HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1952-03-19, Page 7IlUY AND USE
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ANNUAL APPEAL
MARCH 13—APRIL 13
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By R. J. SCOTT
randfather
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Mrs. Frederick Kitchen
Passes in Toronto
Early Sunday morning at the resi-
dence of her daughter, 315 Vesta
Drive, Forest Hill Village, Toronto,
March 2nd., 1952, Cecilia Lisell Gal-
laher, beloved wife of the late Fred-
erick Kitchen of Wroxeter, Ontario,
entered into rest. She had suffered a
severe stroke a few days previous to
her death.
Cecelia Gallaher was born and grew
up on Lot 17, Concession A., Howick.
In 1890 she married Frederick Wil-
liam Kitchen, who predeceased her in
January, 1939. After farming in Turn-
berry Township, they moved to Essex
County, where they lived for about
sixteen years, They moved to Wrox-
eter in 1912.
She was a faithful add devoted
member of the United Church, form-
erly Methodist, a member of the choir
for over fifty years, and as long as
health allowed, was rarely absent
from the many activities of the
church.
She leaves to mourn her loss two
daughters, Mary Irene (Mrs. T. O.
Pardon) Detroit; and Ora Jane (Mrs.
1 R C.Berkinshaw) Toronto; also five
grandchildren and eight greatgrancl-
children. One sister (Blanche) Mrs. J.
Earner and one brother, Albert of
Wroxeter, still survive. One brother,
Will, Wroxeter and six sisters, pre-
deceased her; Mrs. (Liza) Chapple,
Hamilton; Mrs. (Mary) Ed. Bryans,
Grey Township; Mrs. (Maggie) A.
Bryans, Brussels; Mrs. (Emma) Good-
fellow, Toronto; Miss Ada, Wroxeter;
Mrs. (Susan) Wm. Montgomery,
Wroxeter.
Following a short service for rela-
tives and friends on Monday evening
at the home of her son-in-law, R. C.
Berkinshaw, the remains were
brought to the T. V Edgar funeral
home, Gorrie. After a Short service
conducted by Rev. E. V. Todd, she
was borne to her final resting place
in Wroxeter cemetery by six neigh-
bors, Howard Wylie, Harvey McMich-
ael, Roy Hunter, Allen Munro, Wesley
Heimpel and Hector Knight.
Many beautiful floral tributes were
carried by Fred, Jack and Bill Par-
don, Dr. Fred Bryans, John Bryans,
Clifford McAllister, Stanley Gallaher
and Billie Gallaher.
And from her scrapbook by Edgar
Guest:
"They only seem to die,
To the unwise!"
Believe it, you and I,
And dry our eyes.
After the tolling bells,
And pain's release,
The Book of Wisdom tells:
"They are in Peace,"
BRUSSELS CONCERT
Guests were present from London,
Wingham, Orangeville, Owen Sound,
etc., at the concert and dance feat-
uring the Kansas Farmer and his
entertainers held in Brussels, on
Friday, March 14th., by the Lions.
Those taking part under the chairµ
manship of Rev, Lane were Ken
Ashton and his orchestra, the Noll
sisters from Walkerton, Shorty
Campbell from Orangeville, Clark
Johnston from. Belgrave and Robert
Kennedy, Scott Dawson arid Jack
Thynne all of Brussels. Over $200
was realized at the door.
THE VOICE OF TEMPERANCE
The legality of bottle clubs has been
Called in question. It looked as if
they Were going to get away with
their evasion of the law. Their mem-
bers bought tickets. With these ticketh
they purchased their liquor, There
Was lib money transaction for liquor
and se the law Was not broken, The
tickets camouflaged the infraction
Of the law, Now the officers of the
law havd decided that the camouflage
is too thin. They have Challenged the
validity of the bottle club. It remains
to be seen whether law breakers can
Make a fool of the law, or whether
the intent and purpose of the law is
te be sustained.—AtArt
'WEDNESDAY, IARCH 19th., 195` THE wINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES 1,40$ SEE
—Rev. and Mrs. A, H, Harrison of
Tlderton, were guests on Monday with
,Rev, and Mrs. E. O. Lancaster.
—Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Linnell of
Delaware, visited over the week-end
with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. J. H.
iViacIatosh.
—Mr. John Hopper left town last
Monday to accept a position as in-
Spector with the Department of Lab-
our. Prior to his leaving, a surprise
party was held at the home ec' Mr.
,and Mrs, Jim Cameron at which Mr.
and Mrs. Hopper were presented a e, h
a hostess chair.
—Mr. Norman Farquharson of Ed-
monton and Mr. Houghton of Winni-
peg, visited on Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. George Tervit, Mr. Farquharson
also called on his aunt, Miss Ss ede
Farquharson of town and his aunt,
-Mrs. John Tervit in Wingham General
Hospital.
WANTED
HORSES FOR SLAUGHTER
3c LB. AT FARM.
DEAD and DISABLED HORSES
and COWS 'up to $5.00 each.
Smaller animals according to size
and condition.
C BRUBACHER
Phone 608w1 R.R. 1, Wingham
—Mr. W. A. Galbraith was in Tor-
onto for several days recently at a
Health Units Meeting, where problems
confronting the various unite were
discussed,
—Mrs. Howard Wallar and son,
Ralph, of Waterloo, spent last week
with her mother, Mrs, S. Hare. Mr.
Wallar spent the week-end here in
Wingham and they returned with him
to Waterloo,
— •
BEIRAVE
Let's Look Into the Past", was the
theme of the animal meeting of the
Belgrave Junior Institute held in the
Community Centre on March 13th.
The members answered the roll „call
by telling a, story told to them by
their grandparents, The members
wore or displayed an article of cloth-
ing, worn prior to 1920. These early
fashions proved very amusing. The
topic "Women's Clothing in the Nine-
teenth Century", was given by Ruth
Bradburn. Ruth stated that this
spring's nipped in jackets are not so
new, having first been in style in the
eighteen hundreds. Blouses were
worn first in 1890 and featured high
lace collars and leg of mutton sleeves,
Dresses with drop shoulders were
worn as early as 1850.
A quiz on Parliamentary Procedure
was answered and Mr. Harvey John-
ston, Warden of Huron Cpunty, ex-
plained the answers as the quiz was
corredted.
The following officers were elected:
Hon., Pres , Mrs. C. R. Coultes; Past
Pres., June Lear; 1st Vice Pres., Eve-
lyn Leaver; 2nd Vice Pres., Dorothy
Pattison; Sec.-Treas., Vera Falconer;
District Director, Dorothy Pattison;
Directors, Shirley Bradburn, Lois
Fell, Betty Newman; Press Reporter,
Vera Falconer; Pianist, Shirley Brad-
burn; Auditors, Isobel Elliott, Melva
Montgomery.
Evening Auxiliary
The regular meeting of the Bel-
.grave Evening Auxiliary was held
March 11th at the home of Mrs.
James Coultes, with 22 in attendance.
The meeting was opened with hymn
148, "Breathe on Me Breath of God,"
followed with the Lord's Prayer.
Twenty-two hospital and four home
visits were reported by the members.
Mrs. Logan read a letter she had re-
ceived from Mrs. Hillbreck, the liter-
ary secretary, which mentioned books
on the book shelf for the members'
reading,
The Auxiliary accepted the invita-
tion of the Sr. w.M.s. for the April
meeting with the Evening Auxiliary
taking the meeting.
The May meeting is to take the
form of a social evening with the
C.G.I.T. at Which the C.G.I.T. affici-
ation is to be conducted, with the
Brick Church society as guests.
Mrs. Moores read a letter of thanks
received from 'Miss A. N. Rosette of
Tokyo, Japan, for Sunday School pic-
tures sent to her by the society Mrs.
