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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-03-11, Page 8.1% FARMERS ! For your spring work requirements be sure to inquire about the complete line of Renault Tractors • 30 - 60 hp. • gas, diesel • Ontario grain drills • rugged Kewanee discs • versatile vibrating Tau! cultivators And also large stock of tires for cars, trucks, tractors, etc. New car take-offs start as low as $10 for 750 x 14 or 670 x 15 first line tires. HAUGH BROS. <1,06 Farm Equipment 1 MILE EAST OF BRUCE Fl ELD OPEN HOUSE Wed., March 24 2:00 p.m. and 8:00 p.m. Showing of the 1965 FORD TRACTORS Bring the Whole Family for o FILMS o REFRESHMENTS o PRIZES MALTING BARLEY CONTRACTS Seed and Fertilizer Supplied Your Choice BETZE ( 2 rowed variety ) PARKLAND ( 6 rowed variety ) AN EXCELLENT CROP FOR EARLY CASH BEAN SEED Excellent Quality Ontario Registered SEAWAY SANI LAC SAGINAW MICHELITE Michigan Certified Sanilac Seaway ALL SEED GROWN FROM FOUNDATION STOCK BEAN CONTRACTS Seed and Fertilizer Supplied Excellent Bean Demand Creates Good Prices For Your Spring Seeding and Fertilizer Needs WE AIM TO BE OF SERVICE TO YOU E.L.MICKLE & Son LTD. Drop in or phone collect 262.2714 fertilizer Call your local SHUR-GAIN Fertilizer dealer or SHUR-GAIN Fertilizer plant Quality Produce, Exeter Phonoeral3E Page 8 Times-Advocate, March 11, 1965 Centralia women plan Name top players TV show appearance at Whalen euchre Saintsbury couple 30 years married By MRS. FRANK SQUIRE WHALEN Mr. and Mrs. Wm. French were in charge of the Commun- ity euchre Friday evening at the Recreation Centre, Winners for the evening were: ladies high, Mrs. Laverne Mor- ley; men's high, Alton Neil; lone hands, Mrs. Wm. Morley; consolation, Donald Neil, rice MacDonald, past president, as third leader and Mrs. Bill Johnson WA treasurer as fourth leader. Other members took part in the prayers, Mrs. Kooy gaye a message on the theme, "What Doth the Lord Require?" A short business meeting for both WA and Guild members followed, completing plans for the St. Patrick's tea and bake sale. Mrs. Davis was assisted by Mrs. Weiberg and Mrs. At- kinson with refreshments. By MRS. WM. WALTERS Mrs. Gladys Atkinson of Lu- can spent the past week with her sister, Mrs. Newton Clarke. Mrs. John Coward and Mrs. Phil Bern attended the funeral of their uncle the late Mr. Ed. Francis at Creswell, Michi- gan. Mrs. Nelson Squire of Exe- ter and Mrs. Don Myers of London visited Saturday even- ing with Mrs. Nelson Clarke and Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Walters. Mr. Wm. Walters spent Mon- day and Tuesday at the Purina Research Farm in St. Louis, USA. PERSONALS Mr. Cecil Squire spent Wed- nesday and Thursday of last week in Guelph. Mr. & Mrs. Percy Hodgins visited Tuesday with Mr. Fred Pattison, St. Marys on the oc- casion of Mr. Pattison's birth- day. Flowers were placed in the We easily believe that which we wish. were guests Sunday evening with their niece and nephew, Mr. & Mrs. Don Abbott, Lucan. Mr. & Mrs. Jim Young and Jeffrey, Lucan, were guests Sunday with her sister and brother-le-law Mr. & Mrs. Bob Tindall, Nancy and Mary- lou. Mr, & Mrs. Ron Carroll and Ian were guests Sunday with their great uncle, Mr. Clarence Fletcher, Woodham. Mr. & Mrs. Harry Carroll and Wayne were Sunday evening guests with Mrs. Henry Hod- gins, Lucan. Mr. & Mrs. Maurice Mac- Donald and Mr. & Mrs. Harry Carroll were Monday guests with Mr. & Mrs. Heber Davis. Saturday evening Mr. & Mrs. Earl Atkinson, Lucan, and Mr. & Mrs. Jack Dickins were guests with the Davis'. By MRS. HEBER DAVIS SAINI'SBURY Mr. and Mrs. Howard Mac- Donald, Lucan, held an anni- versary dinner Saturday eve- ning for Mr, and Mrs. Tom Kooy, Ailsa Craig, who were observing their