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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1963-07-18, Page 15Used COMBINES At Real CRAZY LOW PRICES Crazy Days. Huron Tractor It Equipment Is Ready For The Harvest . . Are You? Yes, We Have Combines 2 MORE CARLOADS ON THE WAY There's A Self-Propelled Combine JOHN r)E.RE. For Every Harvest Need GRAIN - BEANS - CORN - FLAX Huron Tractor & Equipment Co. ex E1gll 15.14C N 85-,M5 Model 42EB Pull-Type Model 45 Model 55EB Model 95EB EC1 LS DAYS S ON GOOD USED CARS and TRUCKS 1959 Chevrolet 1959 Chevrolet Bel Air Sedan Biscayne Sedan washers, wheel discs, two tone finish, one owner. '•• ,rtr:q*Ztit,'' ;4,4e"` 114' 1959 Consul DELUXE 4-DOOR SEDAN IMMACULATE CONDITION, ONE OWNER • ,'•••-• 4, ' 1958 Chevrolet 1 57 Chevrolet BEL AIR SEDAN AUTOMATIC TRANSMISSION, WHITE WALL TIRES, DISCS, RADIO, TINTED GLASS, A POPULAR MODEL DELUXE COACH custom radio, washers, two tone finish, whitewall tires. POSI enuceriox REAR AXLE, SEE THIS ONE. Snell Bros. Reg. $1.08 CRAZY DAY SPECIAL Plastic Pails SPECIAL PLASTIC CLOTHES BASKETS spEcia, L P. Records $1.68 55t $1,49 Beavers Hardware EkETER 14161qt n'ti•cirW ecials at Beavers Hardware Make Beavers Hardware Your Headquarters For All Your BARBECUE SUPPLIES and OUTDOOR LIVING Snell AS aleepitie hagst SWIin life jacket's * 0, 1963 Page. IS Biddul h Girls from Dashwood T,r„.-Advocate, ttend retrea Py .g,14T014 Mr, and Mrs. Sam Skinner. and family accompanied bylleil and Dale McAllister attended the Skinner reunion .which was held in .Stratford on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs, Allan Eli stop, David and. Wendy :are spending a few holidays a,t.Hea- vertOn on Lake Sinicoe while Sheila is holidaying in Orange, villa With ,Mies Eleanor Ladd. :Sunday visitors with Mr. and Mrs, Mervin Elston were Mr. Clarence Fletcher, woodharn, Mr. and. Mrs. Murray Gibson of Bryanston, also Mr, and. Mrs. Melvin Gardner and Marilyn of Exeter. Miss Shiela Elston and David were guests of Miss Marilyn Gardner, Exeter on Friday. Miss Janet Blair was a guest at the Coates-Kerslake wedding on Saturday. Miss Brenda Blair spent a few days last week with her cou- sin, Blair at Ipperwash. Misses Nellie and. onnie Van Duyn of St. Marys are spending a week with their uncle and aunt, Mr. and Mrs. C. Hoonaard. Mr, and Mrs. Joe Kemps of London spent Saturday evening with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. 40(iPspri., Mr. and Mrs, Ross .Lesterand family Of iirigclen viattoci on Sunday with Mr, and Mrs. Alex. 10:F411s, Mr. •Erliost Ricks .and Mrs, Mack Visited on Monday With mr. and Mrs. Aiox. mcF41$. Mr. and Mrs, 130 Blair and family attended the Hicks re, union which was held at mver- view park on Saturday. The Dia r families attended the Robinson reunion which was held .on Sunday at Riverview ark. An adventure for some, David Mclsaac and Patricia Le- wis, Mrs. Wm. Herd, Mrs. Brad Tobias and family all of Detroit. Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kretzman and boys of Detroit were week- end visitors with Mrs. Cora Geiser. SWIM-HOOKAARD A quiet but pretty wedding was solemnized in the Pentecostal Church, Sanders St., London at 2 o'clock on Saturday, July 13 when the Rev, C. C. Moree united in marriage Miss Ann Hoonaard, youngest, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C, Hoonaard, RR I Centralia, and Ron Swim for- merly of Nova Scotia, The bride chose a formal gown of white peau de soie styled .with lace bodice with short sleeves and round neck- line. Her full skirt was also ap- pliqued with the lace, An elbow- length bouffant veil was caught by a band of tiny rosebuds, She carried a cascade of pink roses. Immediate relatives of the bride and groom were present for the ceremony. After a honeymoon in North- ern Ontario the couple will re- side in London. 