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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-07-18, Page 3Davies Grant Denning • Benn CHARTERED ACCOUNTANTS Municipal Auditors • DEVON BUILDING • Office Hours 9 a.m to 5 PH 2350120 EXETER THE AUCTIONEER ONLY TAKES THE It is an expert Co-op Livestock salesman who decides when your cattle are sold at U.C.O. The Co-op salesman knows the current market value of your animals and will not let them be sold until the bid has reached this figure. sell your oattle co-operatively U.C.O. LIVESTOCK DEPARTMENT ONTARIO STOCKYARDS = TORONTO .,,,,,,•••••••••84408049339=646:69••••••••••Mnr,ft....0..".„...... ,••••••••••111181.111g R. B. WILLIAMS SHIPPER P146140; 2315 ,2501 EXETER EX' TRICIAN nses WEA'E ELECTRICIANS OF GREAT RENOWN, TALK OF 01/11F/NE WORK /5 AIL OVER TOWN" ►L_FAsir AND EFFICIENT Le DON ROOTH ELECTRIC MOTOR CONTROLS LIGHTING 235.0282.70 HURON W Elimville Institute Former resident donates fair prizes. Ohl S99dayi Wednesday afternoon, and durIng the evening throughout the. wick! Funeral services fPr Pr• D. B. Copland, DDS, 40, were held Wednesday Job' 10, at Trinity United Church. A for- mer resident of this community, Copeland was the son of Rev. Robert COPeland, London, who served as pastor of Main St. UC. He died suddenlyin.Grims- by Hospital, July 7. 'Surviving are his wife and four children. dies. at Grimsby Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Fulton on Sunday. Due to the rain, the sports and buffet supper were had at the Township Hall with over 60 attending. A large birth- day cake was served in honor of Mrs, Davidson's 84th birth- day. Mr. and Mrs. PhilipJohns and Margaret were guests at the Coates-Kerslake wedding at James St. Church on Saturday. Miss Margaret Johns was the soloist. Miss I3arbara Docking of Staffa spent the week with her aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Howard Pym, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Routlyat- tended the Scott family picnic at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Alex Crago of Kirkton, president, Slson Lynn; secre- WY, jean .LYnn; sports corn- .inittee„ Mr. and Mrs. Jerry Shore, Mr. and Mrs. Paton. Skinner; table committee, Mr. and Mrs,. ,Hassell stanner, Mr„ and Mrs. Franklin Skinner, 1964 picnic will he held at Stratford .Park on the 'ard sum, ky of July. PERSONALS A good crowd from this com- munity attended the Skinnerpic, nic at Stratford Park onRunday, On Sunday July 21 and July 28 the Rev, Edgar Roulston of Ex, eter will have charge of the church services at Rltrnville. Rev. and Mrs. Wilson are holi, cluing at the summer cottage at Tobermory. Mr, Larry Skinner, attended the 4-H Swine bus trip to Tor- onto on Thursday visiting the OHPA head office, Canada Packers and Pioneer Village being guests of the Hog pro- ducers for the dinner meal. Mrs. Elizabeth Davidson of Stratford and her families en- joyed a picnic at the home of MITCHELL BAND LEADS OFF AFTER 32 LODGES ASSEMBLE AT COMMUNITY PARK FOR FRIDAY'S PARADE HERE GREASE GUN High quality, one-hand operated gun. Low Esso retail price-$8.25. Yours now for only with a carton of 60 Esso MP Grease Cartridges -a saving of $5.25. Two quit Orange platform, object to attack on tax plan tax revenue but by a clever manipulation of provincial tax revenue." The new plan, he said, will provide separate schools with $150 more in provincial revenue each year. "Who pays this money that is to solve the Ro- man Catholic school finance problem? The 85% of the people who are not separate school supporters." The public school, he said, is provided for children of all creeds and all races and must be established in every part of the province. The separate school, on the other hand, is a competing religious school sys- tem which need operate only where it pleases and segregates children in .the most formative years of their lives. "An aroused public school conscience and an intelligently