The Wingham Advance-Times, 1952-07-23, Page 7NEWS OF WROXETER
Howick Lions Club Sponsors
Holiday for Twp. Children 4
Forty-one children of this district
have registered for the annual holi-
day, sponspred by the Howick Lions
Club. From the 9th to the 16th of
August, 21. boys will go to Camp
Kitchigafni which is situated seven
miles south of Goderich. The girls,
2Q in number, will go from the 16th
to the 23rd. Director of the camp
will be Gordon Mullin and his assis-
tant, Audrey Vancamp. Ken Edgar,
local teacher, will he in charge of the
waterfront activities. Mr. and Mrs,
L. Bowerman, Ferne Cooke and Joan
Hunstin are camp leaders. Visitors
will be welcome on Sundays and are
asked to bring picnic lunch and bath-
ing suits, In all their activities the
Howick Lions Club are ever mindful
of the needs and pleasures of the
children of this district. A week of
well-supervised holidays at the beach
for the children should be appreciated
by `the parents,
Biowielt Lions Annual Frolic
Wroxeter Park, August 7th, will be
the scene of a gay carnival, ;when
Howick Lions Club sponsors the an-
nual event. The program includes an
amateur contest with prizes of f
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WEDNESDAY, MIN 230, 1952 THE WINGHAM ADVANCE-TIMES I4GE,
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IME HEIL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA
very hour of every day
the telephone in your home
stands ready to serve you
for a fraction of a cent
an hour. What else in
your daily living means
so much yet costs so little?
$15, $10 and 35. Entries to be gent
to Ken Edgar, Wroxeter, on or be-
fore August 2nd, Other attractions are
rides and bubble gem blowing con-
test (contestants to supply own gum).
St. Andrews Highland Band from
Mount Forest, the youngest pipe
band in Canada, will supply music.
The draw will include 25 valuable
prizes, Dancing with Wilbee's
orchestra. Bingo and other. games.
Make this a date,
Guest Speaker at United Church
Rev, B, W. Todd will be on vaca-
tion during the month of August. Ar-
rangements for service in the United
church, during his absence, are as fol-
lows: August 3rd and 17th will be ob-
served as holiday Sundays. August
10th and 24th, Mr, Hopper of Brus-
sels, will be in charge of service. Mr.
Todd will return to take up his work
August 31st.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Gibson spent
the week-end with Detroit friends,
Miss Marilyn Maclean has gone to
London where she will work In a law
office, Marilyn, who graduated from
Wingham High School, will be missed
around the village. Best wishes of all
are extended for her future success,
Rev. E. W, Todd will be in charge
of Church of the. Air on Thursday of
this week at 10;30 O'clock,
Born
In Wingham General Hospital, on
Sunday, July 13th, to Mr. and Mrs,
Graham Work, Brussels, a daughter,
Judith Ann, a 'sister for Kenneth,
Mrs. Work was the former Margaret
Moffat, of Wroxeter. Congratulations.
Mrs.' J. • H. Wylie 'and Miss Frances
Wylie were London visitors on Thurs-
day and Friday
Miss Annie MacNaughton, of the lo-
cal telephone staff, was lucky when
she was chosen Queen for a Day at
the Shooting Stars show held in
Wingham Arena. Flowers and many
gifts were presented. These were
donated by the local merchants of
Wingham, congratulations.
Friends from this district attended
a shower given for Jack Brown and
his bride in Fordwich community
hall. Gifts included a studio couch,
blankets and china.' Jack and Mrs.
Brown have taken up residence on
their farm just north of Fordwich.
Members of the Women's Associa-
tion, United Church, entertained mem-
bers of the Women's Missionary So-
ciety at a picnic in Seaforth Park on
Tuesday afternoon.
Among local members of Forest
Lodge attending Grand Lodge, in To-
ronto, were T. Burke, Andy and Ar-
thur Gibson, Phil Durst, Harvey Mc-
Michael and Jack McCutcheon. Elect-
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Tablets for new pound; lovely IMMO, new Dep. today. At all druggist&
coming year was, A. H. Cameron,
Northern Light Lodge, Kincardine,
Mr. and Mrs. Jack Town, Mansfield,
Ohio, were in the village last week
renewing old acquaintances, Jack, son
of the late Mr, and Mrs. George Town,
was brought up in Wroxeter. He was
popular here and old friends are pleas-
ed to welcome him back,
_Mr, Jim Coombs, Stratford, was a
wl'ek-end visitor with Mr, and Mrs.
Gilbert Howes.
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Hunter, the la.t-
ter's sister, Miss Winnifred Scott, of
Toronto, also Mr, and Mrs, Thos,
Burke returned on Wednesday from
a vacation trip, which took them to
Cape Cod, New York and Boston. It
was a sad home-coming for Mrs.