A. Scott conducted the worship ser-
vice aided 'by her group.
Mrs. Pletch read a portion of Scrip-
ture, Ephesians 2:11-22. The theme
of the meeting was, "Our Fellow
Canadians from the Orient". Three
exemplary dialogues were given by
Mrs. Bolt and Mrs. 3. Coultes; Mrs.
Pletch and Mrs. Chamney; Mrs. R.
Robinson and Mrs. Oke. • Hymn 519
was sung. Mrs. Scott conducted the
recreation Lunch was served.
The regular C.G.I,T. meeting was
held in the church on Thursday even-
ing, March 6. Shell Craft started
the evening out. The members open-
ed the meeting by repeating our
purpose and singing the C.G.I.T.
hymn. The secretary's report was
read and the roll call answered. The
treasurer read her report. The Jingle
boxes are to be handed in. Mildred
Cook and Mary Scott were appointed
for the next worship service. The
business period was adjourned. The
theme of the worship service was
WESTFIELD
Mr, and Mrs. Kenneth Campbell and
Steven, motored to New York on
Thursday, where Mrs. Campbell and
Steven took the boat for' England,
where they will visit her mother, Mrs.
Stevens.
Mr. and Mrs, Melvin Taylor visited
on Saturday with Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Cardiff of Brussels.
Mr, and Mrs. Howard Campbell vis-
ited on Sunday with Mrs. J. al, Ellis,
; who is ill at the home of her daugh-
ter, Mrs. J. D. Risley of Listowel.
Mr. John Gear of Kitchener, spent
the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Chas.
Smith and other friends.
On Thursday eighteen ladies met in
the church school room for a quilt-
ing at which four quilts were com-
pleted. A pot luck dinner was served
j at noon.
Messrs. Arnold and Dave Cook visit-
ed on Sunday with Mr. Combs of
'Brussels. Arnold also visited with Mr,
Ed. Taylor of Brussels,
Mr. and Mrs. Murdie Young and
family of Hullett Township visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Maurice
Rosman.
Mr. Van den Assim and family mov-
ed on Monday to their new home in
Morris Township where Mr. Vale den
Assim has secured a position.
Several farms in this district have
changed hands in the last few months.
Mr. Will Carter has sold his farm on
the 4th concession to Mr. Groot. Mr.
Nookes has sold his farm to Mr. Bey-
mere. Douglas Campbell has sold his
grass farm to Mr. Sellers. Arnold Vint
has sold his farm to Mr, Marvin Mc-
Dowell.
Mr. and Mrs. Emerson Rodger and
Clare, were London visitors on Satur-
day.
Mr. Ronald Taylor, accompanied by
Mr. and Mrs. Ray Hanna of Belgrave,
were Midland visitors on Saturday,
Well it looks as if Spring was al-
most here, some of the farmers have
their maple trees tapped, the ground
hogs are' out and a number of the
birds are back.
Your correspondent is sorry that in
writing the obituary of Mrs. William
Walden last week, we neglected to
state that she had one sister, Mrs.
Leo (Ella) Bair, living in the West.
OUTPOST HOSPITALS
SERVE REMOTE AREAS
Soon after World War I, Red
Cross Outpost Hospitals and. nursing
stations were established across .044,.
ntia. There are now 87. They bring
medical aid and hospital service to
men and women vital to the Canad-
ian economic .structure, farmers,
fishermen, lumbermen, miners,
People in organized areas of the
province are apt to take hospitals
pretty much for granted; but in
areas where the doctor May be fifty
miles away, what happens to the
mother in childbirth and who ree
pairs the Injuries wrought by acci-
dent? In Ontario the Red Cross Out-
post Hospitals minister to pioneer
families in 25 communities.
Miss Ida Brand, Director of Ont-
ario Outposts, recently told of an
incident in which an Outpost nurse
had shown courage and resourceful-
ness, qualities always necessary in
her job, by skating 8 miles over a
frozen northern lake to attend a
lumberman badly wounded by a fall-
ing tree.
