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The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1971-02-11, Page 4Add your support 1011/1??RfelfinfitrifE Fresh 'Ham whole or half (family pack) Pork Loin Chops Pure Pork Sausage homemade Homemade Head Cheese Sliced Cooked Ham (store sliced) Pork Cutlets Butt Chopi th.49' Ib 59 tin 89' PRODUCE Chiquita Bananas U.S. No. 1 lb. 9 'Head Lettuce U.S. No. 1 ea.19 Grapefruit Fla. No. 1 10/69 4 Utopia brand Tomatoes choice quality Garden Patch Cream Corn Nescafe Instant Coffee io oz. Squirrel Peanut Butter Tasty-Nu Bread Hyatt Beans with Pork Schneiders Soft Margarine Valley Farm Frozen French Fries 19 oz 2/49' 2/39' 179 45' 4/88' 19 oz 4/89' 1 lb. ub 2 1b, bag 33 4 3/9 9' 14 oz. limit 2 per customer 16 oz. Morton Frozen Pot Pies beef, chicken, turkey 8 oz. STORE HOURS Mon. - Thurs. 8 6 Friday 8 9 Saturday 8 • 7 WALLY'S. MARKET Main St. 238.2512 Grand Bend It's an ill wind that doesn't blow some good, and the recent blizzard certainly had some good results for members of the snowmobile fraternity. Newspapers throughout the area had been carrying stories prior to the storm about the nuisance of the machines and how municipal councils were considering bylaws to curtail their antics which were drawing complaints from residents. The storm changed all that. Overnight, the machine operators became heroes, and a glance at this week's area newspapers recounted tale after tale of them going into the blinding storm to assist victims. They did a tremendous job and at the same time earned a spot in everyone's good books. However, they should be reminded that humans are a fickle lot. They changed from villains to heroes overnight and there's no guarantee that as time wags on, the situation couldn't reverse itself. Now that they have shown they are responsible people, they should continue to act in that manner. For all intents and purposes, the slate has been wiped clean and it will be up to them whether it remains that way. • They can't place their trust in such blizzards coming along periodically to keep cleaning the slate . . . we hope. The formation of a local club should prove worthwhile in that effort and it is to be hoped all area enthusiasts will join up. US that sniffing nail polish was the greatest. And the same kids, when they hit their teens, were young men and women, capable and independent. My grandmother died at 33. Fatigue and child-bearing, common enough in those days. There were nine children. And my mother, the oldest girl, reared the lot of them. Most of our kids today couldn't raise a guinea pig without the help of two parents and a veterinarian. I am presently trying to convince my daughter that the free-enterprise system has its points. She has some piano pupils. She thinks it is atrocious that she gets only half the fee the kids pay, a mere .$2 a half-hour, while the studio owner takes the other half, $2. I point out to her that he picks her up and delivers her home, that it is his studio, his piano, his advertising, his overhead. Nope. It is a cleat case of vicious capitalistic exploitation of the young. And my mother hitched up the horse-and-buggy, or horse-and-cutter, and drove all i over Calumet Island and half of ., • Pontiac County, giving lessons at ..fifty cents an hour. And drove the long, dark, lonely road home. It's not the money. Half a buck then was probably worth more than four dollars today. It's the attitude. There's nobody to be blamed. They grew up in an era of comparative peace, when a strong back and a strong will gave you a life that was rewarding. We grew up through a depression and a world war and sought security. Our kids are growing up in an era of violence and feat- and rapid change and insecurity. And perhaps the last are more idealistic than any of us, closer to the truth, with their slogan of "Love and Peace." compared to through the snow. But when, they got there, there wasn't anybody trying to convince them It's one of those wild, Canadian nights, with the wind howling like a pack of wolves on an LSD trip, and snow seeking out every crevice. My wife came down today and found a little kid trying manfully to shut our front door, which had been blown open. There was about eight inches of snow in the vestibule, and the furnace was grunting away like a hippo with a hernia. It's the sort of night when you think with awe of our ancestors. In their draughty log cabins, and their sod houses on the prairies. They were giants, compared to us pampered, doughty creatures, who whimper and get sick at the thought that we might not be able to get the car out of the drive in the morning. We simply can't imagine getting up at five in pitch dark, lighting a lamp, building a fife, breasting it through three or four #1116H1,4)/9y STWANGERs toliwni .424,ticreir,„ Giants .. feet of snow to the barn or lean-to to see whether the animals have survived, feeding them, numb to the bone, and coming back in to make porridge. A tough life, but in some ways we must envy them. They didn't have to worry about too much cholesterol in the eggs, too much fat in the bacon. They didn't have that demon . of today, the alarm-clock, to tear their tender morning nerves. And maybe, because they weren't geared to the clock, they missed some of the joys of modern life. They didn't have ulcers, because they had to do something about their problems, not just worry about them. They weren't constipated, because they didn't have time, in that cold. Their women weren't so neurotic, because they didn't have time to worry about nerves, cancer, gray hair and wrinkles. It was a hard, brutal life, no question. But were they worse off than we? Maybe their kids had to walk three miles to school a A P EV°R 1711 i-R 6 _f.RA c s AY 51 eszracs,' Times Established 1873 :M.N.3HIWOONDMIONVIROMMONNERMISOIMMEMAMV.K.AMI Advocate Established 1881 Amalgamated 1924 SERVING CANADA'S BEST FARMLAND C.W.N.A., 0.W.N.A., CLASS 'A' and ABC Editor -- Bill Batten — Advertising Manager Phone 235.1331 001ACIA0•1 wioro Published Each Thursday Morning at Exeter, Ontario Second Class Mail Registration Number 0386 Paid in Advance Circulation, September 30, 1970, 4,675 RATES: Canada $6.00 Per Year; USA $8.00 SUBSCRIPTION irkfiNAV ••••• ,•••St• '44.v. ',I.