The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1965-05-06, Page 13We started with
Pioneer Professional Power...
and here is the result
IONEER
SUBSIDIARY OF OUTBOARD MARINE CORPORATION OF CANADA LTD
17:7711,3°;•.• TIF.M.MSTrirM.',21111M' • •
Page !I' May 6, 1965
SUGAR AND SPICE
Dispensed by Smiley
Wake up,
vegetable Lucan
and district news
,Ju Mtn
them on head. Hard,
Cancer you want, to live.
forever?
Creeping Socieliam ,,hotez
than the galloping type,
The computer, so who want,
ed a job in the first place?
Leisure Time,-be ltappy, to
have a chance to sit on your
butt.
Unfuifliled Housowives,itil
Population Explosion e
Birth Q oat r el; also Nuclear
Fission,
High-priced Funerals , you
don't have to pay.
And so on.
cording to an article, are chewy
lag my wiring to start a Ism
in which we'll an .be cremated,
end do we have enough incur.
once?
If people weren't basioallysp
tough, sensible and mean,
they'd all go to bed and pull the
covers, over their heads. For-
tunately, we're as sensitive as
an old rubber boot. But, incase
the s c ar e-distributors are
bothering you, let me give you
a formula that is guaranteed
to steady the nerves, one thing
at a time,
Communists most of us are
twice as scared of our wives as
we are of the Red menace. ?hotel .127-12ss. Correspondent; Miss Lin. Abbott
automation takes over. You'll
notice I haven't even mention-
ed nuclear fission, which is old
hat, nor the squirrels in my
attic who, at this moment, ac-
i '.:IrOrtlX67•"•,"•WIMMENTIVAMMVITISIENBRIV '•:;MIRMAXIML
Home and School
watch local films
The April meeting of the
Lucan Home and School Asso-
ciation was held in the school
kindergarten last Wednesday
evening with the president Mrs.
J. W. Lochyer in the chair and
Mrs. Duncan McPhee acting as
secretary.
Mr. J. W. Smith showed his
movies of the figure skaters and
also the children who took part
in the recent "Young Canada
Fashion Show". These were
enjoyed by all especially the
children who participated.
The centennial projects were
discussed and approved, Prin-
cipal Robert Jenkin s spoke
briefly, urging the parents to
see their children did their
Announce marriage plans
Wedding plans have been announced by Julia Ann Crozier and
David George Maynard for May 15 in Lucan United Church at
3:30 pm. The bride-elect is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. R.
Crozier, Lucan, and the groom-elect, the son of Mr. and Mrs.
George Maynard of Innerkip. Both are members of the 1965
graduating class of the University of Guelph.
homework now that exams are
approaching.
In memory of a member, Mrs.
James young (whose funeral
was held a few hours prior to
the meeting), it was decided to
give a donation to the Cancer
Society.
A number of members volun-
teered to assist in the May
Music Festival.
Speaking on the new mathe-
matics system, Mr. R. S. Smith,
a mathematics teacher from the
London Teachers' College was
the guest speaker. He was intro-
duced by Principal Jenkins and
later thanked by Mrs. Russell
Goddard.
To those who were listening
to the explanation of the new
course for the first time it was
all very interesting, but quite
complicated. The question and
answer period which followed
didn't seem to clarify the sub-
ject much to many.
Mrs. Allison's room won the
attendance cup.
The meeting closed with re-
freshments s erved by Mrs.
Dwight Henderson, Mrs. Wil-
liam Froats, Mrs. Lloyd Mason,
Mrs. Leroy Revington, Mrs.
Donald Gardiner, Mrs. William
Hodgins and Mrs. Clarence
Young.
Friends fete brides
Alice St. lady
dies in hospital
Probably no street in Lucan
has had more deaths in the last
10 years than has Alice St.
Last week there were two more,
Mrs. Jim Young and Mrs. Earl
Mathers 72. The latter took
a heart attack Friday April 30
and was rushed to St. Joseph's
Hospital but passed away short-
ly after arrival.
Mrs. Mathers was the former
Margaret Johnston of the Wing-
ham area. She was a member
of the Lucan United Church.
Besides her husband she is
survived by one daughter, Mrs.
Clifford Irwin of RR 6 Wood-
stock, one granddaughter Shar-
on Irwin, and two sisters, Elsie
(Mrs. Frank Shaw) of Brussels,
Adeline (Mrs. Gordon Simmons)
of Wingham.
Funeral services were held
Monday, May 3 conducted by
Rev. G. W. Sach of the United
Church at the C. Haskett & Son
funeral home, Lucan. Interment
was in Embro, Tuesday, May
4 at 10:30 am.
at various showers
applied it to farm needs ...
