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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1959-11-05, Page 18Rage 1 Z The Times•AAdvocate, October 79, 1959 iensa�l recreation. Goshen VP stage show Tei n tpwn b,ci success The Varna hall s filled ed to ca cituaseW ednesd when launch .curlinsseason sshendesenedri10anp .y Mrs. Addle Ypng Pople of Varna and Williswas pianist and organizer'.. "The Darkies" opened their show with the song "In The Evening By TheMoonlight".. SOlos were rendered by •:Bill Elliott, Doug McAsh, Malcolm Clarke, Keith Stephenson, Allan Hayter and Bob McClyinont, A11 were.acconleanied by the darkie singers, A medley of other songs was also sung. This part •of the show closed with singing "Old Black Joe", with soloist, Bill Elliott. Alter a short intermission, the boys put en a play called "Tlie Chiken Lifters Convenshun." This was followed with a scene from Varna's most ex- clusive restaurant, "The Brass Rale", with top-notch entertain- ers such as the Andrew Sisters (Donna Hayter, Gail, McBride, Marlene McClinchey and Joan McClyinont), Pearl Bailey (Edith Dawson) and son Sambo Bailey (Burt Coleman), Perry Como (Frank Postill) and J u l i e t t e (Gary McAsh). At the close of the show the Woman's Association ser v ed lunch to the entertainers. Ivan McClymont was piaster of cere- monies. Mrs, Willis was pre. sented with a gift on. behalf of the Young People, The ushers were Joyce Hayter and Mar- garet Aldington. • By MRS. ,CLARE MCBRLDE By JEAN NOAKES ..Only a few short months after: its, formation, the Hensall Teen Town now boasts a Member- ship well over the 100 mark and Rs- future success is now as- sured, Much of this success can be credited to the loyal teen- agers and the recreation direc- tor, J. 11 Hume. However, outside help has played an important part in aiding the ideal teen town, Mem- bore of the Seaforth Teen Town have attended the Friday night dances regularly and have of- fered helpful advice to the fledg- ling club: Several local citizens have offered their services as chaperons. Last week's chape- ron was Mr. George Vais. -To case the strain of purcha- sing new records, Mayor Berry of .St, Thomas donated 24 discs tothe club. Last Friday, Mr. and Mrs, Al Haveling, Strat- ford, attended the dance to give dancing lessons to the 129 teen- agers who were present. An Thursday, October 28, the executive plans to hold a Hal- lowe'en costume dance. SENIORS' PROGRAM The second meeting of Hen- sall Senior Citizens Club was held in the Arena Tuesday eve- ning. The executive was pleased With the large attendance. President Mrs. R. J. Pater - eon conducted the business and extended a warm welcome. J. R. Hume gave a talk on club ac- tivities- and procedures, He re - (erred to the late Lorne Luker, stating he and Mrs. Luker had ettended the first meeting and were interested in the club. .He also voiced words of ap- preciation to the president and fpr the wonderful co-operation Larger ponds — Continued from page 11 available and the farmer con- sents to the experimental work. Authority Fieldman Hal Hooke said this week he was pleased with the number of migrating waterfowl which used the Mor- rison reservoir for a stopping off point this fall. As many as 150 Canada geese were spotted on the pond and in the millet fields near the banks. .Hog payments -Continued from page 11 board is preparing to register producers and application forms are now being mailed to them. Producers should register im- mediately after receiving appli- cation cards. :„Registration is limited to one *erson for each hog enterpise or farm unit, and all sales of hogs from that enterprise must be. made in the ,name of that person. Huron county crop report By D. H. MILES Wet weather has curtailed the Lifting of sugar beets and the picking of corn and fall plow- ing. •Apple picking is practically complete, Turnip harvesting is taking place when weather con- ditions warrant. of the members.. Miss M. Ellis contributed hu- moreus readings and T. J. Sher- ritt sang 'several solos accom, parried by Mrs. Slierritt. New pffieers elected for the- season heseason Were: President, 1\irs. R. J. Paterson; vice-president, Joe Ferguson; secretary, Mrs, T. C.' Coates; treasurer, Mrs. Wilbert DiWng, convenors, Miss M. El-, Its, publicity; Orval Rapson, en• tertainment; Mrs. R apse lunch. Progressive euchre and shuf-, fleboard were enjoyed. Winners of euchre were: ladies, Miss M. Ellis and Mrs. H. Whittaker; gents, R. M. Peck .and Tom ' Kyle, Sr,; lone hands, Mrs. Alice Joynt; lucky door prize, Mrs. Frank Harburn, Music and deeding followed. Next meeting will be held Tues- day, November 10. Mrs. R. J. Paterson, assisted by Mrs, R. M. Peck, were in charge of the colorful decora- tions. CURLING UNDER WAY Sunday night members of the curling club took to the ice for the first time this season and welcomed several new curlers. Plans were made for league curling to start Monday, Novem- ber 2. League play will be on Monday and Tuesday nights at 7 and will continue through until March 31 with the excep- tion of several weeks during the Christmas holiday season. Open curling will be held Sunday evenings'. ARENA BUSY SPOT The arena has been quite active for the past two weeks with Zurich and Goderich prac- ticing hockey and curling activi- ties. Arrangements have been, made for curlers to secure brooms through the arena. Kippen East WI tours Kitchener Members of Kippen East WI enjoyed a bus trip to Kitchener on Tuesday. During the itinerary, they visited Weston's where - they were given refreshments, en- joyed a dinner at Stone's of Rockway, toured Schneider's plant where they tasted various products, and were guests at the program "Bazaar" at CK - CO -TV. Mrs. William Kyle and Mrs. Arthur Varley were winners of prizes in a quiz contest and the president of the group, Mrs. Russell Brock and Mrs. Alvin Cole, a guest, were interviewed on TV. They toured the Bell Tele- phone building . in the evening. Among the many things they were shown was the procedure for long distance calls and how the dial system operates. AT BARBER'S SESSION Gerry Smith, town, attended the Ontario Barbers' Ass'n con- vention in London Wednesday, Oct. 21. Guest speakers in- cluded D. C. McNeil, director of apprenticeship for Ontario Dep't of Labor, who stated barber schools were replacing the ap- prenticeship training for bar- bers. Reeve clarifies school position Reeve Bill McKenzie this week clarified his position on the proposed public school addi- tion, objecting to the report in last week's paper which he felt was inaccurate. The. reeve said he was not op- posed to the addition but ob- jected to borrowing money for it at the present time because of the high interest rate. When other members sug- gested the town might not he able to get the money at a later date, the reeve felt that in this case perhaps other arrange- ments would have to be made. It was pointed out by other officials that makeshift class- room's had been held in the past in such places as the arena and library basement, How about putting a little sun- shine away for a rainy day? * * Good character is still the best collateral for a loan. Bauer Skates FOR MEN, WOMEN AND CHILDREN We Accept "Trade -Ins" SMYTH'S Shoe Store Phone 376 Exeter Philco Honors Our Town! Introducing the new 1960 21." e XET E Among the strikingly new 1960 TV models unveiled by PHILCO is this handsome `EXETER' model. Just like the community "itself, it's clean-cut, modern, distinctive and it has the PHILCO features which set a new standard of TV performance, You'll be proud to have the 'EXETER' in your living room. See it today. "ik SUPERB MASTERCRAFT CABINETRY * FULL•POWER TRANSFORMER N: OPERATION 'fir ILLUMINATED CHANNEL SELECTOR ::Or CONVENIENT TOP TUNING ,;Ir SOUND OUT FRONT R' TV 'The Exeter' { '299 See all the new '60 Philco's `YEARSAHEAD, YET YOURS TODAY RUSSELL. ELECTRIC FROM YOUR HOUSEHOLD APPLIANCE DEALER FOR SALES WITH SERVICE EXETER. PHONE 109 • Town, Topics Items of ,Social and Personal Interest In and Around Exeter The Exeter Tlmes,Advocate is always pleased to publleh, these Items. We and our readers are interested In you and yoer friends, Phone 770. Mrs. Agnes Stanlake, Exeter and Airs. Mary Clauslus,'Zurielf spent five .days in De}roit visit- ing with their sisters, Mrs, Ma- bel Statton and Mrs. Shirley 13e dard. Miss Ida Penhale of Parkhill and Roy Penhale, Sarnia, visited with Mr, and Mrs. Harold Pen- hale on Sunday, Mr, and Mrs, W. C, Dunsford and family, :Simone, visited at the home of Mrs. Percy Duns - ford and Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Genttner on Sunday. Mrs, Orval Wind of Chatham spent the weekend at the home of Mr. and I11rs, Lloyd Taylor. Mrs. William Passmore re- ceived word of the death of her brotller4n4aw, Charles Grobe of Calgary, Alta, He is :survived by his wife, the former Joanne Montteth of Tbarnes Road. Miss Alice Claypole, Mrs. Lee !;earn, Miss Maxine Reeder and Mrs, •Fred Dobbs attended the O ntario Hospital Association. con- vention held in the Royal York Hotel, Toronto, the forepart ,of this week. Rev. and Mrs. Duncan McTa- visit. of London, formerly of Cre- d iton and Exeter took up resi- dence this week in Sarnia where Mr. McTavish will serve at Cen- tral United church until the end of the year. ,Mr. and Mrs, 'Clark Fisher, • Mr. and Mrs, Glenn Fisher, Yvonne and Glenda, visited with Ur. and Mrs. J. G. Davis) ;St, Back for another Season! CBC RADIO'S •Marys, Sunday,. Mr. and Mrs. Wes 'Winner visited with Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McEwen and fai'uy of Wean on Sunday, Mr, and Mrs. Luther Reynolds and M. George Ferguson of London- attended the funeral of a •cousin, Mrs. Fergys Beenle'r, in Windsor on Tuesday. Mrs. C. W. Hall, Nancy and. Don of SSS, Marys were weeke ! gues'ta..of Miss fret* (farness The clothing and. texllle .in* dustries employ 100,Oee Canal* ians.and are the largest soures of jobs for Canadians of arra: of the branches of inanufaetur. Ing. make work •as .*• every farmer should own a FABULOUS 400 Pioneer 400 sabre grip control panel provides safety -convenience. Provocative and lively discussion of agricultural problems Starting Monday, November 2nd, 8:30 p.m. with this special broadcast— THE SMALL FARMER A SPEC/AL CASE A90 -minute broadcastfromtheAnnual Meeting of the Ontario Federation of Agriculture. CBC RADIO —NEW SIGHTS—NEW SOUNDS Here's the easiest saw in the world to handle. Come • in for a demonstration. You'll see .how it can save you hours of hard work—from cutting firewood to making corrals. 41Ehr PIONEER PHONE 508-W Exeter Farm Equipment EXETER N0W11:6O CHEVROLET STORDI-BILT TRUCKS WITH REVOLUTIONARY TORSION -SPRING SUSPENSION THAT GIVES ASTONISHING NEW SHOCKPROOF ACTION:::::. Chevy's done the next best thing to paving every road in Canada! First they threw out the front axle and put in torsion- spring independent suspension. Then they built coil rear springs into most light-duty models, variable-rate leaf springs into heavies. That made it a ride you have to feel to believe. A ride that lets you move faster to get more work done in a day. Brawnier bulldozer build! They're tougher than any Chevy trucks ever made. Frames are stronger, cabs 67% more rigid. Front wheels and tires are precision -balanced. And that new suspension •cushions jars and road shock that used to spell slow death for sheet metal. More comfortable cabs! Easier to hop in and out of too. Many models are a whole 7 inches lower outside. Yet there's more head room inside, plus more width for shoulders and hips. Big in the power department! With the industry's most advanced gas -saving 6's. With high-torque Workmaster V8 performance in heavyweights. With new 6 -cylinder or V8 power avail- able in new L.C.F. models. More models than ever! New 4 -wheel -drive models, tandems and high -styled Suburban Carryalls. It's the handsomest, hardiest Chevy fleet ever to report for duty. See your dealer for the whole story, and be sure'to take a ride! Anything Tess is an old-fashioned truck! REVOLUTIONARY INDEPENDENT FRONT SUSPENSION STRONGER FRAMES – BIGGER BRAKES • ROOMIER COMFORT – FINE GABS WIDER POWER CHOICI GREATER MODEL SELECTION A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE PHONE 100 See your local authorized Chevrolet dealer Snell Bros. Limited Chevrolet • Oldsmobile ., Corvair • Chev Trucks a Ct1864 EXETER