The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-09-02, Page 5PAID ON
GUARANTEED
TRUST CERTIFICATES
• issued in amounts from $100
upwards for 3, 4 or 5 years.
• earn the above indicated interest,
payable half-yearly by cheque.
• authorized investment, for all
Canadian Insurance Companies
and trust funds.
STERLIV
THE
IAT:fRUSTS
372 Say St., 35 Dunlop St., 73 E.,
Toronto Barrio °aid
oimal•ddiammosiw'
BODYMAN'S SPECIAL
1959 PLYMOUTH, A48431
1957 DODGES (4) A52907, A58251,
A17334, A48910
See Ed if you want
that dent taken out.
Drop in this
weekend
Personal Size
Ivory Soap
5 bars
(F:i loutsh)face 490
King Size Liquid
I vory 32 oz.
990 (120 off
pack)
Bick's Sweet Mixed
Pickles
24 oz. jar
2 /7 90
Duncan Hines
Layer Type
Cake Mixes
reg. 490 each
2/790
Stafford Cherry 20 oz. tins
Pie Filling 29
Cr isco Shortening
(90 OFF PACK) $ I s 09 3 lb. tins
Franco-American
20 Spaghetti 2139i
Carnation Milk
16 oz. tins 3/49
Weston's
Hot Dog Buns
DOZEN 35
HENSALI
STORE HOURS Closed all day every
• Monday; open all day Wednesday;
open Friday evenings until 9 p.m4 •
open Saturday evenings until 10 p.m.
Tomes-Advocate, September 2, 1905 Page
Enjoy the holiday
Drive safely —it may be your life you save . Hensa
and district news
CORRESPONDENTS
Mrs, Maude Hedden, Phone 262-2002
Mrs. Bertha MacGregor, Phone 262-2025 HENSALL
MOTORS LTD Good ball season
of local interest
David Beer, 12-year-old son
of F/O and Mrs. John Beer, of
Moose Jaw, Sask, has had a very
successful baseball season. He
Was chosen for the "All Star
Team" who won the Alberta Sask-
atchewan Inter-Provincial cham-
pionship in Edmonton and went on
to play in New Westminster B.C.
for the Western finals where they
were defeated.
Had they won the Western they
would have played Stoney creek
and then on to Williamsport, Pa.
for the Little League Wor ld
Championship.
David is a grandson of Mrs.
Bessie Mitchell, Brussels, and
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beer, Hen-
sail.
Hensall resident
passes at Clinton
Miss Margaret L. Buchanan,
88, a resident of Hensall for a
number of years and a registered
nurse, passed away in Clinton
Public Hospital Wednesday, Aug-
ust 25 where she had been a pa-
tient for two months with a frac-
tured hip which she suffered in
a fall at her home.
She is survived by two sisters
Mrs. George Armstrong, Hen-
salt, and Miss Mary Buchanan,
Toronto.
Funeral services were held
Friday from Bonthron Funeral
Horne conducted by Rev. H. F.
Currie. Burial was in Hensall
Union Cemetery.
Pallbearers were Len Purdy,
Blighton Ferg, Ira Geiger, W. H.
Bell, Willard Buchanan and W.
H. Weekes.
CHURCH NOTES
Resuming their fall meetings
UCW Unit 4 will meet Thursday,
Sept 2, at 2.30 pm under the
leadership of Mrs. James Mc-
Allister.
Regular services will comm-
ence this Sunday morning Sept. 5
at 11 am. Sunday School registra-
tion of classes at 9,45 am. Rev. H.
F. Currie, minister, will be in his
own pulpit.
By MRS. L. PRESZCATOR
PERSONALS
Mrs. Jack Moir and Mr. &
Mrs. Paul Cochrane and son
Robert of Detroit visited last
week with Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd
Gaiser.
Mr. & Mrs. C, Hawman of
Collingwood spent the weekend
with Mrs. M. Haviland.
