HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1962-08-16, Page 15tCeeeeireeeeee.!EOfeee'Tkeeeeeeireer...71,teeeieieleefe:!f7etePet'ee"*sereeefe'eeetfMfOeteeteteal
three-legged race, Lindaand Dixon gathering B ruce Clarke the s,-nper,
•
The Dixon pi cn i c was h e ld le ladies, Shirley Clarke', Men, an Jack Clarke; paper plate, Bob Riverview Park, Exeter,
Soutnednadeat,ncAe llgust 12 with 50 in ‘er nhldo,/ Man withlsewoenint; r b
.oldest
Call ad re) cs
person,
te head
]firs. Jack and, Janet Aretfield and Burr; largest waist- Bette Dixon organized the pic-
Vic and conducted sports, line, woroan, Mrs. ;Burr; man,
Winners in sack race were George Clarke; bean sin jar,
Larry Isaac, Susan Wells and Qns.M Maas. „„
Sherry 0.1 .-Brienl. ,kick the slip- There we r e " in
Per Dennis Mills, Paul Mills
and Gary Isaac; three-legged
race, Susan Wells and Gary
Isaac, Dennis Mills and Steven
Wells; wheelbarrow race, John
Arntfielcl and Steven Wells,
Paul and Peter Mills; clothes-
pins in one hand, Joan Wells;
tossing balloon filled with
water, Linda O'Brien and An-
drew Dixon; guessing weight
of anvil, Joe Spell; mousetrap
race, Andrew Dixon's team.
Pre-school age children en-
joyed a peanut scramble and
fish pond.
The committee in charge ,of
the 1963 picnic to be held at
the same place is Joan and
George Wells, Audrey Fritz-
gerald, and Andrew Dixon.
attendance,
11.,HEyN 10 N REPOR
ll : lllll t.aereeteettieeeeKeeeeMe.l.e..ei
Dougall reunion.
The Dougall picnic was held
at Riverview Park, Exeter, on
Sunday, August 12 with ever
50 in attendance for the noon
meal.
Relatives attended from Win-
nipeg and Stoeewall, Man., In-
gersoll, Camp Borden, Atwood
and Ilensall.
wxothoswomeematiesentaittatatft
The story in
Sunshine
Allen's Drinks
ORANGE, GRAPE,
PINE-GRAPEFRUIT
FRUIT PUNCH
48.Ounce Tins 29(
KELLOGG'S
V2 Price Sale
SUGAR STARS AND OK'S
2, GIANT
PKGS. 57
Devon Sweet Smoked
Rindiess
Bacon
5 ?la
Schneider's Pure Pork Large
ausage
Maple Leaf Sliced
Bologna
FROZEN FEATURE
Highliner Haddock
LB. 49
dr by the piece
LB. 3 5(
Large 24.oz, pkg,
!gi."141;').$
Jumbo Size
Head HEAD Lettuc 10c - -e
Seoul Afettitti
Oranges1- 45 .doz.
Fresh Melted
Cucumbers t A,
DON,
ROOTH
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTOR
* Domestic
* Commercial
* Industrial
Motors, Controls
Lighting
70 Huron St, West
235-0282
O INVITATIONS
Efi ANNOUNCEMENTS
• INFORMALS
40 ACCESSORIES
tel ASSISI 'IttitI wttH Vont.
COME IN .AND ASK FOR 'YO lit flItt 6R1bAl.
GIFT Lgtoisireg
Heinz
Tomato Soup
Van Camp's
Pork 'n Beans ,hoic. Quality
HENLEY PEACHES
swifro
TEMPT DOG FOOD
Mount Royal Choice Quality
Your best buys are here
Carnation MILK
Shop Act I-I
Large
Tins $1
Ketchup HEINZ
11-OZ.
