HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-04-11, Page 14DON
ROOTH
ELECTRICAL
CONTRACTISR
* Domestic
* Commercial
* Industrial
Motors, Controls
Lighting
70 Huron St. West
235-0282
Titrms-Advocate, April 11, 1943 Twins have babile$ Phrhqg', the everdhg':M§§MarY.-
pegt :4PegtIcer hlMllareW Our-,
rte, ef-BenS4Pe
,PCPOWIN 4.I4MrSePePaP.SMere banquet day after *
1!?lr, Mrs.. Sam Storey and.
Bill ,Pr' gogP.r.0 .;k44.
Mrs. John Plyth.
.recently visited Mr and :Mrs,
Pert •111941,49.4 te-celebrete•the
ed1e:41747,n:r,g:d
M rs,:.tPr:Y
Th.t41
centered
, a AcQtrWc4
0,in
storey.p nlw:410 white,1n cake,, de
The
couple received a.,4rgel?gli.cltlet
,of: red re se s, StyleIn4Ster?
three-ply stainless *Pei cook--
Ware, .anti. a .bouquet et artsActal
flowers,
Mr. •PPWAI.O. Prpwh ,QC and
Mrs, Hrown of Petreitt Mrs,
1-110 of Windger visited
Sunday with the lattge.s. parehtg,
Mr, and Mrs, l' Long also Mr,.
and
tors
ofMrsll,p,E14. Oct fla4gh,
gro4o4rty,.Rebert, pow4p,..and
:Pen*" AA. hekhei a brother,
Robert Tuckersmith. Town,-
AO; sister,. lidrgy.P9.4414 Mee
:.1C*# Seaforth..
Funeral service was ,11.0.14
Tuesday P. X. Whitney Fq-
Peral home, Seaforth. .D4r41.
Was .Staffer cemetery.
UCW 1.4-74T PUPPW, The thankofferieg meeting of
POW was held in the church
en Wednesday,. April .a with IP
ladies in attendance to hear the
By MRS. NORMAN LONG
KITTEN
MrA. John McGregor and
IV4a, Douglas, McGregor,, twin
sisters, gave birth to a daugh-
ter and a son respectively in.
Scott Memorial Hospital, Hea-forth on Friday,.April 5 at
9 am and 4 pm.
The babies are the first
grandchildren for Mr. and Mrs,
FearsOn ChartOrS and We for mr. and Mrs. Ales McGregor
and the first great grandchild-
ren for Mrs. John McGregor,
Seafortil.
The babies were bore the day
following the twin mothers' own
birthday on April 4 when they
were also born In Scott Me,
morial Hospital, Seaforth.
The twin sisters Mary and
Anne Charters married two
brothers in a double ring cere-
mony at Et. Andrew's. United
Omrch, Kippen, May 1961.
eteto rink Pt rlin
Tbted,eWinner, Geolle Tine- s CU
eh°, Harry SherWeed, Gerald
godbolt, Jack Pry* finalists,
Art Cane, Graham Arthur, Ward
Kraft, .Take Malice; Ch arl e s
Shane, GUS GregaS, Phil Hera,
Mery Jones,
MI UP BONSMI4
Winner, Morley .Sander s,
Simmons,Pauline And!, Jennie
sten, Shirley iDevideen; rune
ners-up, Dick Iermy n, Lois
Ottewell, Bob Middleton, How-
ard Truemner; Mel Geis e r,
Dorothy Elder, Russ Tiernan,
Loretta Siegeer.
LADIES DRAWS
First--Winners, Lois Otte-
well, Helen Webber, Berdine
Morgan, Shirley Davidson; fi-
nalists, Bernice Cann, Florence
Seldon, Merl' Fisher, Beatrice
Dawson; Maida Geiser, Helen
Sanders, Norma Parsons, Lyia
Hume.
Second--Winners, Alma Eth-
erington, Helen Mickle, Ruth
Skinner, Marie Musser; final-
ists, Helen Frayne, Vi Hopper,
Jean Hodgert, Connie Johnston;
Jean Page, Helen Sanders, Lois
Armstrong, Lyle. flume.
Third--Winners, Audrey Mc-
Donald, Verna Fink, Ruby Bea-
ver, Margaret McBride; final-
ists, Jean Pecille, Dorothy
Prout, Mary Farrow, Mary Mc-
Carter; Willa Wuerth, Jean
Snell, Lorraine Alexander,
Shirley Davidson.
MEWS OPEN CHAMPS: LEE WEBBER, BEV ALEXANDER, ROSS HODGERT, BILL LAMPORT
ZION
Aver alealbera Of .Prefer
Men'S and curling clubs
received prieele and trophies
Wednesday night du. rine the an--
nilal banquet which .clinieeee
the. Peasel',SPlaYt
About 25¢. witnessed the Pre-
sentatioee to .rinks. which had
Wen honors. in competitions
throughout, the yege. They else
enjoyed some prefeeeional One
terteinMent and •dancing which
followed,.
