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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-02-18, Page 11Raise Canadian flag at Centralia Calving time has hazards for both the calves and the cows, Be prepared for trouble. INJECTABLE VITAMIN A 30 cc's . $2.15 INJECTABLE PENICILLIN SCOUREX TABLETS 1-calf treatment $1.75 Double size $3.00 Nixon PREVENTEX TABLETS administered to a new- born calf during the first 10 days of life will prevent scours and get the calf off to a healthy start. 15-tablet bottle only $1,25 Satisfactory results or your money back. HUDRliuTGLSTEoRIS EXETER 235-1070 Yet Supplies for Calves iNgiRMIF •••,m ;4:§10, • : • fik• :ASO ;8•,•!'• Cucumber Contracts Contact us immediately if you are interested ingrowing cucumbers. We are offering contracts of 1/4 acre and up. This is a growing industry with a small investment but attractive returns. FOR FURTHER IN- FORMATION CONTACT; Canadian Canners Ltd. EXETER ONTARIO 235.2445 ••••••••••••.r.••••••••••,,,, ...It •••• .•• • • .. • • • •••• FERTILIZER SERVICE A complete Warehouse Service ...now within a few miles of your farm. Products • SUPER FLOW Fertilizers in bulk or bags • C-I-L Anhydrous Ammonia in 2-ton nurse tanks (applicators available) • Special Turf and Garden Fertilizers (GOLFGREEN and EVERGREEN) Services Save time and money with the C-I-L Bulk Spreading Service. A fast, efficient method of top-dressing and broadcasting. • Truck bulk spreaders • 800 pound "Lely" spreaders • 4-ton pull-type spreaders • Soil Testing Laboratories • Farm Advisory Service ElID FERTILIZER SERVICE SIMON BRAND Your Area Dealer for fr_ BARN EQUIPMENT & PUMPS For all your requirements of • SANITARY STEEL STALLS & PENS • GUTTER CLEANERS • SILO UNLOADERS • LIMITED HOG FEEDING & BUNK FEEDING EQUIPMENT • WATER SYSTEMS • PUMPS • SOFTENERS SIMON BRAND BEATTY SALES & SERVICE RR 1 Exeter Phone Credifon 234.6473 We do concrete work and installations. •111111•••••••••1•111%. Times-Advocate, February 18, 1965 Pat!' 9 Ladies quilt at Greenway GREENWAY The East Group of the UCW have been busy quilting this winter. Mrs. Lorene Doan and Cyn- thia of Toronto spent the week- end with her parents, Mr. & Mrs. Lawrence Curts. Mr. John Rock returned home from St. Joseph's Hospital, London, Sunday, where he had been a patient last week. Several ladies in this vicinity attended a Conference for Wo- men sponsored by the Women's Advisory Committee of the On- tario Department of Economics and Development at the Hotel London last Thursday. Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Wood- burn, Nancy, Irene and Tommy, visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Clare Woodburn and family of Mitchell. Mr. Manuel Curts and Miss Evelyn Curts attended the fu- neral of their cousin, the late Mr. Oliver Graybiel at Wood- stock, last Wednesday. Joey, Steven and Mark Thom- son of East Williams are visit- ing with their grandparents, Mr. & Mrs. Joe Horner. Mr. & Mrs. Cleve Brophey and family and Mr. & Mrs. Fred Rinker and family of Lon- don visited Sunday with their parents, Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Brophey. New flag unfurled at resort ceremony By MRS. WELLWOOD GILL GRAND BEND The new Canadian flag raising ceremony was held Monday, Feb. 15 at 12;00 noon at the town hall, Grand Bend, with Reeve Stewart Webb presiding for the ceremony. Brazil were chosen as mis- sionaries for prayer. Lunch was served. QUILT FOR BALE The Earl Burr unit of the UCW met Thursday in the church schoolroom with eleven members present. Mrs. Garnet Patterson open- ed the meeting with worship and a short Bible study on Scripture and gave the study book chapter on "A Meeting of Faith". The group decided to quilt a quilt for the bale Monday at the home of Mrs. Don Hendrick. Lunch was served by Mrs. Ivan Luther and Mrs. Garnet Patterson. BUNCO WINNERS Group 2 of the Grand Bend WI held a pot luck supper Wed- nesday evening in the town hall, All members and families were present. After supper the eve- ning was spent playing bunco. Mrs. Elgin Adams won