HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-06-06, Page 74-H members receive pigs
Eighty pairs of purebred gilts were distributed to Huron 4-H
swine club, the province's largest 4-H group, Thursday night
at Seaforth. Above, Larry Lynn of Woodham shows his pair to
Bob McAllister, Auburn, director of the hog producers' as-
sociation, sponsors of the project. --Philips
Federation news
New dairy deduction
to extend promotion
The three ',kept stories ,pn
nee, and the Street Boylt
Were Won; by, 'Martha Kee41e.t.
Segan. GBI ,and. Melony West,
Patti ,Plenti. and Mary Piiirde.,
Vatit. plaYed. a Piano .4404 :P1.4 ,,
:.4eheth Nenne0)": played.P.1p.9.
olo,
Nancy Patterson, l.B.Parktp:
Mop,: Judy Stebbins, -peace.
lieMtningway ,and Da4one
bertg .p.mg two Korean songs.
III Health?
See your doctor first
Bring your prescription to
. MIDDLETON'S DRUGS.
Rec league ball
BANTAM - MIDGET
BASEBALL
This week's scores:
Mets 3, Yankees 3 Mete 9, L-A 0 (default)
Standings T P Mets 2 0 al 6 Yankees 1 0 1 3 0 3 0 0
Future games:
Thurs„ June 6 — Yankeess vs. L-A Monday, June 10 — Yankees vs. Mets
BOYS' SOFTBALL
Tigers 21, Twins 17 Yankees 41, Pirates 5 Tigers 13, ;Pirates 3 Yankees 13, Twins 4
Standings W L T P Yankees 5 0 0 10 Tigers 2 3 0 4 Pirates 2 3 0 4 Twins 1 4 0 2
Future games:
Thursday, June ,0 — Twins vs. Tigers; Tigers vs, Yankees Monday, June 10 — Pirates vs. Yankees; Twins vs. Tigers
PALEK TRIC/AN''SAYS
BUILDI NG A N 4
NEW HOME?
WHAT A FAMILY TREAT
ALL US NOW-WEIL
INSTALL
ELECTRIC
HEAT"
DON ROOTH
ELECTRIC
MOTOR CONTROLS
LIGHTING
235.0282.10 HURON W
Stratford 038 002 100 14 11 3
Centralia 104 000 000 5 6 2
Templeton, McKenzie and Har-
mer, Butcher.
Montomura, Wiper, Bell and
Noyle, Carrigan.
wood Regan of Florida spent a
week with Mrs. Almer Hendrie.
They also visited Mrs. Alex
O'Neil in Aylmer last Wednes-
day.
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Carter
entertained their sons, Mr. and
Mrs. Carlyle Carter and Jim-
mie and Mr. and Mrs. Douglas
Carter and Karen of London on
Sunday,
Mr. and Mrs. Clare Paton
were guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Ken Baker, Strathroy, on Sa-
turday evening.
Following the anniversary
service at Whalen United
Church on Sunday Mr. and Mrs.
Rea Neil, Mr. and Mrs. Charlie
Rollings, and Miss Blanche Rol-
lings and Mr. and Mrs. Clifford
Rollings and son were guests of
Mr. and Mrs. Alton Neil and
Donald of Whalen.
Mr. and Mrs. Mervin Wil-
liams have purchased the for-
mer Melvin Mead's property in
the village.
Guests of the Sigsworth fa-
mily were: on Wednesday, Mrs.
Jim Wright stayed; Thursday
and Friday, Mrs. H. Biebero
stayed; Friday evening, Mr.
and Mrs. Art Lee and Miss
MaryBelle Wright of London
visited, and on Sunday, Mr.
and Mrs. B.J. Hamilton of Au-
burn called and Mr. and Mrs.
Eldon Thompson of Stratford.
This week Mrs. Jessie Lewis
is staying.