Canadian Red Cross is appealing
to Canadians for $5,222,000 to carry
on its many works of mercy, in Ont-
ario it is essential to raise $2,192,000.
Locally the objective is $1200. Give
to help others!
Best
N.\
BIRTHS
WRIGHT—In Wingham General
Hospital, on Tuesday, March 11th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Harvey
Wright, R. R. 1, Wroxeter, a son.
SANDERSON—In Wingham General
Hospital, on Tuesday, March 11th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Mac Sander-
son, R. R. 2, Wroxeter, a son.
ADAMS—In Wingham General Hos-
pital, on Wednesday, March 12th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Harry Adams,
Belgrave, a son.
NOBLE—In Wingham General Hos-
pital, on Saturday, March 15th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs, Jack Noble,
Teeswater, a son.
WALKER—In Wingham General
Hospital, on Sunday, March 16th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Wilfred Walk-
er, R. R. 1, Belgrave, a son.
McGUIRE—In Wingham General
Hospital, on Sunday, March 16th.,
1952, to Mr, and Mrs. Lovell Mc-
Guire, Wingham, a daughter.
ROSENHAGEN—In Wingham Gener-
al Hospital, on Sunday, March 16th,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Donald Ros-
enhagen, Wingham, a daughter.
CAMPBELL—In Wingham General
Hospital, on Monday, March 17th.,
1952, to Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Camp-
bell, R. R. 4, Wingham, a daughter.
EDGAR—In • Wingham, General Hos-
pital, on Tuesday, March 18th., 1952,
to Mr. and Mrs. Earl Edgar, Tees-
water, a son.
Canada has some 150,000 disabled
persons of working age. Many are
veterans of the Second World War.
GOSPEL HALL
Regular Sundays Services
Sunday School 10.15 a.m.
Remembering the Lord
at 11.15
•Gospel Meeting at 7.30 p.m.
Prayers and Bible Study Each
Friday evening at 8 p.m.
Rubber and
Marboleum Tile
Repair Work
Built-in Cupboards
General Contracting
BENNETT CONTRACTING
COMPANY
Roy E. Bennett,
PHONE 447 WINGUAM
PGRSONALS
Huron Gaunty Health Unit
``Imnitinization Gil*"
"The last in a series of 11hr/ioniz-
ation clinics for Wingham and
district will be held in the Town
Hall, Wingham,—Friday, March
21st, 1952, from 2:30 - 4:00 P.M.
Children 4 months of age to
school age may be brought to
these clinics to receive immuniz-
ation for Diphtheria, Whooping
Cough, Tetanus and Smallpox."
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Draperies -flip Covers
WARREN HOUSE
-Phone 475
1110081361V'
Wingbem
In fact, once upon a time, all business
men who advertised were, willing or
unwilling, confirmed speculators.
They couldn't help it, because in those
days they had no way of knowing
what they would get for their money.
Today, advertising money can be
invested on a basis of facts—the in-
formation in the reports of the Audit
Bureau of. Circulations, a national,
cooperative and non-profit associa-
tion of 3300 advertisers, advertising
agencies and publishers. The A.B,C.,
organized in 1914, has established
standards for measuring the circula-
tions of newspapers and periodicals,
just as there are definite standards
for the weights and measures of mer-
chandise.
This newspaper is a member of
A,B.C. Our circulation is audited by
experienced circulation auditors. The
information thus obtained is issued
in A.B.C. reports which show how
much circulation we have, where it
goes, how it was obtained and other
facts that tell business men what they
get for their money when they adver-
tise in these columns,
Ask for a copy of our A. B.C. report,
The Wingham
Advance-4Times
"Whom Shall We Send", Hymn 173
was sung followed by Scripture read, I
ing, Story by Marilyn Moores, Pray-
er and hymn 109. The meeting con-1
Untied with the mission study.
