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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1966-11-17, Page 13I Your DAIRYBDOLIAR BUYS MORE Delicious NUTRITION Dairy foods like butter, cheeses, milk, and cream give body building nutri- tion — they're light, tasty pick-me-ups on summer days. Our low prices give you more flavor and value for your money. EXETER DAIRY Ltd. Times-Advocate, November 17, 1966 Pogo 15 I Century farm housed early church Crediton UCW elect new. officers in the operation was secured fi ann Hoffman's cider mill that stood near Hunger Hollow, Hill, Mrs. Mildred Holtzman and Mrs. Irma Lowry of Exeter, "I Know Who Holds To-morrow'', Thursday evening the soloist was Miss Doris Swartz, and her song "Calvary Love". Mr. & Mrs, Emerson Bawden and Gail of Windsor have been visiting at the home of Mrs, Jacob Ratz. Sunday they return- ed to Windsor, Mrs. Ratz ac- companying them for a stay of several weeks, Mr, BaWden went on a hunting trip during his holi- day, and succeeded in getting a deer, Mr, Russell Price, who has been living in the home on the farm of Gerald Schenk, is mov- ing his family to liensall. Several members of the RUB Youth Fellowship attended the Stratford district banquet at pashwoed Saturday evening, They were I.,inda Hewers, Julie Schenk, Gwen Finkbeiner, Roger Ratz, Hill Rats, Doug Finkbeiner, and im Morlock. Mr. & Mrs. Gordon Finkbeiner were guests at the Zurbrigg— Watson wedding at St. David's, eight miles north of Niagara Falls on November 12. Mrs. Mary Feist is a patient at St. Joseph's Hospital, London. Mrs. Violet Young who has been at the home of Mr. & Mrs, Wil- liam Smith for the past four weeks is returning to her home in Fort Wayne, -Indiana. Mrs. Irven Coot of Elkton, Michigan plans to ac- company her, DID YOU KNOW Did you know that fifty years ago Mr. Albert Wolfe operated a stage run from Crediton that met the London Huron & Bruce train twice daily at Centralia? That Crediton had a printing shop in the building that is now the chopping mill? it was owned by Mr. Frank Wickwire and op- erated by the late Herb Fahner, Mr. William Smith, who has ex- cellent recall of events of fifty years ago, supplied the infor- mation. He has a reprint of his marriage ceremony made byMr. Fahner in Creditor's printing shop, POWER PLUS SPEED in a lightweight chain saw Parents visit school More than 400 ratepayers and parents attended openhouse at the Stephen Central school, Thursday night. Grade seven teacher Donald Finkbeiner, right, is showing some of the pupils' work to interested parents. From the left are, Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ratz, Jack Essery, Mrs. Leonard Schenk and Mrs. Jack Essery. An excellent Remembrance Day display at the school brought back memories to some of the veterans of World War 11, Viewing the display below are: Ralph Weber, member of school board, Lloyd Guenther, Lorne Kleinstiver and Ross Brown, board chairman. T-4 photo By MISS ELLA MORLOCK CREDITON The UCW met Thursday after- noon November 10, with a good attendance. It was decided to carry on with the mystery sisters for another year, and that each member bring a friend to the Christmas meeting. Mrs. G. Hill conducted the worship for the afternoon, with Mrs. D. Warren as guest speak- er. An auction of baked goods and other articles was held with Mrs. E. Neil auctioneer, IIostesses were Mrs. D. Galloway and Mrs, R, Finkbeiner, UCW officers for 1967 were elected. President is Mrs, C, Kenney; vice-presidents, Mrs. E. Neil, Mrs. L. Hodge; sec- retary, Mrs. N. Lamport, as- sistant secretary, Mrs. R, Fink- beiner; treasurer, Mrs. S. King; good cheer, Mrs. L. Hill, Mrs, L. Hodge, Mrs. W. Hodge; manse committee, Mrs. E. Lamport, Mrs, S. King, Mrs. L. Preszcat- or; pianists, Mrs, R, Finkbeiner, Mrs. J. Galloway; Christian Stewardship, Mrs. R, Reid; Christian Citizenship, Mrs. C. Browning; Literature, Mrs. G. Hill; Supply, Mrs, D. Gal- loway; Nominating, Mrs. R. Reid, Mrs. H. Lightfoot; Finance, Mrs. S, King, Mrs. A, Baker, Mrs. R. Molitor; auditors, Mrs. L. Hodge, Mrs. L. Preszcator; Baby Band, Mrs. R. Pickering, Mrs. C. Rus- sell; Group 2 Leader, Mrs. J. Galloway. THE HOMELITE SUPER XL Homelite Super XL cuts through 18" soft- wood in 17 seconds, 18" hardwood in 24 seconds. Fells trees up to 4 feet in dia- meter. Weighs only 13 lbs., 12 oz., less bar and chain. 