Kroehlers
dump CE Stratford Kroehl pr s con-
tinned their Unbeaten streak in
Memorial softball play Tues-
day by downing Centralia RCAF
Flyers 14-5 at the station ball
yard,
Tom Templeton and Lorne
McKenzie shared Stratford
mound duties tq hold the Fly-
ers to six safeties, all coming
in the first three innings.
Left fielder Barry Eckstein
supplied the bulk of the Kroeh-
ler batting punch, connecting
for three home runs, two cotn;.
ing in the third frame.
Centralia first sacker Pete
Beleski maintained his torrid
hitting pace from the league
openers by banging a pair of
singles early in the contest to
drive in four runs.
Monty Montomura, Al Wiper
and Don "Dinger" Bell toiled
on the hill for the airmen and
were tagged for eleven singles.
In the final two innings, Bell
racked up four strike-outs while
issuing a pair of free passes.
The hurling pair for the visit-
ing furniture men sent 15 home
team swingers to the bench via
the strike-out route.
The next home game for the
Centralia club will be Tues-
day, June 11, with Clinton RCAF
providing the opposition.
ti
1
ti
From every point of vieWibedge Light Duty Trucks have what ft
takes to make them great, Tried and proven features and pre,.
dUct irnprOVenienta have been combined to britigyeit trucks you
othi_depohd on to take what" you haVe Where yOtii1Olit it to gOi As
dependability, Dodge gives you VERSATII,ITY,There's
a truck for every need from tight pickup work and door-to
&Of deiivery.-; to tough, rugged hatilihg on and off the highWay.
So if you need a light duty truck with GVW rating anywhere
between 5,06 and WACO lbs., and you heed 'durability,
reliability, and operating economy, look to Dodge.
They're yObit, kind Of
EXETER
MOTOR SALES
Phone 255-12.56'
Dobbs For Dodge
Maier St.
Times-Advncate, June 6, 1.463 page 7 Train hits tractor,
area farmer Grand Bend
By MRS. E41W99(1...914, •
11.4.001. -PUPS et. ;Detroit who. Am spending a few days at their
cottage at pesch.QT1nes„
Miss Leona :NPNValchtdc RN of
Toronto is spending a few days
with MT! and Mrs, ,John
chuk and
By MRS, H. PATON
°LANK BOYg
Funeral services were held
at the Murdy funeral home,
Lucan, on Tuesday, June 3 for
James Riddell, 48, of RR 1
Clandeboye, Who died Saturday
after a CNR freight train
crnmPled his tractor on the
laneway leading into his home,
Mr. Riddell, a realdent of the
area for 20 years, is the son of
Mr. and Mrs. Ivan. Riddell of
Prospect Hill. Besides his par-
ents he is survived by his wife,
the former Margaret. Storey,
two daughters, Mary and Eliza-
beth at home and one brother,
William of Prospect Hill.
Mr. Riddell's home is just
Past the Huron and Bruce rail-
way track and while returning
to his home with his tractor,
manure loader and disk he was
struck by the engine which was
backing. It cut the tractor in
two and Mr. Riddell was thrown
80 feet into a ditch. He was
taken to St. Joseph's Hospital,
London.
Rev. G.W. Sach was assisted
by Rev. Kenneth Hick at the
service. Interment was in St.
James cemetery, Clandeboye.
Pallbearers were Wi lmer
Scott, George Hindmarsh, Jack
Whitmore, Bruce Henry, Alex
Macintosh and Rae Hodgins.
HONORS GRADUATE
Miss Sandra Williams,
duaghter of Mr. and Mrs. Ru-
pert Williams, graduated from
Victoria Hospital School of Nur-
sing on Friday.
In the afternoon Mrs. Wil-
liams, Mrs. Douglas Joyce,
Windsor, and Mrs. George Lee
attended the tea at the nurses'
residence.
In the evening Mr. and Mrs.