'tenting' is vital for Lisa Kraft; carry water in straw to paper cup, John Hecker; walking on paper towel, Marjorie Hec- ker; young men's race, Donald Muller; several relays were en- joyed as well as a tug of war. Special prizes were won by Mrs, Howard Fenton for plea- sing measurements; Measuring pint, Mrs. Harold 13randtpum- ber of buttons, Marilyn Pfaff; yOungest baby, Robert Irvine; coining the farthest, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald TenEyck and Lisa of THIsonbUrg; wedding anni- versary, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Brandt. Officers are, president, Fred TenEyck; vice - pres. Harold K r aft; secretary - treasurer, Mrs. Howard Datars; sports committee, Mr. and Mrs. Gurd Muller and Mr. and Mrs. John Barr; table committee, Mrs. Harold Kraft, Mrs. Melvin Res- temayer, Mrs. Jim Goff, and Mrs. 'Harold Brandt; booth com- mittee, Melvin Resterna.yer and Ted Webb. ATTEND CAMP Joan Becker, Judy Kraft, and Janet Miller of Zion Lutheran congregation attended aConfir- mation Retreat at Camp Pion- eer, Angola, New York. Pastor and Mrs. Wm. Getz also attended as he was one of four camp counselors for the group of 105. They came from Ontario, New York, Ohio, and Michigan. Weekend visitors with Mrs. Lucinda Mclsaac were Mr. and Mrs. Arthur LaDucer and fa- mily, John, Beverley and Ronny, To help with the costs and to finance research, funds are rai- sed by the Cystic F ibrosis Foundation. Some chapters sell Christmas cards, others seek donation through mail appeals, still others sponsor dances and other fund-raising events. Like other cystic fibrosis victims, Lisa must avoid con- tact with people because of the danger from coughs and colds. "They are extremely suscep- tible," Mrs. Hyde states. "You just can't go anywhere with them because they develop pneumonia so easily." Several other area children are among the 19 patients in the London area who are treated at the War Memorial Children's Hospital. Dr. Gordon Valentine, head of the London clinic, gives the parents hope. "With modern treatment, the outlook for sur- vival is excellent," he states. "The children now lead, apart from their treatment, fairly normal lives." BY MRS. ERVIN RADER DASIIWOOA Mrs, Robert StorreeS and Pa- yid of St. Thomas spent last week with her parents, Mr. and Mra, Mervyn Tiernan and Lyn- da. Sharon Rader spent lastweek with her niece, Mary-JO Howe at London, Paul Rader spent last week with Mr,. and Mrs. Fred Miller of Zion. Mr. and Mrs. Norman Miller and Bruce of Edmonton, Alber- ta, left for theirhome Thursday after vacationing with the for- rrier's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Feral Miller. They are driving a school bus as far as Leth- bridge, Alberta. Mrs. Robert Annan, Larry and Nancy of Pickering are vacationing with her parents while Robert is working atQue- bec. Mr. and Mrs. Carmen Eck- /flier, Mr, and Mrs. Harold Gilbert, and Joe Blackwell, all of Stratford, Mrs. Courtney Burmeister and Paul Eckrnier, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Haugh, and Mr. and Mrs. Ray VanDorsse- laer were visitors at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Rader and family when a joint birthday party was held for Diane Rader and Paul Eckrnier who both had birthdays Monday, July 15, Darlene and Sharon Rader, and Paul Rader were guests with Diane Rader Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Melvin. Stade and Sherry, Mrs. Flossie Stade, and Mrs. Adeline Kraft spent Sunday at Sarnia and Port Huron with relatives. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Vandahl and family of Sheerwater, Nova Scotia are vacationing with Mrs. Bertha Hayter for two weeks. Weekend visitors with Mrs. Bertha Hayter were Mr. and Mrs. John Snyder of Brantford, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bruce of Windsor, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Beavis and Barbara and Donald Duffy of Detroit. Joanne, Janice, and Ricky Hayter returned home Saturday after spending two weeks with their aunt and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Joe Bruce. BECKER REUNION The annual Becker Reunion was held Sunday July 14 at the Dashwood community centre. Approximately 148 attended. Winners in the sports were: throwing the ball, Kathy Becker; running races, 4 and 5, Karen Kimpel; 6 and '7, Scott Morlock; 8-10, Brian Muller; carry pea- nuts on knife, Marlene Barr; breaking balloons on ankle, Judy These pictures show the special treatment which keeps 21- month-old Lisa Hyde, a cystic fibrosis victim, alive. Top, she sleeps afternoons and nights in a "mist tent" into which anti- biotic steam Is forced by the pump in foreground. At right, she playfully sticks out her tongue as her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hyde, administer the "pulminory housecleaning" which Lisa receives for 35 minutes, three times a day. Above, she contemplates a few of the dozens of pills she takes daily to off- set the problems caused by glandular disorders. -- T-A photo anyway in the hope that it won't reach her lungs". Lisa sleeps afternoon and evening under a mist tent into which a pump forces antibiotics. "It gets so foggy and dense you can hardly see her inside," says her father. Her bedroom is air- conditioned to prevent exces- sive heat. Three times a day, for 35 minutes before each meal, she lies head-down on her parent's crossed legs for the thumping treatment. With cupped hands, mother or father firmly and vigorously claps various areas of her chest. For those who develop the mucous in their lungs, this helps clean it out, much as one tries to free ket- chup from a bottle. In Lisa's case, the treatment is given in the hope that the mucous won't get in. Lisa's pills give her the di- gestive juices she needs, coun- teract the failure of her sweat glands and protect her against bronchial infections. For digestion she must take cotysyme in a large capsule, even with a glass of milk. Lisa downs two for every meal. Her food Ls heavily salted and she takes salt pills as well. "She has to have a lot of extra vitamins, too, including Vitamin E, as well as many antibiotics," her mother says. "The drugs are abig expense for families," Mrs. Hyde states. "They are all costly and so many are required. Some families spend up to $200 a month." Added to this cost is the $250 for the mist tent and the doc- tor's bills, which are high be- cause of constant checkups. For most children sleeping 10 a tent is an exciting adven- ture. Not for 21-month-old Lisa Hyde of Hensel'. Her "tent" means life itself and she spends half of every day in it, Other children don't like being struck by their parents, But Lisa takes more than an hour of "thumping" every day from her mother or father and doesn't complain. Other children don't like tak- ing pills, either. Lisa takes dozens of them daily without a whimper. At first glance, this pretty, curly-haired daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hyde looks and acts like any other girl her age. Except perhaps that she's cuter than most. Lisa is a victim of cystic fi- brosis--an incurable disease that strikes 500 children every year in Canada. Up to now, half have died before they reached the age of five. Research, however, is help- ing to prolong their life expec- tancy and that's the reason Lisa sleeps in a tent, takes a "thumping" three times a day and swallows pills by the hand- ful. Cystic fibrosis is an inherited disorder of the glands in the bronchial tubes, the pancreas (which delivers digestive jui- ces) and the sweat glands. Their malfunction produces a thick, sticky substance which finds its way into the lungs. Lisa is one of the fortunate victims of the disease whose problem was diagnosed early. "It hasn't gone to her lungs, yet", explains Mary Lou Hyde. "But we give her the treatments tketer tNEV • ?LOS • ENVOY • tORVAiR Phone 13 .0660