informed electorate holds the answer to this handing over of public funds to further subsi- dize and entrench a competing religious school system which has, long since, become out- moded in a world where segre- gation is decried and denounced by everyone who believes in 'Equal rights to all and special privilege to none'," Di Stasi, junior deputy grand CD CHAINSAW i7227110'110 C4 marshall of the Grand Orange Lodge of Ontario West, was a substitute speaker for the day. Rt. Rev. J. V. Mills, grand master of Ontario West, was un- able to appear as scheduled. Master of ceremonies for the program was Oliver Jaques, master of the Exeter lodge and a past county master. Other speakers included Mrs. Day; Harold Watson, London, a mem- ber of the Grand Black Chapter of Ontario West; Rev. C. A. Brittain, Grand Bend; Harry Crich, Clinton, county master, and Mayor Eldrid Simmons. Asked about the apparent di- vision in the lodge over the Foundation Tax Plan. County Master Crich said he ielt most Orangemen opposed the plan. "If we don't stop paying more money into the separate schools, then it's going to cost us more to operate our public schools. That's the way I look at it." He felt a lot of people "haven't read up on the prob- lem". Oliver Jaques, who was in charge of arrangements for the day here, liberally praised Ex- eter council, PUC, businessmen and other groups for their co- operation. "It's been wonder- ful", he said. The first and only dual purpose chainsaw oil in the Canadian market. Does both jobs in your chainsaw. Field-tested and approved by chain- saw manufacturers. 80 oz. blue poly container. The new home heating plan that provides year- round service on your heating equipment, top- quality Esso Furnace Oit delivered as the weatherde• mands-ALL FOR THE PRICE OF THE OIL! 1111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111iI11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111 HOME HEAT SERVICE ,, t -1 "-i;.- YOU CAN ° 'DEPEND ON QUALITY COSTS LESS AT DOBBS FOR DODGE '62 VALIANT SEDAN BROWN, RADIO $1899 '61 COMET SEDAN GREEN, RADIO $1695 '59 VOLKSWAGEN COACH BLUE, $995 '58 REGENT SEDAN BLACK, V-8 $1095 '51 CHRYSLER AUTOMATIC 2 Door Hardtop V-8 RADIO $795 '56 REGENT SEDAN AUTOMATIC, V-8 $695 EXETER MOTOR Phone 235-1250 SALES Exeter YOUR ESSO AGENT IS RIGHT WITH THE TIMES IMPERIAL OIL LIMITED GEORGE VRIESE - EXETER CLIFF RUSSELL - SHIPKA Side Dress Your Beans With Liquid 9-9-9 FERTILIZER Two officials walked off the platform during the July 12 celebration here Friday when the principal speaker critized the new provincial grant pro- gram for separate schools, Hon. C. S. MacN au g h t on, highways minister in the Ro- barts' government, and Mrs. Arthur Day, a past grand mis- tress of the LOBA for Canada, stalked oft together in protest to Dominic Di Stasi's attack on the Robarts' foundation tax plan. Mrs. Day of London, who has been in the order 56 years, explained afterwards: "I don't go along with this bigotry and many others in the lodge don't either. We shouldn't become in- volved in politics. This attack stems from a Toronto group, who are not representative of the order. The Roman Catholics have their rights and I think we should let it go at that." Mr. MacNaughton made his stand known on the platform during a brief but po int ed speech. "Needless to say", he emphasized, "I am in complete support of and in accord with those who say nothing has been done to change the concept (of equal rights for all and special privilege to none).. Continued the Huron MPP: "When we search and examine, as we must do in the great and e v e r-increasing complexities of our society of today and to- morrow; when we distinguish 'right' from 'privilege'; when we witness the rapid trend to- ward ecumenicism and univer- sality of can concepts, then we with assurance and acceptance reaffirm that no po- licy of gov't here in our great province has been altered where it need interfere in anyway with the