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Village Squire, 1974-06, Page 13led to them finding Roy's church. They travelled along Highway 83 to and from Grand Bend from their Toronto home and went exploring one day to see a unique stone home near the church. It was then they discovered the church and found out it was for sale after the congregation had disbanded., The first Roy's church was built in 1851 on land donated by William Roy. The walls were built in 1851 but the roof of the log structure was not erected until the next year. Those were days when everyone wal .!d to church, many for miles, and the young women of the church walked without their shoes and only put them on when they reached the church, so the shoes would not wear out. The log church gave way to a small brick building which in turn was replaced by the current big red brick building which was in use until 1968. The Smith's bought the church but for some time didn't do anything with it as they tried to decide just what their new possession was best suited for. Then, two years ago, with the job in Toronto losing its charm, they decided to move to the country and hired someone to begin work on the basement of the church to turn it into living quarters. Ross arranged his job so he could work three days a week (though he soon found the three days so Strenuous he was as tired as befort) so he could work on the new home. He has done much of the work himself. Upstairs, Shirley was designing her new shop. "I'd sit in the middle of the floor," Shirley recalls, "and contemplate a section and come up with an idea." It was a challenge, she said to take all the space she had and come up with interesting things to do with it, without having the whole place come out looking like a barn. She didn't look at other stores because she didn't want to be preconditioned. So, she sat and contemplated, and when she came up with the idea she would still have to explain it to her husband. The results are some delightful interest areas that subdivides the whole large area. There's a little house as you come into the old church with glass walls so you can see the goods displayed from both inside and outside. There's the little playhouse in the opposite corner of the auditorium holds all sorts of delights for children. In between, there is a wide assortment of goods. The shop opened for the first time last summer, and scon it became a popular past -time for people to drop by and browse through the old church and have coffee and home-made scones in the old choir loft now refinished as a tea room. The first season lasted until January when they closed the shop down for the winter. It re -opened early in April and already there are indications of a busy season ahead. Several groups from London have made appointments in advance Candles sit on a table while lighted stained glass windows brighten a corner. For the style and comfort you've been looking for - We have furniture groupings to match any decor or any room in the house - At a price that you will find in keeping with the budgets of most householders. VILLAGE SQUIRE/MAY 1974, 11