Write club president, Lee
Parker, chaired the ;program
in the Legion hall. Taking part
were Wallace epidoe, firSt ide
president; John G o ni 4n, tree,
surer; Mrs. Robert Southcott,
ladies' president, and Ray
Mille, 1741c) led in a singsong.
Kenneth Hern was in charge
of the dance, for which Des,
jerdineieorchestreprievided.the
President Parker presented
the Labatt Trophy to the Lee
Webber rink which captured the
open club championship. Mem-
bers included Bev Alexander,
Ross Hodgert and Bill Lampert..
Other presentations were
made by Lee Learn, Charles
Snell, Irvine Armstrong, Ken
Bern, Tory Gregg, Robert Flet-
cher and Mrs. Helen Jermyn,
on behalf of donors.
The winners:
MEN'S DRAWS
First--winner, Kenneth Otte-
well, Harold Elder, Hervey
Pfaff, Jack Taylor; finalists,
Lee Learn, Herm Dettmer, Phil
Hero, Walter McBride; Sandy
Elliot, Ed Miller, Norm Wolper,
Harry Strang.
Second—Winner, Les Par-
ker, Ray Wuerth, Art Gainer,
Art Calm; finalists, Dick Reel-
ofson, Bill Rohde, George Re-
ther, Bill Pollen; Harry Snell,
Ray Cann, Glen Lamport, Bill
Lamport.
Aero Urea—the biggest bag of nitro-
gen you can buy, lets you apply
nitrogen before planting. Broad-
cast 100-300 lbs. per acre and work
in. As another step towards the con-
trol of most weeds, after planting,
let the ground settle until just be-
fore or after emergence. Then spray
Atrazine at 4 lb. of 50% per acre.
Something new for corn growers is
the Cytrol —Aero Urea —Atrazine
Program. Spray Cytrol at 1 gallon
per acre as soon as quackgrass is
established in the spring. After 7-10
days when the quackgrass turns
white, plow or cultivate. Aero Urea
supplies fast-acting and long-last-
ing nitrogen in an easy-to-use form.
FAREWELL PARTY
A farewell party was giveri
by neighbors and friends on
Friday evening at. Staffs, Hall
honoring Mr. and Mrs. Ernest
Ross and family of RR 2 Nip-
pon, who very shortly will be
leaving the district to reside
in Exeter.
Several tables of euchre were
in play. Winners were; ladies
high, Mrs. A, Roes; low, Mrs.
Theo Hauwert; men's high, Mrs.
p. McDonald; low, Orville
Cooper.
An address was read by Or-
ville Cooper and gifts presented
by Bruce Armstrong, Lloyd
Cooper, Alex Miller and Jack
consitt. They received a cof-
fee table, a magazine rack and
Elaine was presented with a
cup and saucer and Gordon, e
set of cuff links and a tie clip.
JAMES H. UPSHALL
James H. Upshall, 59, RR 3
Kippen, died Sunday April '7
at Scott Memorial Hospital,
Seaforth.
A native of Tuckersmith
Township, he is survived by
his wife, the former Mary Jane
McDougall; two daughters, Mrs.
Wilmer (Grace) Adkins, Zurich,
Mrs. Donald (Elaine) Harburn,
Woodstock, four sons, Jack of
It e 1`,
MARGARET McBRIDE, RUBY BEAVER, VERNA FINK, AUDREY McDONALD
Third draw winners receive trophy from Tory Gregg, Nielson' s
By MISS MURIEL. HERN
UCW TO HAVE SUPPER
The Zion West UCW meeting
was held on Wednesday evening
April 3 at the home pf Mrs. J.
Wareham, in Woodham with the
pre s ident Mrs. Wellington
Brock in charge of business.
It was decided to have acorn-
munity pot luck supper and bak-
ing sale on Thursday evening,
April 11, and a bale for over-
seas is to be packed at the next
meeting.
Mrs. Morris Hern took
charge of the Easter program
with messages read from "Lent
to Easter" by a number of mem-
bers. Mrs. Hern read the Easter
story, Mrs. J. Wareham favored
with a solo.
Remember the program-Control quackgrass with Cytrol; keep yields up with Aero Urea; control broad-leaved weeds with Atrazine
Cyanamid of Canada Limited, Montreal 2, Quebec
CORN Ill Health ? SERVING
THE MAN WHOSE
BUSINESS IS
AGRICULTURE
PERSONALS
Mr. and Mrs. Norman Brock
and Bill visited Sunday evening
with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Strong,
Seeforth.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hern
visited Sunday evening withicir.
and Mrs. Milne Pullen, Whalen.