Williams, and Wayne, Lorne
Derbushire, Mr. and Mrs. Jim
McComb, Elginfield, Mr. and
Mrs. George Lee, Ailsa Craig,
and Mr. and Mrs. John Wil-
liams, Debbie, Ricky and Lynn,
Sarnia, attended the graduation
at Thames Hall, UWO.
Others, who were entertained
at the Williams residence later,
were Mr. and Mrs. Tom Lay-
man, Roddy, Billy and John,
Downsview, George and Brenda
Mrs. W, Gill visited
with Mr, and Mrs.
EXPLQRERS BANQUET
The mother and daughter ban-
quet for Explorers was held in
Grand Bend 11C Monday evening
with Mrs. Gerald Godbolt.
Exeter as guest speaker,
Camp scholarship was won by
Jean Jennison and Susan for
highest marks. The girls were
presented with the red and blue
stars they had earned by the
leaders Mrs. Wm. Brenner and
Mrs. Peter Ravelle.
WA AT TPEDFORD Church will be beld on the
Rev, and Mrs. Ray Farrell Church 'lawn on Thursday, JUne
opened, their borne fOr the WA 13 at 0 c'elock.
meeting of St. John-By-The- • The falailYpicnic of the Grand
Lake Anglican Church, Grand Bend WI will be held in the,
Bend. Two parstirove the ladies pax* at nine mile bridge on
to Thedford to the rectory, Friday June 14 at 6,30 pm,
Mrs. Maurice Tiedeinan con, Mr. and Mrs, Douglas Bur.
ducted the meeting. Mrs. L, nett and children of Detroit,
Hawken of Arkona and Mrs. spent the weekend with Mr. and
Ilerschsield - of Point Edward Mrs, Teti Stanlaite.,
were the speakers, It was deci. Mrs. Rufus Turnbull Is a pa-
ded to hold a fish and chip sup- tient in St. Joseph's hospital
per on Wednesday June 19 at London.
Grand Bend St. John P ar ish Mr. and
Hall, on Friday
Mrs. M. Tiedeman and. Mrs.
E. Keown assisted the hostess.
Mrs. Douglas Gill attended
the Love-Da.vidge wedding at
St. Catharines on Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Patterson
and Winston spent the weekend
with Mr. and Mrs, Earl. Gibson
and family at Trenton.
Mrs. Don Flear is a patient
in St. Joseph's Hospital London.
The annual Sund ay S chool pic -
nic of the Grand Bend Vnited
Lee, Ailsa Craig, Mr, and Mrs,
Arthur Hodgins .and Victor Hod,
gina, Mrs, ,P1?..dyS 401 4.40 M44
Mary Jane Hall, .London, Mr,
and Mrs, Harry McLeod, peg.
and Heather, Seaforth,
WA AND Gial).
The WA and Guild Meeting of
St. James church was held at
the home of MI.'S, Karl
President Mrs. Andy Carter
.conducted the WA meeting, Se-
veral members were named to
attend the spring deanery at
Strathroy.•June
An invitation to, attend the 75th
anniversary tea at Trinity Ang,
iican church, Ailsa Craig, was
received.
Mrs, Jim Cunningham, presi-
dent of the Guild, presided for
the meeting. Arrangements
were made for a shower in the
schoolroom on June 7.
Several articles were handed
- in for the fall bazaar and par.,
tial plans were made for the
Sunday School picnic,•
PERSONALS
Mr, and Mrs. Joe Cunningham
and Kimberly and Tracy also
Miss Peggy Cliff of London
were guests a few days with the
former's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Wilfred Cunningham.
Mrs, Cora McLean and Ell,
HOPPER-
HOCKEY Minors gobble
Noted for famous names
of QUALITY
kinds of milk drinks, the milk
bars feature such teenage trap-
pings as juke boxes, jazz or-
chestras, and dance floors. Da-
nish dairy interests reason that
youth Is more concerned with
the environment than the liquid
it consumes. And the "bar"
atmosphere seems to have
changed the social image of
milk from a sissy drink to a
drink for "hipsters" and
"cats". Every day is Dairy
Day.
