The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1953-09-24, Page 7THE TIMES-ADVOCATE, EXETER, ONTARIO, THURSDAY MORNING, SEPTEMBER 24, 1953
a.m.
Worship and
7
School rooms
a body to the
TRIVITT MEMORIAL
— Anglican —
Rector; Rev, C. L. Langford,
B.A., M.A.
Organist; Mrs. E, M. Nixon
Sunday, September 27 — Harvest
Thanksgiving.
10:15 a.m.—Sunday School.
11:30 a.m.—Morning Prayer.
Preacher: The Rector./
Page 7
Mrs. Charles Isaac
HOBBYCRAFT DISPLAY — One of the many displays of
hobbycraft at RCAI Station Centralia, Saturday, was this
model railroad with its modern industrial atmosphere. The
display drew many spectators, particularly boys and girls.
CAVEN PRESBYTERIAN
Rev. Donald R, Sinclair, B.A.,
Minister
Organist: Mrs. J. G, Cochrane
10:00 a.m.—-Church School.
11:00 a.m.-—.Public Worship.
Fri., Sept, 25, 8:00 p.m.—Caven
Auxiliary, Women’s Missionary
Society at the home of Mrs.
Fred Wildman.
JAMES STREET
UNITED CHURCH
Rev. H. J. Snell, Pastor
Mr. Lawrence Wein, A.W.C.M.,
Musical Director
Rally Day in the Congregation
10:45 a.m. — Children assemble
in the Sunday
and will move in
auditorium.
11 a.m.—Morning-
Rally Service conducted by the
Superintendent, Carl'rey Cann,
and the minister.
Anthem by the Choir.
Double duet; Alexia Lostell,
Jean Taylor, Nancy Cudmore,
Barbara Brintnell.
p.m.—Evening Worship.
Sermon Subject; “The Earth
Is the Lord’s.
Solo: Jeanette Taylor.
‘ i welcome is extended
Centralia Resident
Mrs. Charles Isaac, well known
resident of the Centralia district,
died at her home in Centralia on
Saturday after being confined to
her bed for the last five years
and seriously ill for a month.
She was the former Martha
Dearing and was born in7 Stephen
township and lived there until
her marriage in 1893. On April
12 of this year, Mr. and Mrs,
Isaac quietly celebrated their dia
mond wedding anniversary. With
few years in
most of their
spent in the
Several Drops Of Drug
Drives Writer Insane
The fantastic story of how he
took part in a scientific experi
ment that drove him insane for
twelve hours, was told in detail
recently by Sidney Katz, a Mac
lean’s Magazine assistant editor.
In a ten-thousand word report
Announcements
Birth, Death, and Marriage
Notices are inserted free of
charge. Cards of Thanks
In Memoriam Notice .75
single verse, .25 extra
each additional verse,
Engagement Notices are
.75,
for
for
and
.75.
BIRTHS
COOKE — Mr. and Mrs. Thomas V.
Cooke, RCAF Station Centralia,
announce the birth of a daughter,
Patricia Marlene, at South Huron
Hospital September 22, 1953.
GOULD—Mr. and Mrs. Allen R. Gould
are happy to announce the birth of
a son, John Allen, on September 15,
1953, at St. Joseph’s Hospital, Lon
don.
KESTLE — To Mr. and Mrs. Harry
Kestle, London, a daughter, Faye
Darlene, on Wednesday, September
16, 1953.
MACK—Mr. and Mrs. Bryce J. Mack,
Zurich, Ont,, are happy to •> an
nounce the birth of a daughter,
Suzanne, at South Huron Hospital
September 20, 1953; a sister for
Stephen and Philip,
McCALL — To Sub, Lieut. M. and
Mrs. McCall, Exeter, a son, Michael
Ian, at South Huron Hospital, Sep
tember 20, 1953.
Me.CA.NN — Mr, and Mrs. Arnold
McCann, Dashwood, wish to an
nounce the birth of a daughter at
St. Joseph’s Hospital, London, on Friday, September 18, 1953.
TAYLOR — In St. Joseph’s Hospital,
Sarnia, on Sunday, September 20,
1953, to Mr. and Mrs. Grant Tay
lor, a son, David Kent.
WEBBER—Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Web
ber, R.R. 3, Exeter, announce the
•birth of a son, Craig William, at
South Huron Hospital, September
19, 1953; weight, 8 lb. 14 oz.