Mrs. Donald Larkin of Lucan
visited on Saturday with her sis-
ter, Mrs. Harry Hera and fa-
mily.
Mrs, Ross Herm is spending a
feW days at her home.
Mr. and Mrs. Ward Hern at-
tended a marathon euchre at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew
Hamilton, Exeter, S atur day
evening.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Herm,
Linda and Fred have moved onto
their farm which they purchased
from Mrs. Christina Herm
See your doctor first.
Bring your prescription to
MIDDLETON'S DRUGS PROGRAM
The best idea yet
in home heating!
SECOND DRAW WINNERS: LES PARKER, RAY WUERTH, ART GAISER, ART CANN
Sugar and spice
-continued from page 13
a movie extra watching the stars
at work, with the friendly con-
cern of a burlesque stripper
watching a prima ballerina. We
sit there as they flash about the
Ice, and muse, "There, but
for the fact that I always went
over on my ankles, go I."
During my own hockey car-
eer, in the days when we used
department store catalogues for
shinpads, I played in the same
peewee league as a fellow who
later went up to Detroit Red
Wings. I still think it was only
the fact that he could skate six
or eight times faster than I
could that made him outdistance
me in our hockey careers. Many
a time I tripped him as he
went by. *
Go through any family and
you'll find they have some great
hockey traditions like this. That
fat fellow watching TV once
scored the winning goal with
only eight seconds to go, if the
lousy ref haddena called it back
for an offside. That old gentle-
man in the rocker remembers
the time Howie Morons came to
town, when Howie was still an
amacher, and he'd have seen
him play if he haddena been
working the night shift that
night. That urchin gnawing his
nails in the corner, why he -was the third highest scorer in
the third best team in the Squirts
league, this very winter.
Oh, it may all seem very
childish to you women. But
it's in our blood. It's part of
the simple, strong, poetic heri-
tage of the Canadian male. Have
patience. The plague wanes
shortly. And then, but not until
then, will you retrieve us to the
dull, ordinary round of family
togetherness.
FREE SERVICE
FROM THE LOCAL
SERVICEMAN OF YOUR
CHOICE 1. Annual burner and
Alaska, with an area one-
third that of Canada's northern
territories, has a population of
about 200,000, more than five
times that of the Yukon and
Northwest Territories combin-
ed.
DO T RGUE
ABOUT MONEY!
furnace conditioning
2. Mici r season check of your
heating equipment
3. Emergency service anytime
JOIN EXETER COMMUNITY
CREDIT UNION
Limited
35-0040 DEVON BUILDING Come on in! 4
YOU PAY FOR
JUST THE OIL!
Here's why it's
the best plan
Our Shell plan gives you your
choice of servicemen and this 15
a big advantage to you. you're
not tied down to one particular
serviceman who, for some rea-
son, may not prove satisfactory.
And you don't have to depend on
one man in an emergency. If he's
busy or out-of-town, what de you
do? The Shell plan Solves this
problem--gives you all the benee
fits the Other plans offer PLUS
freedom of choice in service. Call
us today in order to make ar-
rangement tor your annual burner
and furnace conditioning as soon
as `he weather 15 right,
The familiar bug won't cost you as much but you still get
Volkswagen quality and a list a features as long as your arm .
Adjustable bucket skits.
A built in heater-defroster.
Windshield washers,
Bide-view Mirror.
Floor mounted gear shift with oil speeds synchronized,
Coll ,us today to arrange for this
service oow — DIAL 2354826
Automatic choke.
Padded sun Visors,
An engine that averages 38 miles per
A codling system That can't bell over, Phis Volkswagen
service by 350 dealers.
But that's only the beginning. Your Volkswagen dealer has
even more surprises. Looks like you'Ve got no excuse now for
not having d VoiktWcigOn. Unless you already own one.
ART .
Your Shell Fuel Oil Distributor
favored with •4 tieet
at the 9rg44 by Mrs, Robert.
c1141rPs'
also
'S.'441Pc'
number Pryde,
r.and Mrs.
4, letnneedyk. had clierge.,pe the
worship. Mrs. Ron McGrew
eedlgre.. R,. Binnendyk were the.
hPeteepee for the meeting. The
ladies of ,Gesher.entifirpeefield.
.ebereheS Were .PP.StAp. A social
beer and leech was served at
the nieSe Pf. the meeting.
1.?.440N44.5.
Mrs,Pert Themgert was gcl,
mItted to St. Jeeephee Hospital
lontioe on Friday,
HUNTER-DUVAR LID.
Mdin St 4 Teti,