The Exeter Times-Advocate, 1975-08-14, Page 10Warehouse
Furniture and
Appliances
Unlimited
MAIN ST, EXETER
The Place For . . .
* Captain's Beds
* Bunk Beds
* Bedroom Suites
* Box Springs
* Mattresses
WE ACCEPT
TRADES
"Your Family
Health Centre"
373 Main St.
Phone 235-1570 or 235-1070
EXETER PHARMACY LTD.
Now Open Wednesdays - 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
Food Bills are A r
Phone 235 0212 lower at Mali
-411*-
..4" 5,40
IA k.
r
Schneiders Na. 1
1 lb. Vacyak
CHICKEN LEGS
Schneiders
WIENERS
Schneiders Luncheon Meat
MINCED HAM
Schneiders Beef, Cheese, Onion
QUARTER
POUNDERS Pkge of 4
Libbys
SPAGHETTI 14 oz. 3/1.00
Aylmer
FRUIT COCKTAIL 14 oz. 2/$ 1 .00
Mitchells or Brights Vitaminized
APPLE JUICE
Canada Dry , & Wink, etc.
GINGER ALE
Sherriff
JELLY POWDERS
Canada White Spirit
VINEGAR
Leavers Pieces and Stems
MUSHROOMS l o oz,
lb. 9
lb. 99‘
lb. 89'
lb.
lb. 59,
3 b. $1.69
55'
lb. $1.19
Sucklke 5 lb• ('n' SiSize
AUNDR I SA ,89
tootGsto
48 oz. 59'
Schneiders 1/4 lb. ea, 1 lb, Vac
BEEF STEAKETTES
Fresh
BEEF
case of 24 tins $3.89 t AN
s 1V2
S
'h
BEEF LIVER
Schneiders
SKILLET STRIPS
Kraft Jet Puffed
MARSHMALLOWS
4/$1.00
128 oz 97'
2/9.00
1 1/4 oz 454
Your Choice, Choice, Chocolate Chip, Peanut Butter
COLONIAL COOKIES 1 16. bag 89'
Splendor
SPAGHETTI or
13 594 MACARONI 21
Gay Lea
POWDERED SKIM MILK .3 lb. $ 1 .74
SUNLIGHT LIQUID 24 oz, Pkge of 2 .29
NEW! NEW!
4 01-
NEW!
SQUARE
PIZZA
$ 79
FROM S&M
15" x 10"
Pepperoni
Sausage & Mushroom
Clover Cream 4 litre pail almost gallon
ICE CREAM
Valley Farm Choice
FRENCH FRIES
Turkey, Chicken, Salisbury Steak and Fish
BANQUET TV DINNERS
$2.59
/ lb. Sag 19'
11 oz. 694
Old South
ORANGE JUICE cis1:44g.;s0 2/89'
,zza:vrvfraNAWMnalemM
PRODUCE Superior chiquit«
BANANAS
Ontario NO, 1
CELERY STALKS
Ontario NO. 1
CA 'ROTS
29'
33'
33
24 oz. Enriched
lb. bag
RED HAVEN PEACHES
ARRIVING DAILY
COAT .& DRESS.FASHIONS,
FOR FALL & WINTER
Our Stock Has Been Greatly Enlarged
and We Invite You To Come In And Browse
Our Store-Wide
SUMMER
SALE
CONTINUES
Savings of 50%.
And Even More
Use Your Chorgex or Mastercharge
FLOOR COVERING • WALLPAPER
• FAMILY CLOTHING • CRAPES
I FABRICS
NOW OPEN AIL DAY WEDNESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT
Page )0 Time$-Asivasote, August 14, 1975
• '''''''''''''''' • '" Guide -from .Northwest Terri
says Ontario summers hotter Odds nt .Ends
Canodois faces
A girl from the Northwest
Territories was one of five Girl
Guides visiting Exeter over the
weekend as. part of an exchange
sponsored by the Girl Guides .of
Canada,
Caron McBride .of. Fort Simp-
son is about 1,0(K) miles from
home. .Caron who arrived in
tended a Stratford
Shakespearean Festival show
Saturday night and arrived in
Exeter immediately afterward.
