The Wingham Advance-Times, 1964-10-08, Page 11LEONARD BOK WINS
$100 STAKE: AT TARA
Leonard 13ok won the $100
stake in the light division at
Tara Fall Fair's horse show last
week. Mr. Holt also carne first
in single road class 15-2 hands
and under,
Jack Fitch of Wroxeter was
a winner in the express wagon
classes. Ross McKague of Del-
more won in the carriage and
team class and Mrs. McKague
was judged best lady driver.
One Moment, Please
BY EUV, G. M1TCiifl.L
Bluevale, Ont,
In various papers we see
criticism for and against new
Curriculum for [United Church
Sabbath Schools. Many critics
seem to think that the men who
wrote the Bible were simply
stenographers for God. That
of course is not true. They
gave their own opinions about
life and religion searching for
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LOOK TO IMPERIAL
for the best
ways to know God and Jesus
Christ His Son.
One controversial subject is
the doctrine of the virgin birth
of Jesus. Matthew's gospel
traces the lineage of Jesus
through Joseph to David. That
could only he significant if
Joseph was his father. When
Mary and Joseph went up to
Jerusalem when Jesus was
twelve years old and he re-
mained behind Mary said when
they found him, "Why hast
thou thus dealt with us? Be-
hold thy father and I have
sought thee sorrowing." By no
stretch of the imagination
could Mary have meant any-
one but Joseph as his father.
We human beings do not
create a soul. When a child is
born God gives it a soul. Jesus
had a very special soul given
to him by God his Heavenly
Father.
As a practical matter, why
would Joseph and Mary go to
Bethlehem to register as a fa-
mily if they were not married?
Young men and women go for
short trips before marriage but
not for a week or a month.
Mary was expecting and Jesus
was born before they arrived
home at Nazareth. You and
I have a heavenly Father and an
earthly father. So did our Mas-
ter. Why complicate matters
by suggesting a virgin birth?
The Roman Catholics see the
difficulty of the human element
by making Mary also divine.
What about her parents? Does
that solve the problem? Jesus
was the divine Son of God,
tempted in all points as
we are because He was born
like us, but with a specially re-
fined soul capable of develop-
ment like ours to all eternity.
REMINISCING
(Continued from Page One)
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. E.
Zurbrigg.
Dr. and Mrs. Redmond left
on Monday for New York, where
the doctor will remain for the
month of October doing Post
Graduate work in the hospitals.
OCTOBER 1939
Mr. DeWitt Miller has ac-
cepted a position with Walker
Stores Limited. Ele replaces
Bob Murray who resigned to en-
list in the 100th Battery.
Baptismal services were held
at two local churches, Sunday
morning. At the lin i t e d
Church, Daniel Cecil, son of
Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Stuckey,
and Laura May, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Wm. Latronica, of
Turnherry, were baptized. At
St. Andrew's Presbyterian
Church, Mary Catherine and
James Donald, daughter and
sun of Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Rae,
also James Robert, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William Bain, were
baptized.
Wingham Advance -Times, Thursday, Oct. 8, 1904 -Page 3
THE PET SHOW at the Howick Fall Fair drew a good
entry. "Daffy", the pet duckling of Barry Paul, R. R. 2,
Wingham, was quite content on the shoulder of its own -
er. Little Jeffrey Alcorn, of Wroxeter, on the right,
watches intently.
—Photo by Cantelon.
Box 390
Huronview,
Clinton, Ont.
Sept. 30, 1964
Dear Sir:
May I thank you for your ex-
cellent paper which 1 read
every week. I like the remin-
iscing. It brings back memor-
ies of our boyhood days spent
in the Wingham district and
East Wawanosh so inany years
ago. Is it not remarkable how
a chance word or thought will
send our minds rolling back to
the past?
I note in your column you
refer back only 50 years. Why
not at least 60 or 75? For in-
stance, in the year 1904 the
first automobile came into
Wingham. Alex Crawford
drove it in from the south along
the gravel road. It was a noisy
thing, but I don't think there
was a prouder man in Wingham
than Alex that night.
In 1904 Dr. Chisholm of
Wingham was first elected
M.P., defeating the great
statesman Dr. Macdonald. 1
think it was in 1907 that the
front street was first paved.
"Timothy Hay" used to
write humorous articles to the
paper and Andrew Currie farm-
ed with a big holstein bull and
a horse hitched together.
Yours truly,
R. henry Lishman
OCTOBER 1949
Mr. Charles 1lopper has
moved from his home in Pleas-
ant Valley to the house he re-
cently purchased on Frances St.
in which Mr. Wellington Wilson
lived. Mr. Wilson has taken
up residency in the Thompson
C. Hemingway Shows Slides at F.A.M.E. Meeting
LAKELET-A number from
Howick Township attended the
annual meeting of the Huron
County Shareholders of Farmers
Allied Meat Enterprises Co-op-
erative Limited, held in the
Sea forth District High School on
Friday.
Alex McGregor chaired the
meeting, and the guest speaker
was Jack McGilivary of Paisley,
a director on the Fame hoard.
It was learned in July that
the F. W. Feartnan plant of
Hamilton was for sale and by
the latter part of August Farne
had purchased all the stocks,
plant, equipment, land and
contracts. It is a new, modern
in Pleasant Valley.
A very enjoyable evening
was held at the home of Miss
Donalda Fixtcr last Thursday
when about twenty-five girl
friends of Miss Mary Stewart
presented her with a kitchen
shower.
house, corner of Shuler and
Alfred Streets. Mr. Joe Bailey
will reside in the Ilopperhouse
While the world has repeat-
edly asked "Bremen, Bremen,
who has the Bremen?" and re-
ceived no definite answer, ,,m-
other major mystery has de-
veloped right here in town. Thy
Central League Trophy, praudly
displayed in Ilaselgrove's
smoke shop, apparentlt has
met a similar fate. It myster-
iously disappeared this week
and although it has been report-
ed in different Places, nes nue
knots the answer to '' Where,
Oh Where 1las chuar's Cup
(,ut)e'.
NORMAN BELL, of Listowel, is shown with
his registered hackney winner at the How -
ick Fall pair. It was the first show and
the first win for the four-year-old mare.
—Photo by Cantelon.
plant, perhaps the most modern
in Canada. It has been in op
eration now for two years.
Carl Hemingway, director
on Fame hoard from Huron
County spoke to the group, and
showed slides of the plant, of-
fices, trucks, processing and
the finished products,
During the business meeting
eight voting delegates and
eight alternate delegates were
appointed. There were twenty
men elected to the county
committee to carry out the
plans and program of the Hu-
ron County Shareholders.
Lunch was served by the di-
rectors' wives, and an assort-
ment of meats was provided
with the compliments of the F.
W, Feartnan Company,
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