Mr. & Mrs. Lorne Finkbein-
er, Mr. Joe Wein, Mr. & Mrs.
Reg Finkbeiner of London visit-
ed last week with Mr. Garnet
Sweitzer of Claryville, New York.
Mr. & Mrs. Garfield Hill and
Stanley attended the Gidley—
Moore wedding at Sharon Church
near Lambeth Saturday. Recep-
tion was held at the Seven Dwarfs
Restaurant.
Mr. & Mrs. Ed Hendrick and
Carol and Miss Clara Gaiser
visited over the weekend at Wel-
land, Dunnville and Niagara
Falls.
Mrs. Sam King and Mrs. Karl
O'Neil of Lucan left this -week
to visit with the former's daugh-
ter now stationed in Germany.
Defence of unions
— Continued from page 4
ponsibility. Accordingly, they
often do not demonstrate it. They
leave management of business,
church, and state to others. One
cannot be happy about a large
number of people exercising no
responsibility for their work,
their nation, or their religion.
"Fortunately, individual res-
ponsibility is not the only kind of
responsibility possible. Through
grief and struggle the wage-lab-
ourers developed the union.Here
each member may exercise his
responsibility through the cor-
porate body. He may speak to the
cOmpany through the union and
the company speak to him in a
framework established join tl y
with a union . . . Discipline and
grievances may be settled to-
gether by company and union. The
worker may exercise some con-
trol rarer his working life, insofar
as he is an active union merhber."
It seems to me that this oppor-
tunity should be the inalienable
right of every worker, and the fact
that his employer is arnunicipal-
itY rather thee a private company
should make no difference. Sec-
tion 89 of the Ontario Labour Re-
lationS Ad should be repealed.
The British fsies are a part
of the Ear Ope an continental
shelf:
Peitdaftaid
Miss Kathryn Sells, Miss Ethel
Walker, Mrs. Orva Chevier, of
London, were Sunday guests with
the Misses Amy and Greta Lam-
mie.
Mrs. Phyllis Whiteman, Ot-
tawa, spent the weekend with Mr.
and Mrs. Gordon Whiteman and
Beverly, and with the Whiteman's
attended the Assembly of Jeho-
vah's Witnesses at London over
the weekend.
Keith Hay, 17, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Lorne Hay, Hansen, has
been awarded an Admiss ion
Scholarship to University of Wes-
tern Ontario, also free tuition to
Waterloo Lutheran University.
Keith has accepted the former
offer.
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Shirray
visited recently with Mr. and
Mrs. Wm. MacRae and the lat-
ter's mother,Mrs. Nellie Cooke
at Cumberlad, near Ottawa.
Mr. and Mrs. Bill Simpson
of Birmingham, Mich., spent the
weekend with Mrs. Lou Simpson.
Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Smith
spent the weekend with their
daughter and son-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Tipping, London.
Mrs. Aldwinkle is visiting with
relatives in Ottawa.
Annual Labor Day Trap Shoot
will be held at Kippen Sunday,
Sept 5 at 1 pm. Two Trophies
will be shot for: Kippen Gun
Club 50 bird event and 25 bird
5 man team trophy.
Mrs. R. M. Peck attended the
Statham-Hicks wedding at the
United Church, Kingsville, Sat-
urday, August 28.
Mr. and Mrs. Wes Richardson
of Hensall, Mr. and Mrs. A. J.
Smith of London, formerly of
Hensel', spent last week vaca-
tioning and fishing at Eckford
Camps at Restoue. Fishing was
excellent they said, and between
the four of them they caught over
eighty pickerel and four pike.
Mrs. C. K. Harrison has re-
turned to her home at Summer-
side, P.E.I. after spending two
weeks with her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Wm Smale, and rela-
tives in London, Scarborough,
and Toronto.
Hensall Women's Institute will
resume its meetings Wednesday,
September 8 in the Legion Hall
with a pot luck supper at '7 pm
sharp.