Hunter whose brother, William Scott,
Sault Ste, Marie, died while they were
away and moving from place to place,
the party could not be located. On ar-
riving at Toronto and learning the
news, Mr. and Mrs. Hunter and Miss
Scott went on to Sault Ste. Marie.
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Hunter and baby
daughter spent the week-end with
Mrs. James Sangster.
Mrs. G. A. Gibson spent a week's
vacation with her daughter, Mrs. Har-
ry Befell, and Mr. Refell, London.
Mr. and Mrs. Howard Heath, St.
Thomas, were week-end guests of Mr.
and Mrs. Ira Maclean.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Townsend were
in Guelph on Thursday attending the
funeral services for the latter's sister,
the late Miss Wilson, Sympathy is ex-
tended to Mrs. Townsend in her ber-
eavement.
Gerry and Mrs. Gibson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. G. A. Gibson, who now re-
side in Wingham have just returned
from a vacation at Port Elgin Beach.
Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Shearer, An-
drine and Freddie, all of Sault Ste.
Marie, have spent the past two weeks
with th former's sister and brother,
Miss Beatrice and Mr. Tom Shearer.
Misses Lily and Jean Campbell,
from Morris, spent the week-end with
Misses Marilyn and Marjorie Timm,
Mrs. John Mowat Milton spent sev-
eral days last week with her sister,
Mrs. D. S. MacNaughton.
Miss Marian Gibson, of Winnipeg,
who with her sister, Miss Elsie Gib-
son, is spending the summer vacation
here, will leave early in August for
England where she will spend a year
studying.
Rev. E. W. and Mrs. Todd will leave
on Monday next for their vacation,
They will visit relatives in Ottawa
district and other points,
Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Weir, Toronte,
spent the week-end With Mrs, Weir
and Miss Gerty Bush.
Mr, George Gibson and daughter,
from Northern Ontario, are spending
a holiday with the former's sisters,
Misses Marian and Elsie Gibson, Mrs,
Gibson is a patient in Hamilton Gen-
eral Hospital. Friends here are pleas-
ed to know she is making a good
recovery.
Messages received from George
Wearring, son of Mr. and Mrs, A. B.
Wearring, who is in Helsinki for the
Olympic games, tell of a wonderful
time. He says the hospitality is the
best. The Canadian basketball team,
with which he is assocated, have won
their first two games with Italy and
Finland.
The Fanning Mill
by Bob Gerhart
Well, it's all over, even the shout-
ing has passed away, and the glorious
12th has come and gone. The drums
have been slackened off, and laid
away, the white trousers have gone
back to 'the cleaners, the white mare
back to the hayfield, and the Orange
Lodge members and their families
are rapidly getting back to normal.
The 12th of July means the same
to Orangemen ,as March 17th to an
Irishman, Bobby Burns day to a
Scotchman, or the 29th of February
to a Leap Year baby . . . It is all
important, a day of celebration, a day
of rejoicing and a day of sore feet,
This past Saturday, thousands of
Loyal Orange Lodge members donned
the white apparel, picked up the drum
and fife, piled the kids in the back
seat, and headed for the nearest
meeting place. It was the occasion of
the yearly Orange walk. We had one
here in Wingham, they had one in
Stratford, and there was another one
in Durham. They flocked to these
three centres and many other such
points across the country to celebrate
the victorious battle of the Boyne, and
the part played in that memorable
bit of fisticuffs by King William of
Orange, his white horse, his drum-
mers, and his pipers.
When you see these folks celebrat-
ing the 12th, you'd never guess that
they were celebrating a battle of any
kind, for all is jovial and all is a
spirit of friendliness. Such was not
always the 'case. There was a time
when the Orange walk was a powerful
parade of military might, and beyond
the spirit of celebration of the vic-
tory, it was an orderly and well run
military parade. But, the young
Orangemen of today have lost a lot
of their enthusiasm. They look upon
the parades as a holiday, a time to
make merry. The walks are getting
smaller every year, and the fife and
drum bands are getting weaker. Not
so many years ago I recall attending
an Orange walk in Exeter, and it was
a really big event, There were large,
well trained bands, spotless uniforms,
brilliant banners, and huge crowds.
Yes, the Glorious 12th, has lost a lot
of its glamour, but it's still the na-
tional holiday for all Orangemen.
,1,•••••
That'd the day that mowers sit idle,
horses stand under the tree in the
pasture, and the cows get milked late
at night. It's a day of days in some
communities, especially around Bells
grave, Trowbridge, Woodham, Luck-
now, and Wingham. May they
Ways continue to gather and cele-
brate, Not so much for the actual,
celebration of the Battle of the Boyne,
as for the good fellowship and the
spirit of good will that predominates.
r
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