POULTRY MARKET
The volume of eggs graded in
registered stations in 1962 to-
talled 7.1 million cases (212.9
million dozen) 3.1percent more
than that of 1961. This is the
second time since 1944, when
grading station figures were
first collected, that the total
volume graded has topped seven
million cases. The 1959 volume,
amounting to 7.4 million cases
is the present record, but ex-
ceeds 1962 by only 273 thousand
cases, or 3.8 per cent.
+ Traditional
+ Danish
Vilas
Knechtels
Kaufman
Choose from
+ Modern
+ Colonial
Fry & Blackhall
Kroehler
Sklar
BY MRS. JOHN ELLIOT
Huron Federation Secretary
"June is Dairy Month" and
also the start of a new set-
aside program.
The four provincial dairy
producer groups agreed to a 1/4
of 1% deduction on all milk
s hipped to manufacturing or
processing plants; cream pro-
ducers are continuing the same
method in effect previously and
making up the difference in in-
creased amounts out of board's
funds; fluid milk shippers' ded-
uctions will be le per cwt
which would be the equivalent of
1/4 of 1% to facilitate the amount
of deduction at the plants. The
deductions are on a monthly,
year-around basis.
The total amount of potential
funds on the basis of 1962
Ontario production figures
could amount to $250,000.00 for
the seven months period June 1
to December 31, 1963. The funds
coming from five regions will
be used for promotion, adver-
tising, publicity, public rela-
tions, in proportion of contribu-
tions and concentration of popu-
lation in each zone across Ca-
nada.
The total potential on a one-
year production basis for Cana-
da if $1,334,945.00.
Says Roy Jewell of the London
Free Press:
- Fifteen cents for a cup of.
coffee!!!
Why not try milk at coffee
break time? Take note that
milk dispensing machines, in-
stalled in proper locations in
Germany have sold substantial
amounts of milk. .. .
In Switzerland mobile auto-
matic refrigerated milk dispen-
sers have been market tested
successfully on construc-
tion sites where they have been
placed with the consent of the
construction firms.
And in Denmark milk bars for
teenagers are said to be a suc-
cess. In addition to 30 different
Phone 235-1990
Exeter
It's Easy For Everyone To Enter Norm Walper's
Mitchell takes
police tourney
Constable George Mitchell, in
charge of the local detachment
of the Ontario Provincial Police
proved he is also boss on the
golf course Wednesday.
Competing in the third annual
OPP golf tournament sponsored
by No. 6 District with head-
quarters in Mount Forest, the
local man in blue toured the
Walkerton Golf and C ountr y
Club course in 79 to cop the
title.
In winning the trophy and re-
plica along with some handsome
lawn furniture, Mitchell dethro-
ned perennial winner, Sgt. Jerry
Lynch of Mount Forest.
Juniors high
in Kitchener Father's D
CONTEST
--Continued from page 6
were presented to Captain Bill
Fairbairn of the pee wee Can-
adians, Captain Doug Beaver of
the Mohawks, bantam winners
and midget-juvenile captain,
Gary Parsons of the Lincolns.
Robin Hood Oat trophies and
certificates were presented to
the most valuable player selec-
tions in each house league di-
vision, This selection was based
not only on all-round ability
on and off the ice, but on char-
acter and sportsmanship.
These awards went to two
boys from the Town of Exeter
and three from the surrounding
area, showing the popularity
of the EMHA winter program.
Jini Guenther of Dashwood
was judged most valuable in the
squirt age group with Barry
Baynham of Exeter gaining pee
wee honors. The trophy for the
best bantam went to Paul Ma-
son of Exeter. Exeter Kinsmen
Midgets star netminder Tom
Glavin received the midget
award for his stellar house
league play with Crediton.
The fellow doing the most
travelling to compete in the
minor program was the win-
ner of the juvenile section, Stan
Lovie of Grand Bend.
