HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1970-01-08, Page 18For more satisfactory
driving in the New
Year, let us take over
the responsibility for
servicing your car.
Whether it's a knock in
the engine, or a major
overhaul, we'll give you
prompt attention.
RON
AUTO SALES
TOYOTA SAL ES AdSERVICE
RADIO EQUIPPED 241biTowl NG
/40s6235-1710 'EXETER
,New
* AUSTIN
* MGB
* TRIUMPH
* ROVER
Used...
1969 MONTEGO
2-door hardtop, 15,000
miles, radio, red and
white, automatic. Driven
by a lad who needs more
room. N23031
1967 AUSTIN 1100
Automatic, radio, new
snow tires H77100
1965 METEOR 500
Rideau. Radio, power
steering and brakes. H78764
1965 PONTIAC
Parisienne 2-door hardtop,
-radio, automatic, power
steering, power brakes.
H76642
1964 OLDSMOBILE
Sedan, 4-door, automatic,
power steering, power
brakes H77973
1962 FORD HARDTOP
, 2-door, radio,
automatic H78765
Coming Soon . . .
1968 MONTEGO
2-door hardtop, auto-
matic, radio, 302 motor,
15,000 miles, like new,
seven wheels.
1963 PLYMOUTH
Belvedere 2-door hard-
top, V-8 automatic,
radio.
SOUTH
-END
SERVICE
Exeter 235.2322
a
r LOCAL IRADEMANKS, Inn. 40
START THE NEW YEAR.
RIGHT! DON'T BE LIKE A
PIN - POINTED ONE WAY
AND HEADED ANOTHER/
NEW 1970 "SNOW FURY"
20 H.P. Wankel rotary piston
engine, quiet, smooth, power in
a premium snowmobile, regular
1395.00
$995 00
JANUARY
BARGAINS
1967 VOLKSWAGEN 1500, one owner,
36,000 miles, gas heater and radio. 1295"
1964 DODGE 2 door, V-8 radio, one
owner, very clean.
$15000
" telf Dobbs Motors Ltd.
EXETER 2351250 EVENINGS 235-1130
OUR SERVICE DEPARTMENT OPEN
6 DAYS A WEEK
Trained Mechanics to Serve You
GIVE US A CALL — WE WILL PICK-UP
AND DELIVER YOUR CAR.
EXETER 235-0225 ZURICH 2364331
CHARLIES' AUTO SALES
"Authorized Rambler Dealer"
NORTH-END SUPERTEST
PHONE 235-0225 EXETER
TUTERTIST - -
4-door Hornet SST
4-door Ambassador SST 4:)
Drop In And Test Drive Our All New 1970 Line Of
Cars . We Still Carry Our 5 YEAR — 50,000 MILE P"
Warranty, Plus Our Amazing RUST-PROOFING In
The Body. Drive For Years Without repairs. Air Con-
ditioning Is Another Feature In Our Ambassador
Which Is Standard Equipment.
ALL USED CARS HAVE
BEEN SAFETY CHECKED
AND CARRY OUR USUAL
WARRANTY. THEY ARE
MOSTLY ONE-OWNER
CARS IN SPOTLESS
CONDITION
We have many more older cars to choose from. All have the same safety check, No Reasonable offers refused. We must
make reduction in our inventory in the next 2 weeks.