-4 .;;.• I .5 e 4 tr Drive carefully Don't turn a deaf ear to conversation Don't tune people out simply because you have been missing a great deal of what was being said. You may be agreeably surprised to find just how many hearing problems can be helped with one of the fine new hearing aids now, available. EATON'S carries a complete line of the most modern models. Come in and see our certified hearing aid audiologist. He can give you a personal demonstration of the latest electronic improvements in Hearing Aids. He is qualified to give hearing tests and, if advisable, suggest the most helpful type for you. A telephone call to EATON'S London 439-2411 makes an appointMerit... or brings our man right to your door for home consultation without charge or obligation on your part. Exeter PUC and council have a most valid argument in their suggestion that an Ontario Hydro crew should be stationed in Exeter during the winter months, and also that the department of highways dispense with their proposal to close the local service depot and centralize facilities. One of the greatest hardships suffered during the recent blizzard was the result of hydro failure in several rural areas in the Exeter area. Most homes and farm operations are completely dependent upon hydro service and obviously Ontario Hydro have an obligation to maintain this service to the best of their ability. This can not be done from their centralized offices in Clinton and S trathroy. ' While the plea from Exeter officials to have crews on hand locally during the winter months may help to stir some thought on the matter by hydro and highway officials, it may not be enough. Obviously, area township councils should support the Exeter presentation, as well as any other oganization whose members were — or can be — affected by the loss of service stemming from centralization of such services. The cause can also be greatly aided by personal pleas from area residents. We suggest the best method of making your views known is to send them to the Hon. C. S. MacNaughton, Huron MPP. Do it right NOW! It only takes a few minutes and a six cent stamp. Residents in Middlesex should send it to the Hon. W. A. Stewart, minister of agriculture and food. Remember, they're fickle "We're slowly and surely drowning in it!" That was the comment by Exeter council newcomer Bruce Shaw when he urged his fellow members last week to give some consideration to the pollution problem with a view to taking steps locally to combat the increasing nuisance. While he noted that the area was as yet facing no great problem from pollution, it was important that council members assume their responsibility for keeping it that way and watching situations which threatened to create local problems. That's obviously the crux of the matter, and it was interesting to hear one member give an opinion later that the main concern was the pollution of our lakes and oceans. That may well be, but the implied suggestion that pollution was the 'major concern of other., become evident. than local residents is one of the f It wouldn't have taken too greatest problems we face in the many more hours similar to those Need more than three minutes • Expresses Your Love Forever Choose One From Our Wide Selection For Your Valentine Gals . .. Give the Man In Your Life A A Diamond WATCH struggle to preserve our environment. On a per capita basis, this area contributes as much to pollution as any other area in this nation. Each person throws out as much garbage as a resident in Toronto or sends as much carbon monoxide into the air as any driver in Sarnia. Our meagre numbers do not afford protection; but rather only a slowing of the process. It's not unlike the widow's mite in that it is still very much a contribution. * * * Bruce had only a couple of suggestions on how pollution could be tackled from the local level by council. These were the banning of non-returnable bottles; and the separation of garbage into various lots, those that would burn, those that would quickly deteriorate and those that could be re-cycled such as glass. They should at least provide a starting point for council's consideration and perhaps local residents could present some other suggestions. In his approach to the matter last week, Bruce told council he only wanted three minutes for his presentation. While that may have been appreciated by members of council, it is obviously not a topic which can be solved in such a short time. Unlike many of the side-track discussions onto which council wanders too frequently, it demands some serious and lengthy consideration. Very quickly! * * * For the past week, we've been patiently standing at the front Demonstrate it! Exeter, Ont. Feb. 5/71. The Times-Advocate, Exeter, Ont. Dear Sirs: While trying to navigate the sidewalks of town, especially downtown Main Street, I wondered why the makers of safe-T-salt as per ads of TV and most of grocery and hardware stores do not take this chance to give us a demonstration of the efficiency of this product. If ever we needed it, it is now; especially for older people to get around with any ,degree. of safety, let alone comfort. While sand is really best to use on ice it is very messy when tracked into stores or homes, Just a