Anglican ladies
stage bake sale
The Ladies' Guild of Holy
Trinity Church held a success-
ful bazaar, bake sale and tea
in the church basement Satur-
day afternoon.
The president, Mrs. Harvey
Hodgins and Mrs. E. 0. Lan-
caster received the gue s ts.
Mrs. Jack Murdy had charge of
admission.
Mrs. Jack Hardy as tea-
room hostess was assisted by
Mrs. James Freeman, Mrs.
Clarence Hackett, Mrs. Don
Ankers and Mrs. Allan Scott.
In the kitchen were Mrs. Erwin
Scott, Mrs. Charles Haggar and
Mrs. Harold Hodgins.
Mrs. Earl Atkinson, Mrs.
Wes Atkinson and Mrs. Hilton
Roberts had charge of the long
table of fancy work and Mrs.
P. 0. King, Mrs. Harold Cour-
sey, Mrs. Harold Corbett, Mrs.
Russell Bowman and Mrs. Joe
O'Neil were kept busy at the
home cooking table.
Mrs. Clare Stanley, Mrs.
Gerald Lewis, and Mrs. Roscoe
Hodgins sold marmalade made
by the Evening WA.
Many attend
lady's funeral
Mrs. J. W, Smith and her
mother, Mrs. P. 0, King Fri-
day evening, were joint host-
esses, in their adjoining apart-
ments on Beech St., for a linen
shower for Miss Julia Crozier,
whose marriage will take place
in the Lucan United Church,
May 15.
The opening of gifts was held
in Mrs. Smith's apartment with
the bride-elect's two sisters,
Jane and Susan and Miss Jean
Maynard assisting. The guests
(some 40 in number) moved
into Mrs. King's ap art m e nt
where refreshments were serv-
ed. At a long table covered with
a madiera cloth, and centred
with a large lighted candela-
brum, Mrs. Crozier and Mrs.
Maynard (the gro o m-elect's
mother) poured coffee and tea.
Serving were Mrs. Andy Chis-
holm, Mrs. Al Bromwich, Miss-
es Jean Maynard, Jane and
Susan Crozier.
On display was a beautiful
wedding cake in the shape of
a large open book, made by Mrs.
Smith and decorated by Mrs.
Ernest Ross. A pink satin rib-
bon as a book-mark made the
cake look even more book-like.
SECOND SHOWER
Prior to her marriage Sat-
urday Miss Linda England was
guest of honor at a second
miscellaneous shower when
Mrs. Charles Glenn and Miss
Joan Whitehead were joint host-
esses at the home of the former
for 20 neighbors and friends
April 29. Mrs. Harry Wraith
of Lucan and Mrs. Don Riley of
Stratford assisted in the open-
ing of gifts.
Euchre players MISCELLANEOUS SHOWER
Mrs. Frank Jolliffe, Mr s.
Wes Colley and Miss Barbara
Nagle were joint hostesses for
WIZMAIWY"‘Ps sr-stwrossymyammersvrgrzsrmsesv
enjoy banquet
Last Monday 19 members of
the Medway Euchre Club enjoy-
ed a turkey banquet in the
Granton Forester's Hall, cater-
ed to by the Forester Ladies.
High score prizes were won
by Mrs. Elmer Summers and
Mr. William McComb, lone hand
prizes by Mr. and Mrs. Austin
Hobbs and low score prizes by
Mrs. Wilbert Stanley and Mr.
Clarence Lewis.
The next euchre will be held
at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
Cliff McRoberts May 10.
INWEINMNINNMEttl PIONEERWS MRS. JAMES YOUNG
. . mourned by many
The funeral for Mrs. James
Young last Wednesday was one
of the largest ever held in Lu-
can — so gre at, that a loud
speaker was installed outside
for those who gave up their
seats to the ladies.
Friends and relatives were
there from Traverse City,
Mich., Niagara, T a vis to ck,
Paris, Chatham, Blyth, Wing-
ham, Welland and Stratford as
well as doctors from London,
and nurses from Toronto and
Hamilton.
The many beautiful floral do-
nations showed the high esteem
felt for Mrs. Young for a life
of service in her home, her
church and the hospital. In lieu
of flowers many individuals,
groups, societies and bowlers
made donations to the Cancer
Society, amounting already to
nearly $500 with more to come.
One individual sent a donation
from California.
Special paper
aids store sale
The Wraith & Storeyfull page
ad in the first edition of the
"Lucan Shamrock", April 22
really paid off making the sale
the best ever held.
Mr. Bob Toag of St, Thomas,
who happened to be in the store
made the draw and drew Mrs.
Stewart Park's coupon last Sat-
urday evening.
The second edition of the
"Lucan Shamrock" is planned
for June 3.
Are you frozen with terror,
these days? you're not? Then
wake up, you vegetable. You're
supposed to be.