They left for St, Marys Monday
morning and will be continuing
on to Toronto to attend the
Canadian National Exhibition
later this week.
_Susan Chapman of the Exeter
Guide group accompanied the
visitors for lite balance _of the
week.
GIRL Gviogs ON EXCHANGE — Five visiting Girl guides spent the weekend in Exeter as part of on Inter-
national exchange. Above, Susan Chapman of Exeter chats with Diane Downey, Owen Sound; Caron
McBride, Northwest Territories; Nora Sobolov and Nancy Czcipla of Windsor and Helen Shipley,
Orangeville. T-A photo
?moos 47044
Mrs. Jim Anderson & daughter
Janine & Jennifer of London
visited with her mother Mrs.
Irene Harness for a few daYs
Mr. & Mrs. Don 13rintnell &
girls left on Thursday for Victoria
B.C. They have been tranferred
from Dartmouth N,S. where they
had resided for the past 15 years.
Mrs, Brintnell, Kim, Darlene &
Joanne had spent the summer
with Mrs. Brintnell's parents,
Mr. & Mrs. Eldon Heywood and
visited other relatives.
Mr. & Mrs. Jim Briggs of Dash-
wood and son Frank and Mr. &
Mrs, Grant Westlake, Exeter and
Douglas took a trip to New
Brunswick and stayed at Mrs.
Janet Briggs and went on to Nova
Scotia to visit Mr. & Mrs. Burton
Watson.
Dr, & Mrs. Henry Gates,
Geoffrey, Amy, Melissa and
Alexander of Salt Lake City, Utah
visited recently with Mr. & Mrs.
Garnet Hicks.
Western Ontario a week age said
the weather here was "a bit
hotter" than in the NWT.
The McBride family moved to
Fort Simpson from Winnipeg
about five years age. Caron said
the first year in the Northwest
Territories her family put tin foil
over the windows during July
when the sun shines 24 hours each
day to allow sleeping.
She said although the tem-
peratures rose to 116 one day this
year 75 degrees is a normal
daytime high.
The other girls visiting Exeter.
were Helen Shipley, Orangeville;
Diane Downey, Owen Sound and
Nancy Czapla and Nora Sobolav,
both of Windsor.
The visiting Girl Guides at,
Boutique features local crafts
tryF
BY ELAINE TQWNSHENP
imported from Japan, A huge bell,
hangs nearby, and when visitors
,strike it, the chords resound
through the park.
Lethbridge University, built in
the side of a hill, boasts unique
architecture. I admired its ap-
pearance but not its stairs.
Most Canadians dream of
attending the Calgary Stampede.
The dream came true for three of
us this summer. The broncs and
the bulls bucked as wildly as we
expected, After watching the
cowboys and clowns in action, I
don't think complain about
sitting on our hard wooden
grandstands,
One of my friends bought a
stetson, which travelled to
Vancouver Island and back to
Ontario in our car. Considering
that I sat on it a couple of times, it
stood the trip rather well.
For a panoramic view of the
city, we ate in the revolving
restaurant atop the Calgary
Tower. On our budget, that
meant a real splurge, but the
view was worth it. Calgary is a
sprawling city, yet it's clean and
well-organized. Although the sky
was misty, I glimpsed a whitecap
in the west. It could have been a
cloud or my imagination, but I
insist it was a mountain.
Later, we visited the Klondike
Days in Edmonton, where a
whole city commemorates the
gold rush era,
From Calgary, we headed
toward Banff National Park and
the Rockies. Next week I'll tell
you about taking a snowmobile
ride on a glacier in mid-July,
getting lost in one of Canada's
largest cities and sampling
western hospitality.
100 honor
Zurich bride
A miscellaneous shower was
held on Tuesday, August 5, at the
Zurich town hall for Miss Wanda
Wilder bride-to-be on August 16.
Many games of bingo were
played, conducted by her three
sisters and Valerie Regier. There
were also several special prize
winners,
Wanda graciously thanked all
present, and these unable to
attend, for the beautiful gifts she
received.