Libby's Fancy Quality
Tomato Juice
Aylmer or Henley
Fruit Cocktail
White Cross
Toilet Tissue
Kotex
REGULAR PKG. OF 12'S
2
4
45c
20-ounce tins
49,
15-ounce tins
'1 00
LARGE in, 9 u ROLLS 7 ,
39
CREAM CORN
Lee Choice Crushed
PINEAPPLE
theta and Sanborn 12g ..off is.-OUtiCe ler
INSTANT COFFEE
ttl 69'
20-Demise tins
fir
Phone -0212
Free livery
Town Topics
lllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll To. televise
Mr. and Mrs. William J,
Thomson and Mr, and Mrs,
William Etherigigtee • h.ave re-
tweed after a trip through The
Meritifnee to the East Coast,
vtr.etoi. Alhert Ether-
ingtop .attended 'the wedding of
their grandson, Wing -ComMan-
der Lt. Al.. .Glenn Alien and Ca..
role Stagg at Kingston. on Sat-
ureay, Mr, and Mrs, Allen will
be leaving in Nov.ember for
Germany Where Mr. Allen will
be stationed with the Canadian.
Army. '
Miss Dorothy Bishop Pople-
stone, Kitchener, has. been a
visitor with Mrs, .liarper
ers and other relatives in this.
Mrs, Jake - Reflee spent the
past two • weeks visiting in
Leamington. with her sons and
their families.
Maurice Love took a bus trip
to Nashville, Tennessee, at-
teeding the Grand Ole OPreY.
Drin
—Continued from page 11.
with a drainage program with-
out any persuasion -from the ex-
perts. "But," he added, "I
agree with Mr. Allen's program,
from a standpoint of soil condi-
tions and plant growth,"
Why are tile drains so help-
ful? Jack Murray explained
that tiles increase the amount of
water that plants can use for
growth. Tile only removes from
the ground excess water that
can't be used by the plants any-
way. By lowering the water
table, tile permits a bigger root
system to develop, The •drains
increase the size of the sponge
or reservoir from which plants
can draw water. This gives more
yield and greater resistance to
drought.
Removal of the excess water
h" tile enables air to erter the
soil and provide plant roots
with vital oxygee, . • e is
needed by the bacteria whch
break down organic matter to
release nitrogen.
Removal of excess water en-
ables you to get on wet soils
much earlier, Wet soils require
lour times as much e heat to
warm it as does dry soil. This
means the sun must shine just
that much longer on wet soils
for the same results. Waste of
sunshine give plants a slow
late start and •a shorter grow-
ing season.
"Besides inereasing`yields the
major over-all value of a pro-
per tile-drainage system is that
it gives you uniform crop con-
ditions over the farm," Dr. Stan
Young, OAC field 'crop specia-
list, stated. "It makes your
cropping program more flex-
ible and enables you to special-
ize. It is not a substitute for a
good fertilizer, pest control and
disease control programs over
the long run though. But the
use of tile drains is a spectacu-
lar way to get yields up."
Now about costs? Is it too ex-
pensive? The way Bill Allen
put it was: "I can't afford not
to do it." He added, "there's no
sense buying a second farm
when the first one isn't produc-
ing at capacity."
On an actual dollar-and-cent
basis you can count on spend-
ing $100 an acre on tile-draining
your land. This means that tile-
drainage should increase your
income per acre by $12.33, if it
is going to pay for itself, Stan
Young stated. Part of this ex-
tra income can come through
less costs for such items as fer-
tilizer herbicides and.; pesti-
cides — but the rest must come
from greater production.
The way Jack Murray puts
the cost situation is: "Tile-
draining your land is something
like cleaning a dirty carbure-
tor, With a clean carburetor,
the Speed or performance of a
vehicle depends on the ability
of the operator. Like a vehicle
with a clean earburetor,, tiled
land responds to good `Manage-
ment."
'Bill Allen is a concentrated
milk shipper wittl is finding
that tile drainage more than
pays its way on hit .farts,
Mrs. Fred 411erington, San-
ders St„ who has undergone
surgery twice since fractUring
a MP in a fall last October, has
returned home from St, Jo
sePli's` Hospital/ London,
Visiting with Mrs. Leesum
Desjardine on the weekend
were her nieces, Mrs. Valeria.