the prize for the lucky chair. Lad- ies high went to Mrs. Les Adam's; ladies low, Mrs. Susie Devine; men's high, Kenneth Lovie; men's low, Mr. Leroy Bariteau. was in charge of the raising of the new flag. W/C 0. S. Comishen, extreme left, was parade commander, and beside him is F/L E. Price. The Officer Cadets in the centre of the photo are J. G. Mongeau and I. K. Stuart. --RCAF photo At RCAF Centralia, Monday, the RCAF Ensign came down for the last time — as it did across Canada in conjunction with the ceremony in Ottawa and was replaced by the new Canadian flag, shown here being hoisted aloft. F/L Doug McCallum, right, Kippen man injures back PERSONALS Weekend guests with Mrs. M. pask were Mr. & Mrs. R. Annan and family of Pickering, Mr. & Mrs. H. Bassow and sister Emma of Zurich, Mr. & Mrs. Ferd Miller of Dashwood and Mrs. Tillie Tetreau. Mr. & Mrs. Ron Mitchell and boys of Ailsa Craig visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. John Kowalchuk, Larry and Reed. Mr. & Mrs. Thomas Baird spent last week with their daughter, Mrs. Carl Vanner & Mr. Vanner at Chatham. Mr. & Mrs. W. Gill visited Saturday with Mr. & Mrs. E rvin Rader and family at Dashwood. BEGINS NEW STUDY The Green Orchard Pines unit of the Grand Bend UCW met Monday evening in the church vestry with eleven mem- bers present. A short devotion opened the meeting during which Mrs. Rosa Grigg offered the prayer and Mrs. Wm. Brenner accompan- ied by Mrs. Charles Reeves at the piano sang a solo. Mrs. Elgin Webb introduced the study book 4 'The Salty Christian". Mrs. Myrtle Mc- Gregor assisted by reading the Scripture. Rev. and Mrs. Ver- non Hutson, now serving in Ready Mix CONCRETE Plant 235 - 0833 Residence 228 - 6961 C.A. McDOWELL Ltd. By MRS. W. MOTZ Mrs. Beth Hatherley and daughter Mrs. Harold Gillies of London spent Monday with Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Motz. Mr. & Mrs. Leonard Wein spent Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Alec Hamilton at Grand Bend. Mr. & Mrs. Cecil Coughlin (newlyweds) and son Bradley McKee of London who have spent several days with her parents, Mr. & Mrs. Aaron Wein, have left for their new home in Bagotville, Que. Mr. & Mrs. Corner and daughter Mary Fay of Parkhill spent Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Marvin Wein and family. Mr. & Mrs. Ballantyne Thompson visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Earl Heist and family. 30 By MRS. NORMAN LONG KIPPEN Mr. Orville Workman is con- fined to his home with an in- jured back. Mr. & Mrs. Eldon Kerr at- tended the funeral of the for- mer's father, the late William Kerr of Winthrop. Mr. Norman Long is con- fined to his bed through illness. Mr. & Mrs. Wayne Littleton and daughter of London visited for the weekend with Mr. & Mrs. Russell Faber and Mr. & Mrs. Ron Littleton and family. Mr. & Mrs. Ray Hillier, John and Steven of Chatham spent the weekend with the latter's parents, Mr. & Mrs. Alex Mc- Murtrie. Mr. & Mrs. John Deitz and Nancy returned home from a vacation in California. Mr. & Mrs. Oswald Brown, Detroit, Mich., and Mrs. Mar- guerite Ulch, Windsor, visited for the weekend with Mr. & Mrs. Ed Little, Hensall, and were Sunday guests with Mrs. Ulch's father, Mr. Norman Long and Mrs. Long. have them? EXTRA VALUE FEATURES Does your present car Wind flips truck onto side Strong, gusting winds on Friday were believed responsible for this truck being "vertically parked" on Highway 83, about four miles west of Exeter. The truck was driven by Otto Restemayer, Dash- wood, and he was proceeding west and as he came up over a hill, the wind caught the truck and headed it for the north ditch. The driver pulled sharply to get it back onto the road and it finally landed up as shown above in the eastbound lane. OPP Constable Harry Reid estimated damage at approximately $200. --T-A photo Youth play crokinole, ladies plan at Whalen LIVESTOCK REPORT a Friday overnight guest of Linda Bieber. Mrs. Jas Baillie, mr.B ar r y Baillie, Toronto, Mr. & Mrs. Thos Simpson, Tom Jr and Miss Denise