ideals we all hold dear". Mr. MacNaughton said a num- ber of Orangemen from the crowd came up to him after- wards and congratulated him on his stand. "They indicated they weren't in favor of the Orange attack on the Robarts' founda- tion plan and they seemed pleas- ed that someone stood up to de- fend it," he commented. Di Stasi, a teacher at Nor- thern Secondary School, Tor- onto, devoted most of his ad- dress to an attack on the new provincial grant program, which is the object of a pro- vince-wide campaign by the Or- ange school defence committee, headed by Leslie S au n de r s, Toronto. Stasi charged that under the new plan the 85% of the people in Ontario who are not separate school supporters will be re- quired to pay grants toward Roman Catholic schools. The British North America Act, he acknowledged, gave the Roman Catholics the right to establish separate schools but not to share equally in pro- vincial assistance. The law, he said, gives the Rom an Catholic s only two sources of revenue: one, realty taxes from indivi- dual separate school support- ers, and; two, equal per pupil government grants. "This law has not been fol- lowed," Di Stasi said. "The less separate school supporters raise by direct taxation, the more the Ontario government gives them from funds derived mostly from those who are not separate school supporters." The Orange association, he continued, did not oppose se- parate schools as long as their supporters paid for them out of their legitimate tax revenues. "If they can't support their own schools, they should get the money through their own tax system." The speaker recalled that a former Ontario premier, Mit- chell Hepburn had to repeal legislation designed to provide more assistance to separate schools because of public op- position. "Now the Ontario govern- ment, with its announced Foun- dation Tax plan, intends to give separate schools a slice of rev- enue derived from corpora- tions, not through local realty BUS TIME TABLE Clip and Save LONDON CLINTON - GODERICH - - WINGHAM - KINCARDINE - WALKERTON - PORT ELGIN - OWEN SOUND 1 Results obtained last year on 12 acres beans grown by MR. OSCAR TUCKEY, RR 3 EXETER 6 Acres 6 Acres Liquid Check Plot SOLID FERTILIZER yes yes (same) LIQUID 9-9-9 200 lbs. None acre YIELD PER ACRE 54 bus. 46 bus. The 200 lbs. LIQUID 9-9-9 applied per acre cost $8.00. The INCREASED YIELD of 8 BUSHEL at $6.75 cwt returned $32.40 for a NET PROFIT of $24.40 per acre over the cheek plot, THE PLANT FOOD IN LIQUID FERTILIZER IS MADE AVAILABLE TO THE BEANS IMMEDIATELY AFTER IT IS APPLIED INTO THE SOIL. IN DRY WEATHER, SOLID FERTILIZER CAN REMAIN UNUSED, DO YOUR BEANS LOOK STUNTED? YELLOW? THINNING OUT? IF SO THEY MAY BE STARVING FROM LACK OF PLANT FOOD MORE THAN LACK OF WATER. Fertilize Your Pasture with LIQUID 28% UREA Sun, & Hot, .....__ a ' Sun. & Hot. lot. 8: Sat, Daily Deily EX. Sun, Daily ax. Sun. Rol. "I'ABLR No, 1 Mile- age Doily Daily Ex, Sun, Hot Fri. Only 1 Sat. i Yuli.. lid,i Wed 1 Thur. fol'. Sun. Hot. Sun* v it, ' Sot Only I I pan, -,*-,--. 8 45 9.05 9.10 9,20 9 25 9 30 9.40 9 7 5 3 1 Trip No, 2 4 6 8 10 ...,.... 12 14 16 pan. -----"..,..- 6.05 6.15 6.25 6.35 6.45 6 305 6,50 6.55 7,05 7.10 7.15 7.25 p.m. 25 5.45 5.50 6 00 6.05 6 10 6..20 p.m. 3 .10 i 3,30 3.40 3.50 ' 3,35 3.35 4.00 4.05 4,10 4.15 4.23 aan, a.m. p.m. p.m. p.m. pan. p.m. p.m, p.m. Ran, , 3.20 7,40 -"""-11106 11 On 1 1 2;', ii :lb 11 40 11 4,'',, 11 It, 7 80 7 :10 8 00 8 In -,... ,..in i 1,v, Arr. - as' NI/N GI/am. , ,. .. Arr. nsLortAvE. . ilk BINTII LONDES1361:10. „ , • CLINTON . , .. , 1,V, 72 67 60 57 50 .1 2 40 ± 2 30 1 2 20 t 2 15 t 2 05 . .---- 8.20 8.10 7 55 7.50 7,35 8.25 8 20 8 10 8.05 7.50 10 05 10,00 9 50 9 45 9 .30 1.v. Lv. •, 1111 GODERIC11 • - . , Arr, • CLINTON . Arr. R.C.A.P. STN. . . • Blitcrsitt,i). ,, KII"PLN. ... • RENsALL ..,, • ExeTelt , 62 50 47 43 39 36 30 2,20 ... 00 , 1 55 1 .50 1,45 1.30 1.404.35 5.20 5 00 4 55 4,45 4,40 4,25 7,50 7.30 . 