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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-10-31, Page 5Willi A .Q.e.neral Electric ULTRA-COLOUR TV Or One of 20 $39.95 Portable Transister Radios During Our Fall Sale Oct 28 to Nov, 2 Just visit our I.D,A. Drug Store anytime from Oct, 28 to Nov. 2 to obtain a FREE entry form. Deposit your com- pleted entry form In our store before closing time Sat. Nov. 2, 1963. Entry is limited to one per person. Persons submitting the winning entries will be required to answer correctly a skill-testing question. Naxnes of winners will be posted in our store on or about November 30th. See the entry form for complete rules. UTLEY'S DRUG STORE •Zie EXETER /DA Telephone Ontario 235.1070 CONTEST CLOSES THURSDAY OCT. 31 WIN A Nevi 1963 Kelvinator Automatic Electric Dryer Free Ticket with every $500 worth of NEW OR USED TRACTORS OR FARM MACHINERY All ful OR A 1964 ZENITH CLOCK RADIO you have to do is try anew Ford Tractor on your farm to be eligible to win this beauti- Zenith Radio. Nothing to buy! No obligation! Free ticket with every demonstration. ARRANGE A DEMONSTRATION NOW the new CHASSIS _churches here mark anniversaries Blind fund almost half. Exeter's two United Churches both marked their anniver- saries Sunday with special preachers who spoke to large congregations. Rev. George H. Service, Area canvass for the Cana- dian National Institute for the Blind pears the half way mark of its $1,000 Objective, accord- ing to this week's report from Chairman S. Taylor, Total contributions amount to $oLpo, "There are many regular de- nors yet to hear from," stated Mr, Taylor. We would appre- ciate contributions as early as possible." The donations by community are; Exeter, $384,50; Crediton, $3,00; Dashwood, $24,00; Cen- tralia, $4.00; Woodham, $2.00; Granton, group in the evening. A film on Northern Rhodesia featured the social hour in the church at 8:30 pm. Popular "Sgt. Electro" First Exeter Air Ranger Flight, headed by Captain Mrs. J. Gibson and Lietuenant Mrs. M. Tudor, toured two of the schools at RCAF Clinton last week. They visited the school of food services where Flying Officer Jean Liberty gave a briefing on the role of producing good cooks and dietitians. FO. Ben Hlady showed the visitors around the Radar and Communications School where they Trivitt.server$ at London rally On the weekend, five boys and the rector of Trivitt Memorial Anglican Church attended the sixth annual diocesan servers', guild .conference at St. Paul's athedral, London. The conference, attended by over 200 boys from the 14 deaneries of the Diocese, heard an inspiring talk on 'Christian Vocation' by Dr. J. G. Rowe, dean of arts, Huron College, Greg Harness, the head ser- ver at Trivitt, was elected rep- resentative for the deanery of Huron on the diocesan execu- tive. Chatham, told James St, UC the growing enthusiasm of lay- men is one of the bright spots in an otherwise difficult period in which the church finds itself today. lie cited the laymen's Movement, which has, resulted in the formation of men's clubs and the development of lay con- ferences. He also emphasized the im- parlance of visitation evangel- ism, of which. Mr. Service is probably the foremost exponent in the United Church. This, too, is a laymen's activity in which members go in pairs to visit families in the community. Mr. Service has successfully or- ganized such campaigns in churches he has served in Win- nipeg, Hamilton, Toronto and now in Chatham. Mrs. D. McLeod was the solo- ist for the service. The pastor, Rev. S. E. Lewis, made a spec- ial appeal for the organ fund. HEAR PRESIDENT Rev. C. G. Park, Clinton, president of London conference spoke to Main St. in the morn- ing on "Grass Roots Christian- ity", For the evening service he spoke "To the man who says I'm not very