Grant and Kenneth Jones will
appear on John Dickens Talent
Time on CFPL-TV Sunday Sept
5 at 5.30 pm.
Miss Janice Armstrong is a
patient in Clinton Public Hos-
pital where she underwent sur-
gery for an appendectomy.
At the United Church Sunday
morning Rev., H. F. Currie chose
for his theme "Love Your Neigh-
bour". Mr. Sam Rennie was so-
loist. Flowers in the sanctuary
were in memory of Miss Mar-
garet Buchanan, placed by the
family.
Mr. and Mrs. Joe DeLoge of
Sarnia visited recently with the
latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Lorne Chapman & sons.
Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Bailey
of London were guests with Mr.
& Mrs. Harold Parker and Misses
Dorothy & Patsy Parker.
Mr. and Mrs. Ron Mason and
daughter Tracey of Pittsburgh,
Penn. are holidaying with Mrs.
Mason's parents, Mr. & Mrs.
Glenn E. Bell and Mervyn.
Bradley Sangster, son of Mr.
& Mrs. James Sangster, returned
Was resident
of Hensall
Mrs. Wesley Venner of Heil-
sail passed away Saturday at
South Huron Hospital Exeter in
her 67th year. She was the former
Mary Estella McLaren and a
resident of Hensall for the past
fourteen years. She was also a
member of Hensall United
Church, Amber Rebekah Lodge
and the Ladies Legion Auxiliary.
Survivors are her husband,
sons Rodger, Hensall; Murray,
Grand Bend; daughter, Mrs. Gil-
bert (Jean) Johns, Elimville, Sis-
ters Mrs. Alfred (Margaret) Hun-
kin, Exeter; Mrs. Glenn (Ruby)
Bell, Hensall, brother Roy, Lon-
don.
Funeral services were held
Tuesday at 3 pm from the Bon-
thron Funeral Home, Hensall with
burial in Hensall Union Cem-
etery.
Service was conducted by
members of Amber Rebekah
Lodge, Hensall, and Pride of
Huron, Rebekah Lodge, Exeter,
Monday evening.
PERSONALS
Rev. G. E. Morrow has return-
ed from his vacation and will be
taking services in the United
Church. Rev. W. J. Maines of
Londesboro, a former minister,
has had charge of the service the
last three weeks.
Mr. & Mrs. Bill Baker and fam-
ily returned to Hensall last week
after spending the summer at the
home of her father, Mr. Lisle
Woodburn.
Mr. & Mrs. Carl Pollock and
family of London visited Saturday
with Mr. & Mrs. Milton Pollock.
Mr. & Mrs. Ray Wright of
Sarnia visited one day last week
with Mr. Dean Brown, Mr. &
Mrs. Russell Brown and family.
Mr. & Mrs. John Allister of
Hamilton visited Sunday with
Mrs. Albert Pollock.
Glen Brophey of London spent
last week with his grandparents,
Mr. & Mrs. Lloyd Brophey.
Mr. & Mrs. Ken Larmer of
Peterboro visited last week with
her parents, Mr. & Mrs. Car-
man Woodburn, having returned
from a trip to James Bay.
home from South Huron Hospital
Exeter, following tonsillectomy
on Monday.
Mrs. Pearl Shaddick of Hay-
field spent the weekend at her
home here.
Constable Douglas Wein,
RCMP and Mrs. Wein of Inver-
ness, Nova Scotia, visited this
week with the latter's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Parker and
Patsy.
Mr. Milton Russell, who has
been a patient in South Huron
Hospital, Exeter, returned to his
home,
Mrs. Edna Corbett visited this
week with Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
Parker and family.
Mrs. R, D. McArthur, Mac and
Cam, returned to their home in
Rivers, Man, after spending the
past two months with the former's
parents, Mr. and Mrs. Fred Beer.
By MRS. WELLWOOD GILL.