Masche, California, and her
sister, Mrs, Ernie Frederick,
Kitchener.
Mr, and Mrs, John Christie,
David and Janet of Calgary,
Alta., are on holidays at the
home of Mrs, Christie's par-
ents,'' Mr, and Mrs, Albert Tree
quair.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Strange,
Toronto, visited with friends in
town while on holidays.
Mrs, E. M. Grove, who has
been in St, Joseph's Hospital,
London, as a result of break-
ing her leg and arm in a fall,
is now in South Huron Hospi-
tal.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Hogarth
and Bonnie, Miss Mary Math-
ers and Mr. Frank Mathers
holidayed last week in St. Paul,
Mr. and Mrs. Reg Morrison,
Miss Mary Mothers and Mrs.
Frank Mathers motored to Nia-
gara Falls, N.Y„ on Thursday.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brode-
rick, accompanied by Mr. and.
Mrs. Lawrence Hirtzel, Cen-
tralia, motored along the St.
Lawrence River last week tak-
ing the Thousand Island cruise
and visiting Fort Henry and Up-
per Canada Village.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh McEwert
and family, Mt. Brydges, visit-
ed with Mr. and Mrs. Wes Wit-
mer on Sunday.
Johnnie Wurm, Exeter, vis-
ited last week with his uncle
and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd
Beaman, London.
Misses Wilma Coates, London,
and Bernice Dilling, Hensel!,
returned on Tuesday after mo-
toring to Washington, D.C„
going by way of Buffalo return-
ing by Toledo and Detroit. They
visited Monday night with the
former's sister, Mrs. R. Doher-
ty, Mr. Doherty and girls of
Mount Clemens, Mich,
elr, and Mrs. Irvine Arm-
strong and boys are on a camp-
ing trip around Lake Superior
and will visit with Wayne Bow-
en at Kenora. Mr. and Mrs.
Albert Bowen are also on a
trip to visit their son, Wayne.
Greenway vows
— Continued from page 34
mums. Roger Dougall, 'RR 3
Exeter, nephew of the groom,
was ring bearer.
Hugh Rundle, Exeter, was
groomsman for his brother and
Robert D o w n, Exeter, and
Wayne Merklinger, Windsor,
ushered.
For receiving guests at the
reception the bride's mother
wore an aqua sheath of organ-
za over taffeta featuring appli-
qued lace flowers at the back,
beige accessories and corsage
of white mums. The groom's
mother chose a blue embroid-
ered linen sheath, blue and
White accessories and pink
mum corsage.
For travelling in U.S.A. the
bride changed to a brown silk
shantung sheath, white acces-
sories and yellow rose corsage.
The couple will reside on the
groom's farm, RR 3, Exeter.
The bride is a graduate of Lon-
don Teachers College.
WI growth
On a Friday night in Feb-
ruary 1807 at Stoney Creek lel
women crowded into Squires'
Hall to hear a epeech by cede.
lalde Hunter Hoodless on the
need for a national rural. WM-
en's organization,
From this beginning the Fed-
erated Women's Institute has
grown tp 04,000 members in
Canada and six and a half
'Millen members in coun-
tries,
CPC-TV will examine this his.,
tonic beginning, the growth and
the accomplishments of the WI
over the years op Senday, Sep-
tember 2 at 4 p,m, on the Coun-
try Calendar program,
Guests appearing on the pro-
gram include Mrs. James Hag-
gerty, Napanee, national pres-
ident of. FWIC and Mrs, L, G,
.Lyinburner, Port Colborne,
preeident of FWIO,
This 'n that
— Continued from page 1.4
tsp per cup of mashed potato.