WHITEFORD — To Mr. and Mrs.
Ernest Whiteford, of Crediton, a
daughter, Roberta Joy, at South
Huron Hospital, September 21, 1953.
WOODAJuL — Mr. and Mrs. William
Woodall of Windsor announce the
arrival of a daughter, Monica
Lynne, on Tuesday, September 22,
1953, at Hotel Dieu Hospital; a sis
ter for Judy.
DEATHS
ISAAC—At her late residence in Cen
tralia on Saturday, September 19,
1953, Martha Ellen Dearing, beloved
wife of Charles Isaac, in her eighty
fifth year.
CARDS OF THANKS
I wish to thank all those who re
membered me so kindly with flowers,
cards, treats and visits, while I was
in Victoria Hospital and since return
ing home. —Mrs. Sam Hendrick. 24*
IN MEMORIAM
WEIN—In memory of a loving hus
band, father, grandfather and great
grandfather, Godfrey Wein, who
passed away September 25, 1949.
God saw his steps were getting weak,
The hills were hard to climb;
I-Ie closed his weary eyes in sleep
And whispered "Peace be thine”.
—Ever remembered and sadly missed
by loving wife and family.
ANNOUNCEMENTS
Rev. C. Wesley Cope will visit
eter within the next few days -----
will call on friends of The Lord’s
Day Alliance, He will appreciate a
hearty welcome and response when
called upon. Valuable work is being
performed by this organization in
safeguarding the national weekly day
of re&t. 24c
entitled “My Twelve Hours As A
Madman”, Katz tells how he
swallowed a few grains of a drug
called LSD, which turned him
into a raving schizophrenic, sub
ject to all the visions, hallucina
tions, horrors, dispairs and tor
ments of a certifiable lunatic.
The report is documented by
tape recorded interviews made by
a scientific team who quizzed
Katz while he was under the in
fluence of the drug, as well as
by photographs taken on the
scene and four color illustrations
of his hallucinations prepared by
an artist under the author’s
supervision.
The experiment was carried
out at The Saskatchewan Hospi
tal, Weyburn, as part of a re
search project being conducted by
the Saskatchewan Schizophrenic
Research Group with funds pro
vided by the Department of Na
tional Health and Welfare. Only
a handful of doctors have taken
the drug LSD and Katz is the
first layman to experience it. Dr.
Humphrey Osmund, clinical dir
ector of the hospital says that
Katz’s report will be “a useful
tool” and adds that “in some
phases of research into mental
illness, the guinea pigs must be
the human beings”.
Katz says his experience was
so terrifying that it was a full
two weeks before he could screw
up courage to commit his mem
ories of it to paper. Then he
wrote:
“I saw the faces of familiar
friends turn into fleshless skulls
and the heads of menacing
witches, pigs and weasels. The
gaily patterned carpet at my feet
was transformed into a fabulous
mass of living matter, part vege
table, part animal. An ordinary
sketch of a woman’s head and
shoulders suddenly sprang to life.
Her hair became a nest of a
thousand famished serpent who leaped out to'1'devour me. As I
patted a black dog, my arm grew
heavy and sprouted a thick coat
of glossy black fur. Time lost all
meaning. The room changed with
every breath I drew. Pictures,
chairs, curtains and lamps flew
endlessly about.”
He adds, though, that his
hours of madness were sometimes
filled with visions of dazzling
beauty, “so rapturous, so unearth
ly that no artist will ever paint
them . . . where the clouds were
apricot colored and the air was
filled with liquid golden arrows.”
Scientists believe that experi
ments like this one may lead to
a totally different concept of
schizophrenia, Katz reports.
“A few specks of a drug
changed me, a normal person,
into a madman. Is it not there
fore entirely possible that the
schizophrenic is a person whose
body constantly manufactures
minute particles of a
poisonous substance?” If
the case, Katz suggests,
illness can be cured.
EXETER TABERNACLE
P.A.O.C.
Rev*. H. Kendrick, Pastor
Wed,, 8 p.m.—Bible Study and
Prayer.
Thurs., 8 p.m.—Challengers will
meet at M. S. Triebner.
Fri., 8 p.m.—Annual Y.P. Rally
delegates from Southern On
tario. Speaker: Y.P. District
Treasurer Rev. H. Davis, Pas
tor of Fergus Church.
Solos, duets, trios and quar
tettes. You are invited.