4•door Rebel SST
1969 REBEL DEMO
1,200 Miles, Lic. No. 414201
Save Hundreds on This One
1966 AMBASSADOR D.P.L.
P.W., P.B., Spotless ,Low Miles
Lic. No. H94253
$1595
1965 AMBASSADOR
STATION WAGON
All power, 327. Auto., Lic. No.X2841
FOR $895
1964 THUNDERBIRD
Spotless, All Power Equipment, Lic. 175107
OPEN FOR OFFERS
1969 RAMBLER DEMO
13,000 Miles, Lic. No. H78940
$800 Less Than New Price
I I tif;4., 1901
1967 AMERICAN
2 Dr., Auto., 28,000 Miles, One-Owner
Lic. No. E67865
NOW ONLY $1195
1965 COMET
2 DOOR SEDAN
6 Cyl., Lic. No. 479894
$895 NOW $695
1967 CHEVROLET
327 V8, Auto, Lic. No. E78935
Reg. $1595 ONLY $1295
1966 CLASSIC
4 Dr., Standard, One-Owner, Spotless
Lic. No. H76226
$1095
1964 OLDSMOBILE
SUPER 88
All Power, One-Owner, Lic. No. J4175
$1095 NOW $895
1,\,4777,6,
1964 CLASSIC
V8, Automatic, Lic. No. H79958
$895 NOW $695
Pay. .
January 8, 1970
Mrs, John Corbett who has
been a patient in South. Huron
#ospital for the past several days
as able tp return to her home
M week.
OPEN EVENINGS
BY APPOINTMENT
Mrs. Peart Passmore spent
New Years with her daughter,
son-in-law Mr. & Mrs. Felix
Boogemans and Vicki at
Burlington.
Mrs. Bertie McMurtie and
Mrs. Ann Broadfoot spent
Tuesday with Mr. and Mrs.
Stewart Bell and girls.
The result of the
congregational balloting for
additional members to the Board
of Session resulted in the
following being elected to office
in Hensall United Church,
Wilmer Ferguson, Charles Hay,
Harvey Keys, Cecil Pepper.
Miss Carol Kerr returned to
North Bay Monday of this week
by plane after spending the
holidays with relatives in Hensall
and friends in Exeter.
Mrs. C. L. Finks returned
Friday after spending 3 weeks
with Mr. and Mrs. Ross Jinks,
Gail, Billy and Susan, London.
Mr. and Mrs. Laird Mickle
visited recently with their
daughter and son-in-law Mr. and
Mrs. Ross MacMillan and their
family, David, Tommy and baby
Ann Elizabeth in Waterloo and
the Kitchener-Waterloo Hospital.
Mr. J. E. McEwen a patient in
the Blue Water Rest Home,
Zurich, was taken by ambulance,
Friday to South Huron Hospital,
Exeter.
Mrs. Alma Hess who has been
visiting with relatives in Don
Mills, returned home last Friday.
Her granddaughter Kathy McCloy
who is attending UWO spent the
weekend with her.
Mr. Charles Mickle, Hamilton,
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Mickle, and
Miss Ann Mickle, London spent
a few days last week with their
parents Mr. & Mrs. Laird Mickle
and Ann spent part of her
vacation in Waterloo and
Brownsville and Charles in
Hamilton and London.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Love,
Kevin, Valerie and Laura of
Middleton, Wisconsin, Mr. &
Mrs. Ross Love and Mrs. Anna
Moffatt of Clinton were holiday
visitors with Mrs. John E.
McEwen.
Mr. & Mrs. Don MacLaren
Batt'n Around
— Continued from Page 4
their snowmobile suits
constitutes half the time
involved in an outing, and we
find our eldest rather lazy when
it comes to trying to get into his
outfit by himself.
On Saturday, we thought
we'd use a bit of persuasion to
help things out and we asked his
grandmother what she thought
of a boy who was too lazy to
put on his own suit.
"I'm not lazy," he quickly
replied. "I'm just too full after
that delicious meal grandma
made us."
Well, you can tell from that
how much help yours truly got
from grandma in trying to coax
Scott to get his own clothes on.
A kid with that type of
blarney should do alright for
himself, so no doubt it won't
really matter if he is a bit on the
lazy side.
Steve isn't quite as good with
words. In fact, we have
considerable trouble trying to
understand most of his
conversation.
Driving home from a
snowmobile ride he reported his
nose was
We thought the word he was
trying to use was "cold" but this
wasn't the case. We finally
determined it was "my nose is
going" and he needed a
handkerchief. He thought
"going" was about the same as
"running".