A buffet lunch was served with
approximately 100 friends at-
tending.
decorate your refrigera
Hand crocheted lampshades
and purses by Sally Sneddon and
Helen Green of Huron Park are
also available.
"It gives me something to do,"
says Mrs, Stanley. Now that my
children are grown," Honor and
Emerson Stanley of RR 2 Den-
field have five children. "I used
to make a lot of things for church
bazaars and then 'I got the idea of
a shop of my own."
"Bee Carpenter offered me the
back room of her store. We set it
up together and went into
"Knit one, purl two or is it knit
two, purl one?" Knitting,
crocheting, embroidering,
quilting, all kinds of stitchery
have always been a woman's
talent but the skill is not innate
and some are more talented than
others,
If you like hand made things
but somehow yours never look
like the picture on the pattern
then visit the Honibee Boutique,
Ladies from the Exeter area
contribute their products to
Honor Stanley's little shop
located at the rear of the Carp-
, enter Optical Shoppe Main St,
Exeter. It's chock full of
specialty items, toys and knick
knacks for the home,
Rainbow colored afghans are
made by Mrs. G. Price of
Wellington St. Exeter. Mrs. Ila
Moir, fashions unusual glass
jewellery and ceramics. Sharen
Craven of Ailsa Craig also makes
ceramics as a sideline and sells
her wares to the Honibee.
Also on sale at the shop are
interesting pieces of batik art by
Susan Bakick, an art teacher at
South Huron District High
School. Mrs. Joanne McKnight of
Exeter does decoupage and wall
plaques of driftwood on burlap.
Mrs. L. Rader makes "fridgies"
charming little roosters to
business last April."
Honor's baby quilts are in big
demand, she barely gets one
finished before it's sold and
another one is ordered.
The boutiquels open Thursday,
Friday and Saturday every week.*
If you need a wedding or shower
gift with a personal touch, the
Honibee is the place to shop.
"We are going to start a new
line of craft materials," she
mentioned. Many have inquired
about movable eyes and sequins
and other trimmings; these
articles will be available soon.
To appreciate this country of
ours, we should travel from coast
to coast. In July, I motored with
some friends to Vancouver
Island, and we came home with a
new awareness of Canada. She
has many faces.
The rocks and forests of
Northern Ontario give way to the
plains of Manitoba, Saskat-
chewan and Alberta, From one
horizon to another stretch the
wheat and hay fields, Only grain
elevators, sleepy little towns and
a few marshes interrupt the level
span. Round bales of hay dot the
ground.
In Saskatchewan, the flat land
abruptly becomes rolling hills
that descend to the blue waters
near the Diefenbaker Dam. Near
Saskatoon stands Blackstrap, the
man-made mountain, which
Some westerners call the pimple
on the prairie.
In North Battleford, my friends
and I toured a R.C.M.P. post,
which was built around 1803, The
officers' quarters, the barracks,
the sick horse stable and the
stockade contain original fur-
' nishings and equipment,
Paintings relate the bloody
confrontations between the
Indians and the white men. While
we read an account of the
hanging of six Indians after the
fliel rebellion, we could almost
hear the muffled drumbeats in
the courtyard.
Contrasting the R.C.M,P. past,
we watched 32 members of
the modern force perform the
famous musical ride in Swift
Current's exhibition grounds.
In Lethbridge Alberta, a
Japanese garden symbolizes the
friendship between Canadians
and the Japanese, Unlike the
gardens we're accustomed to, it
contains few flowers. Instead
acres of lawns, landscaped with
trees, shrubs, ponds, brooks and
rocks, create a relaxed at-
mosphere.
The wood of the teahouse is
t,ove SY0 ded:
Mrs. Tillie Tetreau of
Zurich will celebrate her
ninetieth bir thdayon August
25, HONIBEE BOUTIQUE — Mrs. Honor Stanley works on a baby quilt in
her shop .at the rear of the Carpenter Optical Shoppe, Main St., Ex-
eter. The boutique carries handmade specialty items made locally,