Haven't you noticed the re-
lentless campaign to scare the
living daylights out of us ordi-
nary souls? There seems to be a
conspiracy, in the communica-
tions media, to put you and me
and our wives and kids into a
perpetual state of fear.
Advertising is the most pre-
valent, though not the most pow-
erful, weapon of the scaremong-
ers. It is suggested that if we
have greasy hair or a greasy
sink, we're sunk; that if we
don't use a certain soap, we
stink; that if we don't drink a
man's beer, we're a bunch of
you-know-whats.
Well, all this is enough to set
up a certain nervous tension in
the ordinary amiable chap,
What man wants to admit he's a
failure because he can't rush out
to his friendly neighborhood
dealer and snap up an all-new
Super Aurora Borealis Shooting
Star Sedan, with safety belts?
Or has dandruff?
But this, is for the morons.
you know, all the people who
don't read this column. If they
want to wind up with acid sto-
machs, upset nerves, migraine
headaches and irregularity, as
constipation is now known,
serves them right. Anybody who
is frightened by that kind of
advertising deserves it.
But it is not on the humble
commercial-watcher that the
big guns of the horror-brigade
are trained. It is on the serious
re ad e r-viewer. They h a v e
moved, lock, stock and fright-
fuls, into the newspaper, maga-
zine, book and "serious" 'I'V
field.
Every time I pick up, leaf
through, or switch on one of
these media, somebody is try-
ing to frighten the wits out of
me about something. It's a bit
hard for a fellow to cope with.
Black headlines or graphic
pictures suggest that I'm sup-
posed to be shaken rigid about
Communists and cancer; birth
control and bingo; high school
drop-outs and homo,sexualism.
Simultaneously, I'm supposed
to be stricken by integration and
insulation. If I'm not in favor of
the former, there'll be a ter-
rible blood-bath. If I'm agin
the latter, my heating bill will
soar.
Sometimes during the day,
I'm supposed to be whimpering
in a corner because of: high-
priced funerals; the computer,
which is going to put me out of
a job; the unfulfilled housewife;
and all that leisure time I'm
going to have next year, when Lucan personals
It's lightweight, with all the rugged sturdiness you expect in a
Pioneer chain saw. It's farm-sized, versatile, loaded with features
that reduce wood-cutting chores and keep it operating trouble-free
for years. Yet it weighs only 12 pounds.
• We did away with the choke and put in a primer pump, Assured
instant starting in any kind of weather • The new Pioneer 11.10 has
371/2 % greater fuel and oil capacity than previous small chain saws. You
cut more, in less time. Amazing in a small 12 pounder • Sustained
lugging power throughout the entire operating range. Pioneer saws don't
die under load • Every Pioneer 11.10 comes equipped with a Sureguard
Safety Chain as standard equipment • Pioneer dependability and service,
We stand behind every saw we sell. We've been doing it for the past 25
years. That's why Pioneer leads the professional chain saw field.
After seven weeks in St. Jo-
seph's Hospital Mrs. William
Berry= was able to be brought
home Friday.
Mr. & Mrs. Norman Schell
and family were Sunday guests
of Mr. & Mrs. Preston Holmes,
of Shakespeare Sunday after-
noon.
ATTENDS COSMETIC SCHOOL
The Yardley Cosmetic Co.
Ltd. sponsored a cosmetic
school at Hotel London this
week. Ladies from the Radcliffe
Drug Store, Lucan, participat-
ing were Mrs. Bert Thompson
and Mrs. Harold Butler on Mon-
day and Mrs. J. S. Radcliffe and
Mrs. Calvin Haskett on Thurs-
day.
Exeter Farm Equipment
a miscellaneous shower held in
St. Patrick's (old) school Friday
evening to honor Miss Carol
Young, whose marriage to Allan
Hutchinson will take place, May
29,
Assisting in the opening of
gifts were the bride-elect's sis-
ters Betty Ann and Mary Mar-
garet Young and Mrs. Colley.
CAT'S
out of the bag •
R. D. Jermyn Main North 235-1380
AGRICO"
introduces
NEW AA QUALITY
Anglican
The April awards for attend-
ance, attention and co-opera-
tion were given out to the junior
choir at the II o'clock service,
Billy Henderson winning for the
boys and Julie Hardy and Julie
Henderson were joint winners
for the girls,
7-28-28
for Corn and Spring Grain
After we paint the car, we paint the paint.
}HMI ANALYSIS — Your yields and
profit will take a tremendous leap forward
with new AA Quality 7-28-28 fertilizer,
Agrito's 7.28-28 in the popular 1-4-4 ratio
is high in phosphorus for early maturity
and high in potash for top quality grain
and sturdier stalks.