35% larger fuel capacity for longer cutting before refuelling. All the features of famous Homelite XL engine plus extra power, extra smoothness, extra quietness. Have a free demonstration today. So light you can balance it on one hand! MARK ANNIVERSARY More than one hundred friends called at the home of Mr. and Mrs. William H. Smith Sunday afternoon. They were "at home" on the occasion of their fiftieth wedding anniversary. Tea was poured at a table centred with golden candles and a three-tier- ed wedding cake, in a room bright with floral arrangements of gold and bronze mums. At five o'clock the family sat down to dinner In the Township Community Centre. The room had been decorated in gold and white. A program had been arranged. Mrs. Dale Wertz, grand-niece of Mrs. Smith, sang a solo, as did Mr. Don Finkbeiner. Mrs. Clay- ton Sims gave a reading, and Rev. Howard Zurbrigg addressed the gathering. Then Mr. Fink- beiner led the entire group in singing. The Hon. Mr. and Mrs. C. S, MacNaughton, unable to attend "At Home" called at the hall to offer congratulations, Among the out-of-town guests were Mrs. Violet young of Fort Wayne, Indiana; Mrs. Leonard Wing and son Ronald and Mrs. Ed. Gettle of Sebewaing, Michi- gan; Miss Shepherd, Mrs. Freida Neurath and Mrs. Dale Wertz of Pigeon, Michigan; Mr. and Mrs. John Rothfuss, Bay Port, Michi- gan; Mr. and Mrs. Irven Coot, Mr. and Mrs. Keith Rothfuss and family and Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Knectel of Elkton, Michigan; Mr. and Mrs. Louis Nemeth of Cass City, Michigan; Mrs Beulah Sparling and Mr. and Mrs. Clare Sparling and family of Walkerton; Mr. and Mrs. Roy Ortwein of Galt; Mrs. Winnie Anderson of Freel- ton, Ontario; Mr. and Mrs. Milt- on Deitz, Zurich, and Mrs. Cliff Milt's Mower & Cycle PERSONALS Mr. & Mrs, Wilmer Wein and Barbara and Mr. & Mrs, Lloyd Header and family attended the Royal Winter Fair Saturday. The flower display was outstanding, with many roses and chrysanthe- mums. A horse and rider were made of mums, the horse of white mums, the rider of flowers of different colours to represent the various garments. There was a cornucopia display. Pumpkins, corn, cauliflower and other vege- tables all made of mums spilled from it. Mr. Calvin Fahrner took his parents Mr. & Mrs. Eminery Fahrner to Trenton to the home of S/L and Mrs. Robert Palmer. lie himself went on to a reunion at the Canadian Sunday School Mission Camp at Norway Bay near Ottawa where he had served as counsellor last summer, A hunting party including John Hodgins, Exeter, Bill Hodgins, Lucan, Terry Hodgins of Lam- beth and Earl Lippert went into the area north of Sault Ste Marie. They drove as far as Hawk's Junction, then took a fifty-mile train journey further north. The land there is one of rocks, hills, and many lakes. Terry and Earl succeeded in getting a moose. It had to be quartered before the return trip by train, so they can only estimate its size. They be- lieve it weighed about 1100 pounds. Rev. & Mrs. Karl Tauber of Fort Wayne, Indiana were guests at the home of Rev. & Mrs. How- ard Zurbrigg. They are Mrs. Zurbrigg's parents. More than three hundred people took advantage of Open House evening at Stephen Central School to view the new building. The general agreement was that the structure is a fine one and that the teachers keep their class- rooms in most attractive condi- tion. Mr. & Mrs. Sam King and mr. & Mrs. Don Mahoney attended the Hutton-Donaldson wedding in the Presbyterian Church at Ailsa Craig, November 12. Following the wedding ceremony there was a reception in St. John's Anglican Parish Hall, Strathroy. The bride is a niece of Mrs. King. Rev. Howard Zurbrigg was speaker at the Preaching Mis- sion, EUB Church Zurich Tues- day and Thursday of last week. Tuesday Mr. Don Finkbeiner sang Box 250, Exeter, Ont. Tel: 235-2940 Girls' group at Elimville honor mothers at banquet Meteor has the longest wheelbase in its