When potatoes are blended
and fluffy add one tsp per cup
of onion and chill. When cold
add, per cup of potato 1/2 to
1 chopped hard-cooked egg, 1
tbl finely chopped green
onion, two or\three thinly sliced
radishes, 1/4 cup fine diced
celery and salad dressing to
flavor,
Fresh corn-on-the-cob ...de-
licious, and even better when
cooked outdoors. Foods experts
at Macdonald Institute, Guelph,
suggest a method for baking in
an open fire; peel back the
husks but do not tear off. Re-
move the silk and dab the ker-
nels with butter, then roll back
the husks to cover the cob.
Wrap in a double thickness of
kitchen foil and bake in the
embers 10 to 30 minutes until
the kernels are tender,
Federation
Manitoba though western sec-
tions of the province are in need
of rain, according to Manitgba
pool elevators' latest crop re-
port. Early seeded Acreage, in
particular shows promise of
giving good yields. Grasshop-
pers are taking a heavy tool,
particularly in the Red River
Valley and in some districts
farmers have had to spray two
or three times.
Delighted by the gift she
had received, the lady spoke
warmly to the boy:
"At church tomorrow, 1'11
thank your mother for this
lovely pie."
"If you don't mind, ma'am,"
the boy suggested nervously,
"would you thank her for two
pies?"
Garage
Sunday And
Evening Service
Open this Sunday, Wed-
nesday afternoon and dur-
ing the evening through-
out the week.
Graham
Arthur
ftakitTAIN HEvirLxWEDs
Mrs. Valerie Armstrong, Anne
St., entertained neighbors and
friends honoring the newly-
weds, Mr. and MO. William C.
Pearce, ''..rtieedey evening, ,
Mrs. Gordon Koch, on behalf
of the group, presented a gift
to the couple, The evening was
spent in chit-chat .and getting
aeqiiainted with the bride.
Happenings- hi '
Eilanshard
8y MRS, GLADWYM HOOPER
eifieTereWleiteleeneeMailleiMeMeti
Mrs, Lottie Jones of St. Ma-
rys spent Wednesday and
Thursday with Mr. and Mrs.
Wm. G, Jones,
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Pickett
and family of St, Marys spent
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Ken-
neth Parkinson,
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Lang-
ford and family spent Sunday
at Elora.
Miss Linda Thacker is spend-
ing a few days this week with
her grandmother, Mrs, Fred
Pattison and Mr, Pattison of
St. Marys.
Cathy and Joy Thacker are
spending a few days with Mar-
lene and Gwen liodgins of
Granton.
Mr, and Mrs. Jack Thomson
and family attended the Terrill
reunion at Fanshawe on Sun-
day.
Mr, and Mrs. Leonard Thac-
ker and family spent Wednes-
day at Port Elgin and with Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Thacker of
Kincardine.
Mr. and Mrs. Claire Sisson
visited the latter's uncle, Mr.
Archie Musklow of St. Marys
Hospital, London, and were
evening guests of. Mr, and
Mrs. Lawrence Grasby also of
London on Sunday.
spending this week with. Mr.
and Mrs. Jim Miller,
Bobby and Betty Jean Mil-
ler are visiting with Bill and
Irene Ferrie at a cottage on
the Bay of Quinte this week.
Mr. Charles Thompson, To.
mita, called on friends in the
village on Sunday.
Mrs, Victor Chatten spent
several days visiting in Oak-
vine with Mr. and Mrs. nen
Chatten,
Mrs. Roy Kirk spent the past
week at her home and had as her ,guests, her grandchildren,
Shirley, Leroy, Kirk and Larry
Skinner, of Munro.
Mrs, Victor Chatten visited
Sunday evening with Miss Bar-
bara. Chatten, London.
Mr. Harold Willis, Exeter,
visited Sunday with Air, and
Mrs. Gerald Lawson and fam-
ily,
The Woodham quartet sang
at the United Church service,
Grand Bend, on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. George Ball and
family, Dundas, visited Mr.
and Mrs. Norris Webb and fam-
ily, Kathy and Debra remaining
for holidays with their cousins,
Julie and Laurie,
Mrs, Norman Mackey and
Alec, Toronto, are visiting with
Mr. and Mrs. Don Morphy and
Bradley.