Sun., 9:45 a.m.-—Sunday School.
Speaker: Mr. E. Cudmore.
Sun., 11 a.m.—Harvest Home.
Speaker: Mr. E. Cudmore.
Sun., 3 p.m. — Opening of New
Church at Clinton. Speaker:
Rev. H. Kendrick.
•Sun., 7:30 p.m. — Evangelistic
Service. In charge: Mr. Ste
phen Kendrick and Miss Joyce
McLaren of Eastern Pentecostal
Bible College. Daylight Saving
Time.
A warm
to all.
N.B. — The
will meet
8 p.m. sharp in the Sunday
School rooms.
Board of Stewards
on Friday evening at
THE BETHEL
REFORMED CHURCH
Rev. Carl Schroeder, Minister
This Sunday, 2:30 p.m.—English
service in the Exeter Canadian
Legion Hall. All welcome!
the exception of a
Lucan and London,
married life was
Centralia district.
Mrs. Isaac was __
Centralia United Church.
Surviving besides her husband
are a son, Charles, of Detroit;
two daughters, Mrs. Alvin Essery
and Mrs. Archie Robinson, of
Centralia; and two brothers,
James Dearing, London, and Wes
ley Dearing, of Stephen. Seven
grandchildren and eleven great
grandchildren also survive.
The body rested at the Hopper-
Hockey funeral home until Tues
day afternoon when the funeral
service was conducted by the Rev.
Gordon Weir, of Millbank, former
pastor of Centralia United
Church. Interment was made in
Exeter cemetery.
Six grandsons, Jack Essery,
Bill Essery, Glenn Robinson, Jack
Isaac, Charles Rowe and Harold
Lightfoot, acted as pallbearers.
Researcher Visits
Mr., and Mrs. Louis Gable of
Charleston, West Virginia, have
been visiting with Mrs. Amelia
Brierly and other relatives during
the past week. Mrs. Gable is the
former Donelda McLean of Hen
sail, and is Mrs. Brierley’s niece.
Mr. Gable is affiliated with the
Monsanto Chemical Company at
their Nitro, W. Va., plant, where
he fills the position of research
group leader, having the super
visory responsibility for 15 engin
eers and technicians who are
engaged in exploratory research
in the field of rubber chemicals.
Mr. Gable’s company is the
fifth largest chemical concern in
the world, having other plants in
New England, Missouri Illinois,
Alabama, Texas and other U.S.
I locations, as well as in England,
France and Australia.
topping.valuesfi
fAll TO PtOATS
24c
Ex-
and
Redecorate Church
A group of about 25 men,
members of the congregation of
■Hensall United Church, held a
painting bee and redecorated the
entire basement of the church in
cluding five rooms, the entrance
and the steps leading to the choir
loft. Members of the Evening
Auxiliary served lunch to
volunteer workmen.
Notice
Time Change
The Town of Exeter will change back to Standard
Time at MIDNIGHT, SUNDAY, SEPTEMBER. 28, 1953.
Will all citizens please govern themselves accordingly.
Signed,
WM. G. COCHRANE
Mayor
.........iiiiiHHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiihtiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiHiiiirtiiiiiiimniiiiihiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiii''
CALVARY CHURCH
Evangelical United Brethren
DASHWOOD
Rev. W. F. Krotz, Minister
Mrs, Ken McCrae, Organist
10:00 a.m.—Windows open.
11:05 a.m.—Sunday School.
7:30 p.m. — W.S.W.S. Day
Prayer Service.
Of
MAIN STREET
UNITED CHURCH
Rev. A. E. Holley, B.A., B.D.,
Minister
Mrs. A. Y. Willard, Organist
Sunday, September 27—
10 a.m.—-Rally Day in the
day School.
11 a.m.—Morning Worship.
“Jesus Christ Our Lord.”
Come
October
Guest
Scott,
Soloist: Alan Elston.
Sun-
and bring a friend.
4—Anniversary Services,
preacher: Rev. C. J.
B.A., B.D., Blyth.
ZION CHURCH
Evangelical United Brethren
CREDITON
Minister: Rev. E. N. Mohr
10:30 a.m.—Rally Day Service.
Bible School and Worship Serv
ice. Offering: Hamilton Re
Location Project.
7:30 p.m.—Evening Worship.
Wed., Sept. 30,
The W.S.W.S.
•Laura Mauk,
furlough from
speaker. This
Evening meeting at 7:45 p.m.