With more plant food units in every bag
you need less fertilizer to get maximum
yields. And you save time, labour and
money. The uniform granules spread even-
ly and are easily regulated in the hopper.
This season, use Agrico's AA Quality
7-28-28 for corn and small grains and watch
your profits grow.
AGIRICON
AGRICULTURAL CHEMICALS LIMITED
LONDON -- ORANGEVILLE PORT' HOPE
Order from your Agrico dealer
Cook Bros. Milling Co. Ltd., Henson
Lloyd Rader, Doshwood
You can't even see the paint going on.
It just seems to grow on the car. Thick and even.
After another baking, we wet-sand the finish. By hand.
And another coat of paint is puf on.
Then we bake again. And sand again. And add another
coat of paint. The fourth.
Of course, every step we take in making a Volkswagen
involves the some attention to detail.
And there are 5,320 inspectors along our
production line to keep us from getting rusty.
And before we do either to a Volkswagen, we bathe it.
We bathe it in steam, we bathe it in alkali, we bathe it in
phosphate. Then we bathe if in a neutralizing solution.
If it got any cleaner, there wouldn't be much left to paint.
Then we dunk the whole thing into a vat of slate gray
primer until every square inch of metal is covered. Inside
and out.
After the dunking, we bake it and sand it by hand.
Then we paint it.
This time the VW puts the paint on itself. The car is
electrically charged to attract paint. Molecule by molecule.
HUNTER-DUVAR M n Street, Tel.: 235-1100
CONFIRMATION CLASS
An enrolment of 18 teenage
candidates attended the first
confirmation class in the church
last Wednesday. There will also
be a number of adults being con-
firmed.
Pentecostal Holiness
Rev. James Jinks of Virginia
held successful revivals all last
week, ending with the Sunday
services.
The pastor, the Rev. John
Sexton, Who has been holding
revival services in N. Caro-
lina, will return honie this week.
FILM COMING
Thursday May 6 at 8 pm,
Eldon Boyd a the Oral Roberts
Ministry will show a film.-
United
gm, Andrew Brncljar, secre-
tarY of the Canadian Bible so,
tidy, taking as hiS text, "Ade-
quate for the Tasks of Life",
was the guest speaker at the
11 o'clock service.
The pastor, the Rey. G. W.
Sach, waS guest Speaker at the
Bryon MAW Church Sunday.
Mrs. Jane Somerville called
on Mrs. Maud Berry of St.
Marys on Sunday.
Lucan's IGA store had three
winners last week Mrs. C.
Armstrong of Clandeboye, Mrs.
Harry Carroll of Saintsbury and
Mrs. Shirley Maeklem of Liman.
Mrs. Joseph E, Frey (the
former Miriam Martin) visited
her sister Mrs. T. A. Hodgins
last week. Wednesday they both
visited another sister, Mrs. W.
P. Westney Of Brooklin, Ont.,
and Thursday visited two ne-
phews Messrs Bob and Barry
Wenger of Wingham.
Mrs. Margaret Blackwood of
Don Mills spent last weekend
with her sister, Mrs. Robert
Jenkins and Mr. Jenkins. Mr.
and Mrs. J. C. Taylor (another
sister) of London were Monday
vests.
Mr. & Mrs. Bernard Avery
and family spent last weekend
in Rockwood guests Of Mr. &
Mrs. Ben Saulnier.
Mrs. Ed Morris and baby
Sandra has returned home to
Mount Forest after spending a
few days with Mr. & Mrs. Jack
Murdy.
Mr. & Mrs. Robert Jenkins
Tuesday attended a birthday
party for their grandson, Perry
Woods, at the home of Perry's
parents, Mr. & Mrs. John Woods
of London.
Mr. Morris Murdy of Kitch-
ener is a patient in WeStminater
Hospital and will be there for
at least five Weeks.
Mrs. Maria ''Casket of Lon-
don and her brother, Mr. Heinz
Taby of Germany, were Thurs-
day guests of Mr. & Mrs. Frank
Hardy.
Mr. & Mrs. William Ayle-'
stock have returned home from
a week's visit with their Toronto
family and another Week with
their daughter, Rev. A. Ayle-
stock of St. Catharines andNia.,
gara.
Flowers in Lucan's chltrcheS
last Sunday were In loving me-
mory of the late Mrs. James
Young.
Mrs. R. H. Stanley of St.
Thomas was a Sunday guest
Of Mrs. T. C. 'McFarlane.
Mr. & Mrs. Harold Town-
send and family were week,
end guests of Mr. & Mrs. John
Craig of liitlYth.
Mr. Lionel Kendrick IS again
a patient in St, Joseph's Hos-
pital,
Mrs. Alec Colvin and small
Son were weekend guests of the
fortnerbis parents, M. & Mrs.
V. P. Stanley.