thirtieth wed- ding anniversary. Mr. and Mrs. Maurice MacDonald, Mr. and Mrs. Peter Sovereign, Faren and Ferlin, and Mr. Clayton Kooy and Mrs. Laura McLin- chy, Ailsa Craig, were present. Mr. and Mrs. Kooy received beautiful gifts. By MRS. FRED BOWDEN CENTRALIA The World Day of Prayer was observed in conjunction with the monthly meeting of the UCW in the schoolroom of the church Thursday evening. The president, Mrs. K. Greb, conducted the business and opened the meeting with a poem. The citizenship report was giv- en by Mrs. Earl Heist. Invita- tions to participate in the Tele- pathy Tea on March 17 were given out at the close of the meeting. It was decided to charter a bus to London for the ladies' PERSONALS Mr. & Mrs. Clarence Davis Purchases farm at at Mt. Carmel DAY OF PRAYER SERVICE The World Day of Prayer service was held at the home of Mrs. Hugh Davis with 12 present. Mrs. Tom Kooy, WA president, as first leader was in charge assisted by Mrs. Hugh Davis, Guild president, as second leader and Mrs. Mau- DON' T RISK DISAPPOINTMENT Buy J-M Seeds Jenkins, in London Monday. Mr. & Mrs. John Thompson were weekend visitors with Mr. & Mrs. Grant Brown and family in Sarnia. Visitors with Mr. & Mrs. George Dunn were Mr. & Mrs. Chester Dunn of Exeter onSun- day, Mr. & Mrs. Mervin Dunn of Hurondale on Monday eve- ning. Miss Wilda Pollock of Kit- chener was a weekend guest with her sister, Mrs. Lorne Hicks. Mrs. Joseph Wilson of Cen- tralia, who suffered a stroke Tuesday, and was rushed to St. Joseph's Hospital, London, by Haskett ambulance, is now re- cuperating satisfactorily. Bill Wilson, son of Mr. & Mrs. Joseph Wilson, who recently underwent surgery in Victoria Hospital, is progressing favor- ably at the home of Mr. & Mrs. James Ogden, London. United Church Sunday in mem- ory of the late Mr. Bristol Holden, St. Marys, father of Mrs. Cecil Squire. Mr, Frank Gunning is still a patient at Memorial Hospital, St. Marys. Mrs. Norman Hodgins, Mrs. Clare Bryan, Avis Hodgins, Mrs. Percy Hodgins and Mrs. Mervin Baker attended the Farm Show at London Tuesday evening. Several ladies from Whalen attended the shower Monday evening in honor of Miss Jean Anderson, Thames Road at the home of her sister Mrs. Jack Triebner, Exeter. Mr. & Mrs. Ken Hodgson and family visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Harold Carter, Metro- politan. Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Johnson and family were Saturday even- ing guests of Mr. & Mrs. Steve Fields, London. Avis and Grant H o d g ins attended the meeting of the Edgewood Jr. Farmers Monday evening at the home of Chas. O'Shea. Mr. & Mrs. Percy Hodgins Joan, Marlene and Gwen attend- ed the Ice Capades at the Gar- dens in London, Saturday even- ing. Jim Foster, Kitchener spent the weekend at his home here. Work copper at Elimville and be SURE ! By MRS. ROSS SKINNER ELIMVILLE appearance on the TV program "Take Your Choice". Mrs. Elmer Powe and Mrs. M. Elliott were the leaders for the World Day of Prayer ser- vice which was followed as written by Mrs. Jesse Jai Mc- Neil a gifted and distinguished American Negro woman, wife of the Rev. Dr. McNeil of Pasa- dena, California. "What Doth the Lord Re- quire" was the theme of the service. The service opened with quiet music by Mrs. Alvin Essery. Intercessory prayers were offered by Mrs. K. Greb, Mrs. V. Drought, Mrs. R. Blair, Mrs. W. R. Essery, and Mrs. L. Morgan. Passages of scripture conveying "Words of Assur- ance" were read by Mrs. S. Skinner, Mrs. M. Buswell, Mrs. C. Rollings, Mrs. K. Hodgins, and Mrs. W. Huxtable. The solo "He's Got The Whole World in His Hands" was sung by Mrs. Russell Wilson with Mrs. K. Hodgins playing the piano ac- companiment. The message was given by Mrs. Arthur McF ells who