religious." The junior choir sang in the morning and joined the senior the gals all adore him watched "Sgt Electro" — the mechanical man and were given demonstrations of sound transmission and a brief look at radar. From left, above, they are; Marion Bentley, Shirley Snider, Carolynne Simmons, Phyllis Madge, Sandra Hunter, Mrs. J. Gib- son, captain, Sgt Electro, Mrs. M. Tudor, lieutenant, Lynda Jory, Helen Campbell, Lana Keller, Shirley Genttner, Marcia Little. Clandeboye couple mark golden event "Miss Bates, do we have a slinky black crepe in size 44 'PI 'Mrs. William Wilson; candy table, Mrs. Gerald 'Willson, Mrs. Bruce Bradley and Mrs. Keith Simpson, Tea table as- 7 ./..474,.%—f.---..1,4pY sistants were Mrs. Ralph Lynn, Mrs. Charlie Coughlin, Mrs. Peter Voison and Mrs. Andy Thompson; kitchen assistants, Woodham UC ladies host to area groups WE'RE TRADING LONG Mrs. Rupert Williams, Miss Aggie Northgrave, Mrs, Alex Macintosh and Mrs. Jim Don- aldson; tea, Mrs. Arthur Simp- son; tickets, Mrs. Arthur Hod- gins. The homebaking table seemed to be the highlight with lovely fancy cakes, variety of pies and buns, cookies and tarts. Over $100 was added to the treasury. PERSONALS It is reported sugar has reached the highest price now $18.95 a cwt. since 1901. House- wives will be grateful canning is over but with the abundance of apples, considerable sugar is needed for cooking them. Mrs. Jim Sigsworth, who has spent the past five weeks in St. Joseph's Hospital was not suffering as much Sunday when Mr. Sigsworth, Helen and Billy visited her. Mrs. Bill Downing and daugh- ter Joan of Chatham spent the weekend with the former's mo- ther, Mrs. Almer Hendrie. Mr. and Mrs. Murray Hodg- son and daughters took up re- sidence in their new home in Lucan on Oct. 22 last week. Mrs. J. H. Paton called on Mrs. L. A. Kilmer, Lucan, on Thursday. . sa" 2001. G s 0 Instal executive for deanery YP Next Sunday evening the exe- cutive of the Huron Deanery Anglican Young People's As- sociation will be installed at a service in Trivitt Memorial Church, Exeter. The Deanery includes all 18 congregations of the Anglican Church In the county of Huron. The rural dean of Huron, the Rev. Harry Donaldson of Sea- forth will instal the new chap- lain, following which the chap- lain will instal the other mem- bers of the executive. The service will be conducted by Greg Harness, president of Trivitt's A. Y. P. A. 1E CI ROES l BARN CLEANER SILO UNLOADER & BUNK FEEDER YOU'LL GET BETTER PER- FORMANCE AND LONGER WEAR FROM A BADGER SALES • SERVICE • INSTALLATION ,..On nN6w TRACTORS John Beane JR. • Extra-Big Allowances for your old tractor-- any make or model—during this special event! BRUCEFIELD Phone HU 2.9250 Collect Jaques, Sharon Witteveen and Cynthia Copeland. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Campbell of Hensall, Raymond Beavers of Exeter visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Gerald Lawson and family. Mr. and Mrs. Teke Witteveen of Paris visited with Mr. and Mrs. John Witteveen, Sharon and Brian on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Smith were Sunday evening guests with Mr. and Mrs. Verne Smith of Exeter. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Miller visited with Mrs. May Stewart of Exeter Sunday. Miss Barbara Chatten of Lon- don spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Victor Chatten. Mr. and Mrs. I,aVerne Rodd, Wayne, Karen and Eddie, visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Wil- fred Rosenberg and family of Tavistock. Mr. Robert Rundle was one of the petit jurors at Stratford this past week. Mr. Victor Chatter is con- fined to his home with pneu- monia. Mr. Herman Punter of Kirk- ton, Mr. arid Mrs. James Drake and Mrs. Wm. Yule of London were Sunday visitors with Mr. Wm. Elliott. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Hol- lingsworth of Watford were Sun- day visitors with Mrs. M. Ja- ques. Mrs. Meta Schroder of North- ville, Mich. is spending some time with her niece, Mrs. Nel- son Ernst, Rev. Ernst and Bar- bara. Mr. and Mrs. John Rodd, Pamela and Calvin were Sun- day visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Roy Martin and family of Delhi. Mr. and Mrs. Miller Gray of Courtright spent a couple of days with Rev. and Mrs. Nelson Ernst and Barbara. • Pick Your Power in a new Ford-2-3-4-5- plow in all purpose or row crop models. Advancements and improvements that put them years ahead! • easy Terms! Use your present tractor for all or part of the down payment—take up to 4 crop years on the balance! By MRS. J. H. PATON OLANDEBOYE MARK GOLDEN WEDDING About 50 relatives and friends brought greetings to help cele- brate the fiftieth wedding an- niversary for Mr. and Mrs. John D. McEwen, RR 1 Clande- boye in McGillivray township. The former Olive Lee young- est daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs. William Lee and John D. McEwen, son of the late Mr. and Mrs. John P. McEwen all of McGillivray township were married at the home of the bride, with the Rev. T. T. George of Lucan and Clande- boye Methodist churches of- ficiating on October 22, 1913. They have two sons, George, RR 3 Ailsa Craig and Donald at home; three granddaughters, Mrs. William (Marion) Lums- den of Strathroy, Misses Cher- yl and Arlene McEwen and one grandson Ross McEwen also two great granddaughters, Mary and Barbara Lumsden, Strath- roy. Mr. McEwen has one sis- ter, Mrs. Minnie Anderson, Ailsa Craig. Mrs. McEwen has one brother, William Lee, Ailsa Craig, one sister, Mrs. Arthur (Laura) Simpson, RR 1 Clande- boye. They have always lived in Mc- Gillivray township, moving to Con. 1 in 1919, where they farm and have kept bees till a few years ago. Mr. McEwen still plays the violin, Mrs. Mc- Ewen is noted for her hobby of growing lovely flowers. They received many cards and gifts; one special gift was a gaily decorated anniversary cake. BAZAAR IS SUCCESS The ladies of the Clandeboye UC held a successful bake sale, bazaar and tea in the Sunday School room on Saturday after- noon. Mrs. G. W. Sach with the President, Mrs. Wilmer Scott welcomed the guests. The Rev. G. W. Sach opened the bazaar. The tea tables looked attrac- tive with hallowe'en table cloths and serviettes, centred with mums. Conveners of sewing or apron table were Mrs. David Kestle and Mrs. Clarence Millso n; bake table and farm or vege- tables produce, Mrs. George Simpson, Mrs. Rea Neil and e Offset snapping rolls save more corn. s Snapping roll clearing lever lets you clear trash without leaving the tractor safer. Less husking ears don't ride on top of rolls. • Get more down corn. Wide gathering points and three gathering chains skim the ground. • Farm-priced for profitable farming 1- and 2-row models. Pay-As- You-Farm Terms!! 12 MONTH parts warranty is another big difference in Electrohome TV! By MRS. ROBERT RUNDLE WOODHAM Mrs. M. C. Fletcher of Ex- eter was guest speaker Tues- day, Oct. 22, when Coopers, Zion East and Zion West la- dies were guests of Woodham UCW. Around 75 ladies were present. Miss Jean Copeland presided and welcomed the guests and was assisted in the worship by Mrs. Jack Thomson and Mrs. James Miller. Mrs. Wm. Spence fa- vored with a solo, Mrs. Har- vey Spearin gave a reading and Mrs. Grant Slcinner, an accordion solo. Mrs. Ted Ins- ley and Miss Rhea Mills gave a piano and organ duet. Mrs. Fred Doupe thanked the speak- er for her interesting message on "Let Go Let God". The ladies were invited to the base- ment where they were divided into groups according to the month of their birthday and a smorgasbord lunch was served and social time spent. PERSON AL Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Thomson, Janice, Earl, Vernon