class... gives you a smoother, quieter ride at no additional cost. It's the extra things we put into Meteor that make the difference. By MRS. ROSS SKINNER ELEVIVILLE The Elimville-Thames Road CGIT mother and daughter ban- quet was held at Elimville Church Thursday evening. Mrs. Howard Pym was spokesman and pro- posed a toast to the Queen. Miss Beverley Passmore pro- posed a toast to the mothers which was replied by Mrs. Frank- lin Skinner. Mrs. Stewart Miner proposed a toast to the CGITand leaders to which Miss Sharon Passmore responded, Miss Susan Allen introduced the guest speaker Mrs. M. C. STAHL CENTURY FARM Mr. Irving Stahl lives on a century farm that saw the be- ginning of religious activity in this community, His grandfather Diebold Stahl bought the land, one hundred acres, from the Canada Land Company for sixty- six pounds,, and came to his holdings in 1851 on horseback from Morriston. The New York Conference had established the Huron Mission which included all German settle- ments from Stratford to Lake Huron. When the itinerant pastor came into this area, he preached to the settlers gathered in Mr. Stahl's log cabin. The log barn was replaced by a larger one of frame, the log cabin by a brick dwelling in 1872. That house was torn down in 1948 when the present owner built a modern bungalow. Levi Stahl, who succeeded his father Diebold in the ownership of the land, died when his son Irving was only fourteen years old. There were two large apple orchards that bore abundantly. During winter evenings apples were peeled, using a hand-turn- ed peeler that was fastened to a board. The next day the fruit that had been prepared the evening before was dried over the kitchen range. The dried apples were weighed in fifty-pound bags and sold at five cents a pound to Zwicker's General Store. Three times a year there was apple butter cooking, a chore that took all day. The butter was cooked in a huge copper kettle slung from a pole in the yard. The cider used Meteor has the longest wheelbase in its class. It's the smoothest, most comfortable-riding car in the popular price field. Independent, all-coil suspension lets Meteor's wheels step individually over bumps. Cushion-link rear suspension takes the "jar" out of dips and hollows. A compliance,tuned frame flexes slightly to help absorb road shock and vibration. That's Meteor. And that's the difference! Ford of Canada More Comprehensive 3-Point New Car Warranty 0 5 year/50,000 miles on power train, steering,suspension and wheels. @ 2 year/24,000 miles on the entire car. 0 Only one dealer certification per year See your dealer for details. Meteor-uniquely different in the popular price field. 15 distinctive models in Montego • S-33 • Montcalm • Rideau 500 • Rideau Every 67 Ford built cat is entrupped with Ford of Canada's standard safety package , 119.34G ..,has a better idea SAVERS CAN BE CHOOSERS Ever wonder why some folks seem to have all the "luck" . . new cars, attractive clothes, wonderful vacations? These folks are real savers. You can have them too, start put- ting a regular amount into your savings account each pay day. OPEN A 4% SAVINGS ACCOUNT NOW VICTORIA and GREY TRUST 425 Main St. Exeter 2350530 HENSALL MOTOR SALES, HENSALL MERCURY Hwy. 4 South, Phone 262-2604 Fletcher of Exeter who was thanked by Miss Carol Bell. Miss Marlene Stewart gave a piano selection and Misses Joan and Susan Allen sang a duet. PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Carman Herd- man and family of Livonia, Mich. visited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Squire Herdman and Messrs. Amos and Herman Herdman. Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Rennie and family of London, Mr. and Mrs. Don Willcox and family of Kitchener spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Routly. Mr. and Mrs. Roylance West- cott of Exeter, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Routly attended the Good Roads banquet at Clinton last Wednesday evening. Mr. Fred Spike of Camp Bor- den spent the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Skinner. ,O.vommic.„, Meteor Montego 2•door hardtop '." 1,14kt•-• 45.