thought for safety's sake, especially my own. Yours truly, A Senior Citizen " door waiting for some Indian with a pocketful of beads and trinkets to make an offer on our property. However, they obviously knew what they were doing when they sold much of their terrain for such considerations, because the way Mother Nature has been treating us, of late, we can't imagine anyone wanting to live in this neck of the woods. But most hardy souls have withstood every trick that has been tossed their way in the past two weeks and only the most pessimistic would suggest that things could get worse. Councillor Mery Cudmore's suggestion at last week's council that local residents should be apprised of the danger of a flood appeared worthwhile, but not even he probably realized just how soon such dangers would of Thursday night and , early Friday morning to get us back into that normal July situation, and obviously that would have been the final straw for most people who were just starting to get their breath after the blizzard. 50 YEARS AGO Mr. Ben Makins has purchased the 50 acre farm of Mr. Harry Bierling on the' Lake Road. Mr. Bierling has purchased the residence of Mr. Henry Rumehr, Exeter North. Mr. S. M. Sanders has purchased the large James Pickard Block owned by Mr. William Jackson of Clinton, and now occupied on the north side by the Jackson Manufacturing Company and on the south side by the Y.P.C.A. In the first of the home and home games between Kitchener and Exeter, Zurich Intermediate Hockey teams at Kitchener on Wednesday night last, Kitchener got a lead of three goals, the score being 3•0. Friday night the second game of the round took place on Exeter ice resulting in favour of Kitchener by a score of 6-2. Miss Ella Link who has been visiting with relatives here and in Crediton left Friday to attend the Toronto millinery opening and from there will go to Walkerton to resume her millinery duties. Miss Margaret Hanover is this week opening a dressmaking shop in Hartleib's block in Dashwood. Miss Hanover formerly did dressmaking in Buffalo. 25 YEARS AGO A debate "Resolved that the Japanese should be excluded from Canada" was held at the I.O.O.F. meeting with the affirmative taken by A. W. Morgan and Arnold Cann and the negative by Garnet Hicks and Wm. E. Middleton. The decision was given in favor of the affirmative. Five hundred people attended the carnival at the Exeter arena Friday evening. Some of the prize winners' for best -.costumes went to: Mrs. Wes Ryckman, Shirley Appleton, Marjorie Richards, Sterling Ince, Maxine Reeder, Ann Marie Rivers, Mrs. Pickard and Peter Cowen. Races were won by Tim Stire, Art Trites, Claudette White, Keith trintnell, Gordon Price and Mary McKnight. Mr, E. Maurice Quance has rounded out 40 years as a harness maker in Exeter, During that time he has been absent from work on five ' ccasions only. The storm not only kept the department of highways crews busy, but a trip along Highway 4 indicates it will also give them plenty of work come spring. Sign after sign has been broken off or knocked down as the crews shoved the snow into the ditches. We wouldn't hazard a guess as to how much it may cost to replace the broken signs, but it will probably be high enough to warrant some consideration to changing the location of them to prevent the annual destruction. Surely some of them could be made bigger and set farther away from the travelled portion to prevent them from being hit by the plows and yet afford the motoring public a clear view of them. A girl being interviewed for a secretarial job was asked how she was on spelling. She said she considered herself a pretty good speller. "But," she added, pointing to a dictionary on a nearby desk "I don't take any chances. If I'm in any doubt, I just reach for Mr. Weber." Mr. Henry C. Finkbeiner has purchased the farm on the fourth concession of Stephen from his father, Mr. Fred Finkbeiner. 15 YEARS AGO The Pinery will be open for limited public use this summer, E. C. Janes, Lambton East MLA, predicted Wednesday. Town council decided Monday night not to attempt organization of a civil defence unit for this district because of disinterest in the program. Sgt. R.. A. McKinnon of Sussex, N.B. who is taking a special course at Camp Borden visited his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Donald McKinnon, and brother Billy, of Hensall. Jack Weber Ltd., Exeter, purchased the reserve champion turkey at the Canadian Turkey Federation convention last week for $101.56 when it was auctioned off. The bid amounted to $6.25 per pound. A miscellaneous shower for Miss Norma Ford, bride elect of Saturday, was held at the home of Miss Eleanor Jones, Thursday evening. 10 YEARS AGO A $245,000 sewerage program for Exeter has been accepted as a project by the Ontario Water Resources Commission. The commission, co-operating closely with council, will advance the project as quickly as possible. It will include construction of a 22-acre lagoon plus 15,000 feet of sanitary sewers. Existing storm sewers will be utilized. The seventh anniversary of the Senior Citizens club was celebrated Tuesday with over 150 Signing the register, Thames Road public. school was broken into Wednesday night and the school radio stolen, Entrance was made by breaking a window, Joseph Davis, who for 31 years was manager of the flax mill in Exeter north, died Sunday in the Heywood nursing home in his 93rd year. Principal H. L, Sturgis told the SHDHS board, Tuesday, he expected next year's enrolment to reach between 725 and 750 students, an increase of nearly 100 over present enrolment. e MAIN ST. CANADA'S FINEST HOME-MADE CANDY 0 A a a a a ORDER YOUR Olin Brown Candy Jack Smith JEWELLER 235-2944 EXETER * * Here's Something She'll Like