Krunk, London, visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Alex Baillie. Monday Mr. & Mrs. Wilson Morley, Exeter, also visited the Rallies. Linda Johnson, London, is spending several weeks with her aunt and uncle, Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Johnson. Mrs. Fred Anderson, St. Marys, spent last week with her daughter, Mrs. Gordon Johnson and Mr. Johnson. These are a few of the best prices received for cattle sold ,by United Co-operatives On- tario Stock Yards, Toronto. EARL FRAYNE, Exeter 2 Hereford Heifers 1420 lbs .. . @23.30 ED HENDRICK, Crediton 2 Hereford Steers 2300 lbs @ $24.20 RUSSELL FISCHER, Dashwood 1 Durham Cow 1210 lbs @ $14.75 For Service Call R. B. WILLIAMS 235-2597 Exeter DON'T RISK DISAPPOINTMENT Buy J-M Seeds and be SURE ! By MRS. FRANK SQUIRE WHALEN Whalen young people were guests Saturday evening of Cen- tralia young people at a croki- nole party in the church hall of Centralia United Church. UCW PLAN EVENTS The Whalen UCW met at the home of Mrs. Cecil Squire, Thursday afternoon. Mrs. Wm French and Mrs. Cleve Pullman were hostesses. The theme of meeting was "Fruits of the Spirit". Mrs. Bert Duffield presided. Fifteen members answered the roll call. Mrs. Eric Atwood was in charge of the worship service assisted by Mrs. Harry Klahre. During the business meeting plans were made for February 19 when the UCW ladies will serve lunch to the Centralia- Whalen men's club at Whalen church, and later a social even- ing sponsored by the UCW in March. Preparations are being made for a bazaar in the early fall. BOLT-ON FENDERS AND FRONT END SHEET METAL—Cut crash repair time and costs by as much as 50%l Save hours of cutting, fitting and welding necessary with unitized bodies, O FLAT, EASY-TO-CLEAN FLOORS—An outstanding Studebaker advantage. No.trip entry and exit... cannot catch heels or collect water easy to sweep out. O WIDE, EASY.TO.ENTER DOORS—Open wider... Less stooping and bending ...make for much more graceful entrance and exit. ALUMINIZED MUFFLER AND TAILPIPE—An outstanding, moneysaving Studebaker feature that delivers much longer life at critical points of rust, corrosion and salt damage. It takes a seed expert with world wide connections to buy the right seeds, at the right time, from the right sources, at the right price. So, if you're not an expert, trust Jones, Mac- Naughton to provide you with seeds that will give you com- pletely satisfying results—they are experts? In fact, seeds —and only seeds — are Jones,MacNaUghton's business . • . and they ha.ve specialized in seeds for Wes- tern Ontario for a great many years. You can be sure of reliable and dependable performance from all Jones, MacNaughton Seeds true to variety, high in germination and exactly suited to the soils and climate of Western Ontario. Get full value, too, from Jones, MacNaughton's long-time policy of selling the best seeds at the fairest prices. For all your seed needs, order from your local dealer or EXTENDED LUBRICATION INTERVALS— Reduces maintenance costs, allows more miles of driving pleasure between service Intervals, Mr. & Mrs. HamiltonHodgins attended the Middlesex county Jr. Farmers annual banquet at Ilderton Friday evening. Mr. & Mrs. Paul Schrier and Ann, Stratford, were Sunday visitors with Mr. & Mrs. La- verne Morley. Mr. Jim Foster, Kitchener, spent the weekend at his home here. Mrs. Florence Johns, Exeter, visited Sunday and Monday with Mr. & Mrs. Cleve Pullman. Mr. Harry Klahre is apatient at Westminster Hospital. Mr. Cecil Squire left Malton airport Sunday travelling by plane on a business trip to Sask- atoon. Mr. Hamilton Hodgins attend- ed the Federation of Agriculture annual directors' dinner meet- ing for Elgin County at the YMCA St. Thomas. Mr. & Mrs. Cleve Pullman, Roy and Ronnie visited Satur- day with Mr. & Mrs. Stan Pull- man, Staffa. Mrs. Norman Hodgins, M r s. Clare Bryan and Mrs. Percy Hodgins took a block printing course Wednesday and Thurs- day evening sponsored by Gran- ton WI at the home of Mrs. Clarence Lewis and Mrs. Cliff McRoberts. Mr. & Mrs. Ed