Rec Director Don Gravett
was In charge of the presenta-
tions arid thanked the manyvol-
unteer helpers for their con-
tributions to a successful minor
hockey program.
RAP Chairman MacMillan
presented a certificate of merit
to Rev. deVries in recognition
of his work with minor hockey
and recreation. Mr. deVries,
who will move shortly to north-
ern Alberta, said "I'll hang
this in my igloo". ended in third position in the
race for girls' high single, a
scant seven points behind the
winner, Brenda Hass of Kit-
chener.
In double events, the juniors
from Exeter finished well up
the ladder in the field of fifty
pairs.
Bryan Baynham and Phyllis
Madge nabbed 14th place with
Hank Gosar and Sue Anne Lin-
denfield lodged in 15th. The
other duo from Exeter Lanes,
Bill Farquhar and DarleneSnell f
grabbed the 22nd position.
Nothing To Buy — Ws Easy To Win
Exeter's minor five pin bow-
lers continue to turn in spark-
ling performances in out-of-
town tournaments.
Six keglers from the local
lanes competed in the first an-
nual World's Invitational Tour-
ney at Victoria Bowl In Kit-
chener, May 11.
One hundred juniors, under
15 years of age, travelled from
all parts of Ontario to roll in
mixed double events and combi-
ned their score s for team
awards.
The Exeter aggregation fini-
shed in second spot in the three-
boy, three-girl team division,
close behind the winning sextet
from the Ace Bowl in Toronto.
Phyllis Madge with a 238,
"And we'll live wherever you
want—either at my house
or yours."
this Sunday, Wednesday afternoon
and during the evening throughout
the week.
You can win for Dad, Grandad
or your Husband! Enter Now
$50 MEWROCRHTAHNODIFSE GIF
Actually it only takes two, but
most brides like to have their
groom come with them when
they choose their furniture at
Hopper-Hockey. Buying quality
at H-H is the best way to get
any marriage off to a good start
- -it ensures happiness for many
years to come.
You can shop Friday evenings
'til 10 or make an appointment
with us for any evening at your
convenience.
It takes THREE to ge
married!
The
BRIDE
the
GROOM
and . .
HOPPER-HOCKEY FURNITURE
FURNITURE
Liberty Dinette Suites
•
LIGHT DUTY
FOR DURABILITY, RELIABILITY,
OPERATING ECONOMY AND EYE APPEAL...
LOOK TO BEGINNING TODAY, SIMPLY STOP AT OUR STORE AND REGISTER THE
NAME OF YOUR DAD, GRANDAD. OR HUSBAND ON A FATHER'S DAY
CONTEST COUPON. THAT'S ALL THERE IS TO IT. ENTER NOW DRAW WILL
BE MADE AT 6 P.M. SATURDAY, JUNE 15. Li C
Alt No. 1 Stock
Each Registered Name Will Be Eligible
To Win One of These 6 Valuable Prizes
451rilige 2. of SLACKS
4. JACKET
6. JEWELLERY SET
ROSE BUSHES REQ
FlOrabunda
ol. 'V() $4,64'
Grandflora.
Climbers
Hybrid Teas
EVERGREENS
.Tamerix Juniper, 15-18"
Andora Juniper, 15-18"
Pfitzer Juniper (green, bine,
gold tip) 18-24"
Savin Juniper, 18-24"
111eauws Juniper, 15-18"
Dwarf Alberta Sprtice,15-18"
Hick's Yew, 18-24"
Mugho Pine, 10-12"
SHRUBS Assorted 974
STILL A LARGE SELECTION OP BEDDING PLANTS
WE CARRY A FULL LINE OP FRUITS AND VEGETABLES
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HOME OP THE FINEST FATHER'S DAY GIFTS
Phone. 235-0991 Main St. Exeter
LEN'S FARM MARKET
1 Mile North of Grand Bend Itighwo.y 21
itOpeti Seven bays Wee'0'