point- ed out that God requires follow- ers who will be true and faith- ful witnesses. The offering was taken by Mrs. Earl Heist and Mrs. Ross McFalls. There was a good attendance and the hos- tesses were Mrs. E. Powe, Mrs. M. Elliott, Mrs. M. Abbott and Mrs. R, Breen. PERSONALS Miss Agnes Anderson who has been vacationing in Mesa, Arizona, for the past few weeks returned home Saturday eve- ning. Mr. & Mrs. Armand Bedour and family of Goderich were Sunday guests with Mr. & Mrs. V. Overholt and family. Mr. & Mrs. Murray Elliott, Mr. & Mrs. Wm. Elliott attended the funeral of the former's sister, the late Mrs. William The Elimville WI sponsored a copper tooling course last week at the hail when several ladies enjoyed doing the craft demonstrated by Miss Leslie, the instructor from the exten- sion branch of the Dept. of Agriculture. MT. CARMEL Mr. Albert Regier has sold his farm to Mr. Arnold Martens of Crediton. Mr. Louis Dietrich is enjoy- ing a holiday in sunny Florida. Mr. Pius Dietrich has return- ed to Victoria Hospital. Misses Joanne and Eleanore and Mr. Larry Dietrich spent the weekend with their parents, Mr. & Mrs. Charles Dietrich. Vincent Ryan, Dennis and Dan McCann of Windsor visited with their parents over the weekend. Mrs. Michael Ryan Sr. has returned home after a pleasant visit with Mr. & Mrs. Gerard McCarthy of Maidstone. Misses Theresa, Margaret and Irene Carey, London, were weekend guests with Mr. & Mrs. Hubert Carey. Mrs. Catherine Morrissey visited with Mrs. Andy Morris- sey and family in Chatham last Saturday. Mr. & Mrs. Wilfred Helm and girls of Kitchener, accom- panied by Mrs. Jim Glavin dined with Mr. & Mrs. Joe Carey and girls Sunday evening. Mrs. Gerry Dignan of London is spending this week with Miss Bernie Madden. LIVESTOCK REPORT owing to weather conditions No Shipment of Cattle Thank You For Service Call ir•o. 4P, ^ • 4, NI,....w• b' 41` ajilly, 4' * ....Indies 4it ,,,,011116 tin - ''''' qiik.4i4 I/ ' Vi, ,,, 1,9,00,41P0 'Iltok .,,, ':31,,, • 41/,,:- .4 40,6 4 1, *I A P "Sid:.:4'441,„ ..4 ,oste*,,_144)'.**;Nee" ie',-,,,,,..._44,' 1.40 74,1t, ,64it.,„A"- 1:03%' j•CL,-111• 04•:••10,4 11.4 • k,, .1° 515,... 4 e IMP 1 ' - Oseerti Al. .<'' • *A '#er•L tr& .. 7 4° r.014,.. PS, 4, ., 44t 1 • , '41111cAn 0V *40 A * / ' '''' RECEIVES SHOCK Mr. John Dietrich received an electric shock from a milking machine he was operating last Saturday evening. He was help- ing his cousin do chores at the farm of Pius Dietrich. He was rushed to SouthHuron Hospital in Exefer. He is much improved now. 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 satisfactory results—they are experts! In fact, seeds—and only seeds — are Jones, MacNaughton's business . . and they have specialized in seeds for Western 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 Exeter R. B. WILLIAMS 235-2597 JONES, MacNAUGHTON SEEDS reN \ M. AL-a, -06,-. EXETER CREDITON Phone 235-0363 Phone 234- 6363 DOES SHUR•GAIN FERTILIZER SPREAD BETTER? PERSONALS The Elimville UCW were guests of the Thames Road ladies Friday for the World Day of Prayer. Mrs. Addle Coaltis of Exeter visited Sunday with Mr. & Mrs. Harold Kerslake and family. A family gathering was held at the Elimville Hall Friday evening for Mr. & Mrs. Chester Cornish of Exeter who cele- brated their 25th wedding anni- versary when all their relatives attended. Mr. & Mrs. Russell Morley of Exeter celebrated their 25th wedding anniversary at the Elimville Hall Saturday eve- ning when their relatives and friends were guests. At a quick glance SHUR-GAIN Selected-Granulated Fertilizer may look very much like most other kinds of granular fertilizers—but there is an important difference. Most ordinary fertilizers and practically all custom blended ones consist of a dry