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'53 $ 595
'52 $ 595
'50 $ 500
'51. $ 450
'51 $ 450
'42 DODGE STAKE—good motor, good truck! $ 300
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8-FT1 COCKSHUTT TANDUM DISC HARROW $ 100
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