Before finishing off our first
column of the new year we
should apologize for not having
some inspiring thoughts or
prognostications for the coming
year.
Writing about our family
problems and experiences over
the past couple of weeks may
not be very interesting to some,
but under the circumstances,
we've been totally involved with
them and don't really have much
else on which to write.
Perhaps by next week we'll
be back to normal. Whatever
that is!
and Jodi returned to their home
in Scarborough after holidaying
with the former's mother Mrs,
Bertha MacGregor.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Chaffe and
sons of Mitchell were recent
visitors with Mr, & Mrs. Ross
Corbett, Mr, John Corbett and
Al and visited with Mrs. Chaffe's
mother, Mrs. John Corbett, who
is a patient in South Huron
Hospital, Exeter.
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Parker and
Patsy and Cindy Parker returned
home on New Year's day after a
pleasant holiday with their
son-in-law and daughter
Constable Douglas Wein, and
Mrs. Wein and David in North
Sydney, N.S.
T. ORVILLE SOUTHCOTT
Orville Southcott passed
away in South Huron Hospital,
Exeter, December 28, 1969. He
Was in his 85th year.
Mr. Southcott was
predeceased by his wife, the late
Laura M. Hobbs.
Mr. Southcott operated the
present Gould & Jory store for
several years with his late
brother, Herb, and was also a
partner in Southcott Pines
Limited.
He was a member of Exeter
Lions and the Masonic Lodge.
He is survived by a sister, Miss
Stella Southcott, Exeter, a
brother, Rev. R. E. Southcott of
Oil City and four nephews.
The funeral was held from
the Hopper-Hockey Funeral
Home, December 30 with Rev.
Glen Wright officiating.
The pallbearers were Robert
Southcott, Donald Southcott,
James Southcott, Jack
Southcott, Barry Southcott and
Michael Southcott.
Interment was in the Exeter
Cemetery.
HENRY MILLER
Henry Miller, RR 8 Parkhill
passed away in St. Joseph's
Hospital, December 29, 1969.
He was in his 92nd year.
Mr. Miller was born in Hay
Township and was the last
member of a family of 12. His
wife, the former Susan Querin,
predeceased him in 1965.
He is survived by one
daughter, Elizabeth, at home.
The body rested at the T.
Harry Hoffman Funeral Home.
Requiem mass was from Our
Lady of Mount Carmel Church,
Wednesday, December 31.
The pallbearers were Joe and
Charles Dietrich, Nici? Jeromkin,
Paul Hajes, Thomas Ryan and
Hubert Carey.
Interment was in Mount
Carmel Cemetery.
Hensall picks
new chairmen
The major business at the
first meeting of the year of
Hensall Village council, Monday
night was formulating
committees and making council
appointments.
Following are the councillors
named to the various
committees:
Streets committee, Leonard
Erb and Hein Rooseboom;
property committee, John Baker
and Paul Neilands; fire
protection committee,
Rooseboom and Baker;
representatives to the recreation,
parks and community centre
board, John Henderson and
Wayne Smith.
Clerk Earl Campbell was
authorized to sign the purchase
order for the new fire truck and
sign the fire protection
agreement between the village
and the township of
Tuckersmith. A bylaw covering
the purchase of the truck will be
sent to the Municipal Board for
approval.
Approval was given to
building permit applications
from George Parker and Mrs.
Fred Bonthron for renovations.
The Clerk was also authorized
to send an account to Usborne
Township for their portion of
maintaining the dump for 1969.
Conestoga plans
tour of campus
Conestoga College of Applied
Arts and Technology which
serves Huron, Perth, Waterloo
and Wellington counties from its
Doon campus in Kitchener, rolls
out the red carpet to visitors on
Saturday, Jan. 17.
From 1 to 5:30 p.m. that day,
the two-year-old school will hold
open house with students acting
as hosts and staffing information
booths to answer questions
about the college.
The college has an enrolment
at Doon of more than 1,100
students. Counting those in
adult education courses in
Guelph, Stratford, Galt and
Kitchener, total enrolment is
about 2,500.