Ward, St. Thomas, visited sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Milne Pullen and Mr. Frank Gunning. Mr. & Mrs. LaverneMorley and Mr. & Mrs. McCleod Mills were chaperones for the “Teen Town" dance Friday evening at the Recreation Centre. Karen Hern, Winchelsea. was C) SAFE ROCKER-TYPE ILLUMINATED FLUSH. MOUNTED SWITCHES—No knobs to fell off. Positive control for windshield wipers, lights. heating and ventilation. O FULLY PADDED INSTRUMENT PANEL—A stand. and feature on every Cornmon.Sense Studebaker. A great safety factor for front seat passengers—. cuts glare, adds to interior beauty. RUGGED BODY.ON.FRAME CONSTRUCTION — Rigid foundation for automobile quality ,,, a better, safer ride with box section frame con• struction and heavy side rail protection. PERSONALS Friday evening guests with Mr. & Mrs. Ken Hodgson were: Mr. & Mrs. Gerald Hem and family, Zion, Mr. & Mrs. Alton Neil and Donald, Mr. & Mrs. Wm French and family and Mrs. Olive Frederick, Mr. & Mrs. Eric Atwood, Mrs. Pascoe and Gwen. Mr. & Mrs. Bert Duffield and Mr. & Mrs. John Marshall, St. Marys, spent Sunday even- ing with Mr. & Mrs. Wm Duf- field, London. O TRANSMISSIONS—Choice of smooth, efficient automatic, economical overdrive or manual trims. Missions. PROTECTOR SERVICE—An exclusive mainte. nance program for Studebaker owners —.In- eluded with standard domestic warranty. 0 0 O 0 11 12 13 0 15 O 16 17 CONVENIENT INSIDE HOOD RELEASE—Opens easily at a touch, protects engine components against theft, HYDRAULIC VALVE LIFTERS —Provide quiet, trouble free engine periormande and extend engine life. ENGINES—Choice of two brand new engines—a powerful responsive V-S and a high perforinence 6—both run on regular fuel. LARGE INSTRUMENTS WITH CALIBRATED DIALS—No blinking lights, but practical, easy-to- read instruments that tell yoU what is happening. Rhenstits control brightness. ELECTRIC WINDSHIELD WIPERS—Positive de- pondable eCtion....two.speed control as weather conditions dtetate. MORE HEAD, HAT AND LEG ROOM-Front and rear, mare comfortable apaciOustieet than many of the highest priced luxury eel's. ONE-PIECE, ALL-WELDED SAFETY BODY—Thor- oughly insulated against sound end weather... mounted on rubber to reduce Vibration.— providei added strength and protection for paisengers. CAREFREE SAPPHIRE LUSTRE FINISHES— Tough and durable .„ Wash sparkling clean... available In a choice of ten beautiful colors with complementary interiOrs1 COURTESY 'LIGHT SWITCHES Automatic iniritehei ire • big ft-0.de rk lid On entry and 'W. COMFORVCONTOUR SEATS—Big coil spring, foam.padded deliver greater comfort, re- duce fatigue level even on long trips. EXCLUSIVE WEATHER-GUARD ALUMINIZED HusTeAboriNG—The Industry's finest 'protec. Con against rust, Corrosion and reed .Chemicals at every vulnerable point throughout .he car. 0 RECIRCULATING BALL STEERING—Effort- less, finger tip steering control with oval steering wheel that combines to give you sports.car feel of the road, DUAL BRAKE SYSTEM—Doubly safe...if one brake system falls, the other still provides safe stopping power. 18 BIG 1S.INCH WHEELS AND TIRES—For smoother, more comfortable ride, better road. ability. Give 20% bonus in extra tire mileage over 13.1nch wheels. 0 0 LEVEL RIDE FRONT STABILIZER BAR—Provides better, nO.sway control, level cornering, NEW, FOOT-OPERATED PARKING BRAKE — Keene car secure oven on steepest gridea,. Eisy fingertip release, 19 LABYRINTH.SEALED BRAKE DRUMS—Keep out dust and dirt to Improve braking action and prolong brake life. 29 WINDSHIELD WASHERS—Keep Windshield clear of slush, splash, dirt and Insects for greater safety. 0 CONTINUOUSLY DEPENDABLE SELF-AD. DUSTING BRAKES—Automatically adjust to corn. pensate for Wear and to provide continuous safe braking action. 0 BRAKE WARNING LIGHT—New "parking brake" warning light protects brake life. 11) CANADA'S OWN CAR Studebaker Check 'em out at: GRAHAM ARTHUR MOTORS JONES, MacNAUGHTON SEEDS EXETER CR EDITON Phone 235-0363 Phone 234. 6363 Topnotch Feeds Limited, Brussels, 199 EXETER Main South 235-1373