mixture of fertilizer materials either in powder or granular form. As a result the different ingredients vary in size, and weight. You can com- pare it to a handful of ping-pong balls, mixed with marbles. If you throw out a handful of these, the heavier marbles will travel farther than the ping-pong balls—and that is exactly what happens with ordinary fertilizers. When you spread your fertilizer, with a drill or even more important, with any broadcast-type spreader you can be sure that every particle (from the smallest to the largest) of free-running SHUR-GAIN Selected-Granulated Fer- tilizer is nutritionally balanced no matter where it lies—assuring you of complete and even intake of all the plant food by your crops. There are no excesses in one area and starvation in another with SHUR-GAIN. Another good reason why you can be confident of top returns from SHUR-GAIN —the finest fertilizer for your good earth! BUT if you can't wait - - we've special prices on 1964 FORD SUPER MAJOR and SUPER DEXTA 4-plow and 3 - plow tractors. TRACTORS '62 FORD 641 tractor & side-mounted mower, Under 400 hrs. (Like new) ...... . 1,800 '62 FORD, LCG tractor, ideal for lawns, golf courses 1,550 '61 ALLIS CHALMERS, ED 40, less than 1,000 hrs. 1,800 '58 FORDSON Power Major, 3-point hitch, etc... 1,900 FORD rear-end LOADER 100 '53 M-H 23 Mustang, 3-point hitch, plow, cultivator, snow blade & chains 600 '50 IIiC "IV with super kit. A real dandy! 650 10-FOOT drag cultivator 100 Spring Is Not Just Aro C Corner ... It's Here . In fishing, it's the best bait in the best waters at the right time. In farming, it's the best SEED with the best FERTILIZER in the right soil at the right time. • Our GRASS SEEDS and SEED GRAIN are cleaned and graded, high in germination and selected for this area with a wide choice of varieties. • Clovers, Alfalfas, Grasses, Permanent Pas- tures. • CANADA #1 and Registered Oats, Barley, Wheat and Mixtures. • SEED CORN — Pfister, Warwick, DeKalb, Funks, Jacques — Orders taken now are protected against price increases. • Our stock of FERTILIZERS offers you the most COMPLETE PROGRAM whether it be solid or liquid, bulk or bag, with spreading facilities. • OUR GRAIN CONTRACTS offer you a choice of MALTING BARLEY, OATS and MIXED GRAIN — Seed and fertilizer supplied. • CUSTOM PLANTING for Corn, Beans and Sugar Beets. CARS '64 GALAXIE 500 XL hardtop, fully loaded. '64 FORD Custom 2-door, V-8, standard transmission '64 FALCON Wagon, 4-door, radio, stick shift. '64 METEOR coach, V-8, auto, radio, a beautiful black. '64 FORD Custom 2-door, 6 cylinder, automatic. '63 MERCURY 2-door, hardtop, loaded, a beautiful thing. '63 DODGE coach, V-8, auto, "former holstein". '63 FORD GALAXIE, 4-door, V-8, standard trans., ex- ceptionally clean. '62 FORD V8 sedan, auto, radio, Lovely! '61 FORD sedan, V-8, stick, radio. '61 GALAXIE, V-B sedan, a beautiful black. '61 DODGE Seneca, 4-door, 6 cyl., auto. gleaming black. '60 FALCON 2-door, 6 cyl., standard trans., radio, locally owned. '60 FALCON station wagon, 6 cyl., auto, radio, new motor. '59 FORD sedan, V-8, auto, can be bought right. '59 METEOR, 2-door, V-8, auto, radio. Place your order with us now for ALL your requirements in Seed and Fertilizer. TRUCKS '63 FORD F700 dump, above average 3,750 '62 FALCON RANCHERO, auto, radio 1,850 '59 FORD F-700 dump. Ready to roll 2,100 '59 FORD 1-ton stake, dual wheels, rebuilt motor 1,400 '59 GMC 3-toh chassis and cab 1,200 '57 FORD 1-ton stake, dual wheels 1,100 '55 IHC, 184 tractor, full air, 5th wheel, ready to roll 900 (ANN'S MILL Reduced $10. A Day Ti I Sold '60 FORD sedan, V-8 automatic Thurs. price 785 Larry Snider Motors Ltd. Pord, Fairlane, Falcon and Ford Trucks SEd Main South Exeter 235-1782 EXETER 229-6118 KIRKTON 235.1640 I