and Brian attended Lieury Uni- ted Church anniversary Sunday and spent the day with Mrs. Thomson's father, Mr. Wm. Armstrong. Misses Blanche and Rhea Mills and Mrs. Roy Kirk were Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Bob Smith and family of Kitchener. Mr.' and Mrs. Luxon Hill of Tucson, Arizona, and Mr. and Mrs. Garnet Ford of Flint, Mich. , were visitors during the week with their uncle, Mr. Wm. Elliott. Miss Pamela Rodd entertain- ed on her fifth birthday, Karen Insley, David and Sharon Jans- son, Michelle Robinson, Nancy NI ail Niu_Mailla in in inis Nei EN Other TV manufacturers talk about trouble free service. But ELECTROHOME guarantees it! This is no publicity stunt. The plain fact is that ELECTROHOME sets are more de- pendable. Why? For one thing, they are designed that way—with only the finest, most durable components. For another, they are hand assembled by trained tech- nicians, Then every set is performance tested by a trained engineer, You'll like the difference in ELECTROHOME cabinet styling too. They're created by Deilcraft—the fine furniture division of ELECTROHOME. (,/a4 edsta'4 Featuring CENTURION TIPS Used Cars Save On These '63 Demonstrators ON HOW TO PUT $80 EXTRA IN YOUR POCKET GALAXIE 8, automatic FAIRLANE 500 RANCHWAGON FALCON FUTURA, V-8 CONVERTIBLE '63 PONTIAC LAURENTIAN, 6 cyl. sedan, automatic, 10,000 miles, power steer- ing, power brakes, one owner. '61 GALAXIE SEDAN, V-B, automatic, one owner. '61 FORD 9 PASSENGER COUNTRY SEDAN, loaded. '60 CONSUL SEDAN, one owner. '59 METEOR SEDAN, 6 cylinder. '59 FORD COUNTRY SEDAN, V-8 auto. matic '59 RAMBLER SEDAN '59 PONTIAC COACH '58 FORD 2.000R STATION WAGON '56 FORD SEDAN '55 CHEVROLET SEDAN Tractors Used Trucks Rat-Kill to commercial feeds and grains. Cold weather drives rats indoors where they do most tiaitiage. Don't wait until you see rats! Now is the time to Set up a series of bait Statioh8, They1 t1 help you kill any rats which you might have and keep newrats from moving in. '59 FARGO, long wheel base, new motor '56 DODGE, CHASSIS & CAB, long wheel base, motor overhauled, 2 new tires. '59 GMC PICK-UP '54 CHEVROLET STAKE '53 FORD STAKE '63 FORD 41.205 DIESEL, very low hours '60 MODEL 1841 FORD DIESEL with super duty loader and back hoe. A real go getter. '59 MASSEY-HARRIS "65" with loader '59 MASSEY-HARRIS 35 DIESEL '55 MASSEY-HARRIS one row corn picker '58 INTERNATIONAL B 250 '51 FORD '50 MINNIE.MOEZ CO-OP TRACTOR. Make us an offer. JOHN DEERE 'B' ROW CROP '44 CASE. Make us an offer! '42 OLIVER 80 '41 MASSEY 101 SENIOR JOHN DEERE SPREADER CASE 1•ROW CORN PICKER KIMBERLEY MK I See and hear ELECTROHOME TV with the difference It has been calculated that in just one year, a family of rats eats (or ruins) AS much feed as a steer—about $80 worth, They also damage buildings, spread disease and cause electrical fires. Purina Research has developed a new effective tat killer—Purina Rat-Kill. It's a "carry-home" bait, Rats haul it back to the nest and distribute it among thewhole family. Painless death front internal bleeding is caused iii about a week, Rats never become bait- ally of this cereal-base bait, which conies ready to use. in tests eOndireLeti by Purina Research, they faint) that rats and hike actually prefer ,Ptirien for best, efficient feed service call Cann's Mill Ltd. Exeter Phone 285-1782 Whalen Corners Phone 85r15 Kirkton Up To $150 Trade -In Allowance. For Your Old TV :Larry Snider Motors Ltd. Canadians wheive-otbigger profits tornerrow DIAL 235-1640 Ford Fairlane Falcon and Ford !rucks EXETER feed PUMA CHOWgtodoyl Exeter ..,f4;t;g4i•oi‘.,;;WA'.1.4Wiltat?....Mif*.ttg;;;i70.11,1t.itiUlti;'41.1i;$I;WitifA ie,ret0);;;rkttitiiittret:teXtii..0.10kciiiftiOA*;x:r.:0);:lez.peif.rmA.. „ ....,,, .,„. „.. 't.e2tliti3."IiKS.P.M;2t.etet*M4.•;;It.e...c.•