Personals
Mr. and Mrs. Roger IngleS and
George of Walkerton visited pa Sun-
day with Mr. and Mrs. Albert
Mr. and Mrs, Alton Baynes and
family of Belton spent Sunday with
her parents,Mr, and Mrs. Richard
Chamney, and Mrs. E. Campbell,
Mr and Mrs, Charles Tiffin of
Langside spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs. Clark Johnston,
Mr, and Mrs. Ray Hanna and Mr.
Ronald Taylor were in Midland on
Saturday.
Mr. and Mrs. R, J. McKenzie have
purchased a home in Wingham and
are leaving this week.
"STOKE FOR MINDS"
DECLARES PR, MINISTER
The cold war gripping the hearts of
the World is more than a test of
armed strength. It is also a struggle
for men's minds. Canadians must
develop and cherish all those re-
sources of the spirit which derive
from our classical and our Christian
heritage. Armed strength is an in-
dispensable bulwark behind which the
free nations can hope to preserve a
way of life in which there remains
scope for the development of the free
spirit of men and women.
This was the warning sounded by
Prime Minister Louis St. Laurent in
addressing the graduating class of
1St. Michael's College in Toronto on
March 16th, on the occasion of the
College's Centennial Arts Dinner. "I
believe," said the Prime Minister, `.`it
is no exaggeration to say that never
before in recorded history has there
been a tyranny more ruthless, more
pervasive, better endowed with re-
'sources which can be employed for
destructive ends, or more resolute to
extirpate all traces of freedom of
mind and soul, either institutional or
individual, than the tyranny of the
Soviet State."
The Prime Minister stressed that
Soviet Russia has, moreover, in the
Communist doctrine, both an "insid-
ious and specious appeal" to the
natural human . craving for social
justice for all sorts and conditions of
men, and the most powerful engines
of modern propaganda to spread
that doctrine.
"Communism is all the more dan-
gerous", the Prime Minister continu-
ed, "because it remains a dynamic
faith for its deluded followers, and
because they believe there is an un-
easy balance between the areas dom-
inated by Soviet Imperialism and the
Western World with its free and
Christian traditions.
"In the free world, most of us have
-recognized that our very survival' de-
pends upon having enough combined
strength at least to maintain that un-
easy balance",
The Prime Minister told the gather-
ing of students, alumni and guests
that armed strength alone is not
enough to give us security and lasting
peace. "To say so", he added, "es-
pecially in an academic community,
would be blasphemy. We need as well
all those resources of the spirit which
I believe are the hallmark of the
superiority of our free way of life in
the eyes of God as well as of men".
The Prime Minister declared that
the Churches, Colleges and Universi-
ties are the main repositories of our
spiritual heritage "and the main
sources of the spiritual strength of
the free world".
The Prime Minister was joined in
his congratulations to St. Michael's
on their 100-year-old record of a-
chievement by His Eminence, Card-
inal McGuigan; Hon. Paul Martin,
Minister of Health and Welfare, a
graduate of the College; Mayor Lam-
port of Toronto; President Sidney
Smith of the University of Toronto,
with which St. Michael's is affiliated,
and ethers.
St. Michael's was founded inde-
pendently in 1852 at the request of
Rt, Rev. Armand Francois Count de
Charborinel, the second Catholic
Bishop of Toronto. It became affili-
ated with the University of Toronto
in 1881 and entered the federation in
1887, ranking equally with the other I
federated Colleges. In 1906 it began
to function as an integral part of the
faculty of arts and in 1912, university
courses were made available to Wo-
men.
One of the most striking featUres
of the college ls its post-graduate
division known as the Pontifical In-
stitute of Medieval StUdies which has
one of the World's finest medieval
libraries, It attracts students from
varions parts Of the world and has on
its lecture staff such international
Philodophical notables as Jacques
Maritairi and Etienne Gilson, A small
loofa school when it started, St.
Michael's new has students front
every province, Various parts of the
USA, and from Latin! America,