Mr. and Mrs, Glen Copeland
and Cynthia, Mr. and Mrs. Nor-
ris Webb and family spent Sun-
day at Grand Bend,
Mr. Frank Levy, Rachel,
Helen and Hilda, Transvaal,
were Sunday guests with Mr.
and Mrs. Jack Smith.
St, Marys, visited Wednesday
Mr. and Mrs. Alonzo Knowles,
with Mrs, Arthur Hopkins,
Miss Patty McKenzie, Grand
Bend, is holidaying with. Miss
Doris Mills. They are spend•
ing a few days with Mr, and
Mrs. Martin Arenthals and Beth,
Lucan.
Mrs. R. Huddleston, San Di-
ego, Cal., visited Thursday
with Misses Blanche and Rhea
Mills.
Mr, and. Mrs. Ron Chatten
are leaving this week for a two.
week vacation in Florida.
Mrs. Olive Stephens, St
Marys, visited with Mr. and
Mrs, Clarence
mis$ Nathy Amos, !Crider,
is spending a few days with
Miss Diane Smith.
Douglas. Smith returned home
on Tuesday after spending the
past week with his grandpar-
ents, Mr. and. Mrs. Roy
Detroit,
Mrs. Lawrence Copeland and
Murray visited last week with
Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rutledge,
13urkley, Mich,.
Mr, and Mrs. him Fatter
and family, 'Rochester, Mias
Mary Welsh, Toronto, spent the
weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Don
Morph), and Bradley.
Mr, end ,Mrs, Cecil Dobson,
Kirkton, were guests on. Sim,
day with Mrs. Arthur HoPkins,
10-o u nce
0
4
R Is0
1S-ounte tins
7 0 F
15-ounce tins
Personal Items .of intere0 in. and Around •Exeter.
The ..xeter rirnee-Advocae 1 3 ple43e0 to putnieh these., none, We.
ono our readere are Interested In yeu and your trioncie, Phone 235-1441,
Times,Advecetei Avgust 14. 1942 "Pegg
.414RW:.L:
OOdhCIM Topics
MRS, ROBERT kUNDLE
Clarke reunion
At the Clarke family reunion
held in Riverview Park, on
Sunday, August 12 president
elected was Jack Clarke, Dash-
wood; secretary - treasurer,
Shirley Clarke, Dashwood;
sports committe, Mr. and. Mrs,
Roy Clarke, Mr. and Mrs. Rus-
sell Clarke; table committee,
Mr. and Mrs. Don Dinney and
Mrs, George Clarke.
Winners in races for boys,
five to seven years, Ronnie
Clark; girls, Wendy Clarke;
boys, eight to ten, Eric Hutch-
inson; girls, Bonnie Clarke;
boys 11-13, Donald Clarke;
girls, Brenda Clarke; young la-
dies, Linda. Clarke; young men,
Bob Clarke; wheelbarrow, Don-
ald Clarke; Bruce Hutchinson;
ity MRS, WILLIAM DICKEY
Wayne and Karen Rodd spent
last week holidaying with Ricky
and Gail McLaughlin in Kitch-
ener. Eddie Rodd spent a feW
days with his grandparents,
Mr. and Mrs. Wib, Kirkby of
the 4th line, Blanshard.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Bec-
kett, Jaqueline and Geraldine
were Sunday visitors with Mr.
and Mrs, Dave Shamblaw at
Kirkton, also their aunt,' Mrs.
Lila 'Bromley of Calgary, whom
they had not seen for 34
years,
Mrs. Edgar Rodd of Exeter
spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs, La Verne Rodd and
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Ross Gunning
and children of Toronto are
Davies Grant Denning Benn
CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS
Municipal Auditors
DEVON BUILDING PH 235.0120 EXETER
•
Office Hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
4
4
rtlq 39c
15 ,0Litiet this
10 c
20 -ounce