Welcome.
at 2:45 p.m.—
Rally. Miss
missionary on
Japan the guest
will be a treat.
National Immunization Week
Fights Parental Indifference
Mr. Coyne
we fail to
we may ex
in the num-
the
very
and
are
danger is
success in
more Can-
immunized
“The things we are constantly
fighting against are complacency
and indifference,” declared Gor
don Coyne, acting president of
the Health League of Canada in
a National Immunization Week
statement. “And
enhanced by our
seeing that more
adian children
every year. The fewer deaths
there are from diphtheria, whoop
ing cough, lockjaw and smallpox,
the less parents think about the
risk their children run when
they are not given protection
against them.”
This is the reason for the year-
after-ye ar pounding on the same
old theme—“Be wise!
ize!” This is why the week of
September 27 through October 3
is being observed by the press,
public speakers, health officials
and the medical profession across
Canada as National Immunization
Week.
“It is an uphill struggle to
keep Canadian parents alerted to
the lurking dangers of these pre-
ventable diseases,”
continued. “But if
keep our guard up,
pect a tragic upsurge
ber of victims claimed by these
notorious child killers.”
Lending point to the Health
League executive’s words is the
history of smallpox epidemics in
Vancouver in the 1930’s and in
Windsor, Ontario, in the 20’s. In
the latter outbreak there were
67' cases of smallpox of whom 3 2
(or 48 per cent) died. None of
those who died had been vac
cinated, although this protection
was well known and easily avail
able to all who sought it.
a member of
Topics From
Thames Road
By MRS. WILLIAM RHODE
Fall
-Wts
Phone 141 ExeterPersonal Items
Mrs. Jack Cann Z
visited on Tuesday of last
with Mrs. Reg. Hodgert.
Miss Carolyn Gackstetter
Sunday with her friend,
Marilyn Gardiner.
Mr. John Miller fell and
his hip while visiting at the
home of his grandson, Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin Miller.
Miss Margaret Bray of Lon
don spent the weekend with her
parents, Mr. and Mrs. John Bray.
Rev. Mr. McMillan will be the
guest speaker on Sunday at the
church service. Sunday School
will be at 14)i: 15 a.m. (standard
time), and church service at
11:15 a.m. (standard time).
Rally Service
A combined rally service that
was held at the church hour on
Sunday was well attended. Those
taking part were the superintend
ents, Messrs. William Elford and
Elmore Gackstetter and Mrs. Mel
vin Gardiner who read the story.
The choir sang an anthem and
the Rev. W. J. Moores gave the
address.
of Ottawa
week
spent
Miss
broke
When you make a mistake
don’t look back at it very long.
Take the reason of it into your
mind, and look forward. Mis
takes are lessons of wisdom. The
past cannot be changed; the fu
ture is in our power.
—Maclean's Magazine
“You’d better come in and say
hello—they’re staying to supper.”
r.
GABARDINE
TOPCOATS
Sands., Greys, Browns, Blues
Shorts, Regulars, Tails — Sizes To
Fit Every Man
SPECIAL
INTRODUCTORY
PRICE
McKnight & Walper
MEN’S WEAR
Superior Store Special Values
SEPTEMBER 24, 25 AND 26
KELLOGG’S RICE KRISP1ES
With free cut-out masks on package.
Large packages .......................... each
STOKELEY’S TOMATO JUICE
Large 48-oz. tins
CRISCO
l-lb. packages
VELVET FLOUR
5-lb. bags
270
GOLDEN NET COHOE SALMON
Fancy red, 7%,-oz. tins .......... each 290
each
each
each
JOHNSON’S NEW HARD GLOSS
270
340
370
KLEENEX
Regular or Chubby
KAM
Luncheon meat
per pkg. 200
per tin 330
OMAR COATED WAFFLES
Orange, lemon,.maple and strawberry.
Cello package ....................................... 320
GLO-COAT Pints 590 - Quarts $1.06
Phones7S J. H, Jones Groceries Phones 32
752
similar
this is
mental
Immun-
Mar'eans M-grzine
SUMMER BECOMES WINTER OVERNIGHT — Winter has
come early to Northern Ontario, and Manitoba. In some sec
tions, six inches of snow turned summer into winter and had
Children out on sleighs and skis. These Timmins children did
the obvious thing—they built a snowman—-the earliest a snow
man has ever been made in the history of the town. —C.P.C,