PERSONALS
Sunday guests with Mrs. Marie
Pask were Mr. & Mrs. Robert
Annan and family of Pickering,
Mr. and Mrs. Harry McAdams,
and son of Arva, Mr. and Mrs.
H. Hasson and sister Emma of
Zurich and Mr. and Mrs. Ferd
Miller of Dashwood.
Mr. and Mrs. Carl Vanner of
Chatham, Miss Pauline Mason
of London and Mrs. Thomas
Baird, Grand Bend, spent a few
days last week at Port Huron.
Mr. and Mrs. James Miekle,
Susan and John, Mrs. Glen Man-
ley and Linda of Southampton
visited Sunday.
Mrs. Don Leslie of Winnipeg,
Man,, has returned home after
visiting with her parents and
relatives. She's the daughter of
N. J. Whiteford, Grand Bend.
Mr. and Mrs. James Whiteford
of Royal Oak, Mich., also spent
a few days recently with his
brother and sister-in-law.
Mr. and Mrs. Glen Manley and
family of Southampton are moving
this week to Grand Bend and will
reside in Mr. Wally Desjardine's
house on Main St.
' Mrs. E. A. McMaster is a
patient in South Huron hospital,
Exeter.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Flear
and Mark of London are spend-
ing a few days with her father,
Mr: Earl Finan.
Sunkist No. 1
Oranges
size 163's
3 doz. $1
Frozen Farmhouse
Apple
Pies
24 oz. size
390
CARS
1965 METEOR MONTCALM 2 door hardtop,
V8, automatic, A53449
1965 METEOR MONTCALM 4 door sedan,
just beautiful, A50670
1964 FORD Tudor, 6 cyl., standard, 981207
1964 FORD 4 door Custom, 6 cyl., standard,
47376E
1964 COMET, 6 FYI. standard, 4 door, radio,
33436J
1963 CORVAIR Monza, 4 speed transmission,
radio, white walls.
1963 CHEV Impala 2-door hardtop, 327 en-
gine, sharp, A52891
1962 OLDSMOBILE, 4 dr, H.T., V8 automatic,
white walls, wheel discs, 21,000 miles.
1962 CHRYSLER 2-door hardtop, V8, auto-
matic, power steering, power brakes,
A50125
1962 STUDEBAKER 4 door, 6 cyl., automatic,
white walls, wheel discs, radio, A53510
1961 MONARCH 4 door sedan, all power
equipped, A61972
1960 PONTIAC Convertible, 2-door, 6 cyl.,
automatic, radio, A50898
1960 METEOR Wagon, 6 cyl., 4
ard, 91263X
1959 METEOR, V8 automatic, 4 door, A51300
1959 RENAULT 4 door sedan, just what
mother needs, A53606
1958 METEOR, V8, A52823
TRUCKS
1960 FORD 1 Ton, with good box, 4 speed,
6 cyl., Y60737
1959 FORD 1 Ton, 6 cyl., 4 speed, Y60738
1957 GMC, 3/4 Ton, C56566
1957 FORD 1 Ton with racks, 88350E
1949 INTERNATIONAL 1 Ton, 202436
door, stand-
Hwy 4 South 262.2604
METEOR, COMET, MERCURY
Scenes at Grand Ole Opry
Approximately 1,000 spectators .were on hand Tuesday evening for
the Grand Ole Opry program held at the Hensall arena. The group
were brought in by the Hensall Kinsmen club as a fund raising pro-
ject with proceeds to be used for community work. The above scenes
show one group of entertainers and a portion of the crowd which was
on hand to hear the old time music. (T-A photos)
. • • u...ar:ae•-.::,
BIG
SAVINGS
at Hensall
Smoked
COTTAGE ROLLSZ:"1. 690
HEAD CHEESE per tin 790
Fresh
Ground Beef
2i„7 91
LIVER Bee, or Pork
L.290
WIENERS
2.850
Fresh
SIDE PORK .490