7 10 7 05 7 00 6.50 '7 50 7.30 7.20 7 10 7 05 7.00 6 ,50 e9,50 9.30 '2,20 9.10 9.05 9.00 8.50 12,40 12,00 12.15 12.10 12.05 Hy., 11,55 1.00 1.15 1,10 1.05 11y. 12.51 8 15 8 %'.11 8 '2 A 8 3n 8 413 8 41 7.56 7,45 7.35 7 30 7 25 7 15 9.50 10.10 10.15 10.45, . p.m. 111 no .3,26 nab,. 7.35 7.55 8.00 8.30 t'ni. 10.1n 1.16 6 30 6 50 6.5.5 7 20 p,ta. 10.10 1,15 a•n 4,35 4.55 NM 5.25 p.m, 5.30 9.05 12 05 12 30 12 35 1,00 p.m, 2.30 5.35 8 67, 9.15 9 20 I 9.50 nan, 11.15 2,50 Arr. CENTRALIA 411 L11OAN. PI ' ; 4 1.0NDonr.. 1.,,, ..,... 26 17 14 0 120 I .4 15 6.40 1 00 .3.45 6.15 1:1 55 3.40 6,10 12.30 3.15 5.45 6.40 6 15 6.10 5.45 7 05 6.45 6.40 6 IS 8.40 8.15 8.10 7,45 11,45 11.25 11.20 11.00 12.46' 12,26 12.20 11,59 I.v. Arr. ---,-- p.m, p.m, ' psis. 4.55 1.15 p.m, p.m, pith, 7.10 4,15 p.m. 12.05 6.30 , p.m. LONDON Oh.. . . Arr. DE9'11011" Gb.,., IN, 11.10 8.15 4,55 1.15 10.05 6.3 0 - , 5.7, 1 1 • n„tn, r.th, , Pan.. I P.m. amt. x ...Saturday and Mondny ancl Tuesday after a Monday Holiday, ± Daily except Sunday and HolidaYs. m ...- Does not operate Sunday before Li 1V101)clay Holiday. # •• --,TIcket end Freight 8erit. . - Dally Ex. St hday and Holiday, Oh Via Greyhound Lines. 6 - Priday only • -Cohneetions with Chatham Conch Lines From and To Semis ,, Chathanti neut.! q #-• Sunday and liolidayowIll hold tor kitthener col-mentions Oil l'etillOSt. IT PAYS TO BUY ROUND TRIP TICKETS YOU SAVE 10% LiQuip FERTILIZER PAYS LET US GIVE FULL PARTICULARS LOCAL AGENT ,.„ Trailways of Canada Ltd. Burkley Restaurant Phone 235-030 'LONDON '69101'16th Avenue .60.'0.01181's ommommoi‘oini By MRS. ROSS SKINNER EPMVILLB At the meeting of the EPTO, VIM WI held Thursday evening, roll call was answered by "My Favourite page of the news- paper and why?" Mrs. Jackson Woods, the delegate to the ACWW meeting in Guelph on June 20 gave her report. It was voted to donate $5,90 to the Exeter Fair Board as special prizes, $2.50 for the five articles suitable for a bazaar and $2.50 for the best decorated birthday cake. Mrs. Wellington Brock was chairman for the citizenship and education program. The motto - "You don't take time for com- munity activities - you make it" was well given by Mrs, Thomas Here. Mrs. Grant Skinner favored with an accordion num- ber. The topic "Training in the Home" was given by Mrs, Wel- lington Brock. Mrs. Allen Johns was hostess and she and her committee, Mrs. N. Clarice, Mrs. E. Lynn and Mrs. H. Delbridge served lunch. SKINNER PICNIC The Skinner picnic was held on Sunday at Stratford Park in spite of the rainy day. There were 35 present for the noon meal and 97 attended for the afternoon and supper meal, The sports committee Mr. and Mrs. Sam Skinner, Mr. and Mrs. Ross Skinner conducted the races and relays inside the pavilion. Winners were: Preschool children pulling clothespins off line, Dale Morgan (all the rest received balloons), girls, 8 and under, (walking toe to heel) Karen Skinner, Cheryl Morgan; boys, 8 and under, (ru nning backwards) Glen Himburg, Jim- my Skinner; girls, 12 and under, (two legs in rubber bands), Brenda Skinner, Patty Himburg; boys, 12 and under, (hop in squatter's race), Dale Skinner, Jimmy Skinner; young ladies, (hop in squatters race), Sandra Skinner, Janet Skinner; young men, (running in squatters race), Neil McAllister, Dale McAllister; married ladies (stepping off 210"), Mary Shore, Margaret Evans; married men, (walking backwards 21 1/2'), Dalton Skinner, Jerry Shore; couple's shaving relay, Jerry and Mary Shore; A & B's re- lays were "Setting up Pop Bot- tles" and"Finding lifesavers in confetti"; C & D's relays were "Running String down Line" and "Eating Contest". Youngest person present was Sandra Morgan; oldest person present, Melville Skinner; far- thest away, Mr. and Mrs. Nor- man Skinner of Alliston; nearest birthday, Glen Himburg; guess- ing smarties in jar, Jim Noble; The executive for 1964 are: Clip and Save E.0ter Ph 235 1782 Whaler) Corners Ph Kirk,on 35r15