ADVERTISING
The shortest
route to
business profits
RECEIVES DEGREE
David Noakes, son of Mr, and
Mrs. Leonard Noakes, Hensall,
has completed his work for his
PhD in Zoology at the
University of California in
Berkley. He and his wife left for
Edinburgh, Scotland, December
29, where lie has accepted a
position on the faculty of the
University of Edinburgh. Dr.
Noakes is a graduate of SHDHS
and the University of Western
Ontario, London.
Mr. & Mrs. Joe Flynn spent
the weekend visiting with Mr. &
Mrs. Roy Allison in Toronto.
Dear Sir,
Through a directive from the
administrative staff of the Huron
County Board of Education, the
people of Huron County are
being given an opportunity to
meet with the teaching staff of
their local school to discuss the
aims and objects of education
and a list of some twenty
different topics has been
prepared by the principals as
possible subjects for discussion,
Having been closely involved
with schools and the education
of children for the past fifteen
years, I realize that this is an
occasion for which those persons
vitally concerned with the
development of the full
potential of all children, have
long been awaiting.
For years children have been
attending smaller schools, taught
by teachers and run by local
school boards with whom the
parents were in close contact.
The advent of the County Board
has made the individual contact
with parents a thing of the past
itwould seem that no one now
knows what is taking place in
these seats of learning. But the
day has long since gone when
parents can cease to be
concerned.
The Home & School
association is the one existing
organization which can bridge
the gaps and the Department of
Education readily recognizes this
and has encouraged the
establishment of communication
with Boards of Education by the
Home and School Council and is
also anxious for the closer
relationship between the parent
and the teacher which takes
place when there is a Home &
School Association connected
with a school,
Gone are the days when the
majority of parents are out to
have a go at the teacher or to
criticise the running of a school.
It is of mutual benefit for
teachers and parents to get
together to discuss the ways in
which the teachers' job can be
made easier and to inform the
parent of all the new advances
which are presently coming our
way in the field of education.
More than half our
population is under 21 years of
age and therefore in some formal
school of learning. One-third of
our tax dollar goes to education.
Let us, therefore, come
together in January, to study the
"Aims and Objects of
Education" as so ably put
forward in the publication of
that name by Mr. Lloyd Dennis.
If we apply a serious and
intelligent concern to produce
constructive ideas which will
benefit not only the Individual
child but all .children in the
County, the Board of Education
may have some idea .of the
policy it should form for the
next few years.
When you receive your notice.
from the school to come and
attend .a meeting to discuss the
needs of your particular school,
I urge every parent, and not only
the 'mothers, to take an interest
in these meetings,
The children of today will be
the leaders of tomorrow and it
will depend upon the job that
we can do of educating them,
what they can make of the
world when it is their turn to
lead.
Yours truly,
Moira E. Couper
President
Perth-Huron Council of
Home & School Association
Dear Sir:
The residents and staff of
Huronview would appreciate it
very much, if you would allow
them space to say a heartfelt
"Thank You" to all those who
put on programs or
entertainment, and those who
sent gifts, cards or treats to
residents during the Holiday
n session
Season.
A special thanks to
organizations and individuals
who came regularly throughout
the year.
Sincerely,
C.A. Archibald
Administrator
Poi ,,,,,,, WOW ,,, IPP1104011 ,, ,, ,, , ipipsptippoompipimpopopppilip ,, ,,,, ,, • , ,, pp ,,, pt ,, , , f!ei 4 wow! 44 ip 4 !IMOD! 4
Hensall personals
111,1111111II , ppopsingli lll l ll p ll lll ipitopppplapollimilposop l l lllll ll llll mom 111 ll till ll 1,1 inim 1.1msll1111111111 I lll
The readers. write
Urges support for .educatio
4;
ib
i VAN
and
MICKEY'S
GULF Gulf)
Phone 238-2257
GRAND BEND
6.