The Wingham Advance-Times, 1959-05-27, Page 9FORDIVICII
Mr. and Mrs. James Vittie, Mr,
and Mrs. Stan Bride and Bob vis-
ited Sunday with Mr. and Mrs.
Dick Aldrich in Galt.
Ml.s. Ruby Forester of Toronto
spent the week-end at her home
here,
Mr. and Mrs. Scott Keith and
Randy of Baden were Saturday
visitors with Mr. and Mrs. Alex
Keith: Mr.and Mrs. Bill Foote and Ter-
ry of Paris were meek-end visitors,
with Mr. and Mrs. Earl Moore.
Mrs. 'Emmerson ,Hargrave, Mrs.
Stan Forester, Mrs, Ruby Foster,
Mrs, Garn King and Mrs. Elsie
Strong attended the spring Huron
W.A. Deanery meeting on Thurs-
day in Exeter.
Mr. and Mrs. Alex Wray and
children of Toronto visited S. couple
of days last week in the commun-
ity.
4' A number of A.Y.P.A. members
of Trinity Church with their rec-
tor, Rev. E. C. Attwell, were in
Hayfield on Friday night helping
with the spring cleaning of the
boys' and girls' Anglican Camp.
Mrs, Lloyd Jacques and family
and the former's father, Mr. Wil-
liam H. Dane, were in St; Thomas
on Saturday, visiting with Mr. and
Mrs. Tom Edgar.
Friends of Mrs. Harvey McDer-
mitt will be pleased to know she
was able to return to her home on
Friday after being confined to the
Listowel Hospital the past ten
days following a major operation.
Mrs. Don King returned home
Saturday from Victoria Hospital,
London, where she recently under-
went surgery. We wish her a
speedy return to better health, ,
Week-end visitors with Mrs. Do
Ridley were Mr, and Mrs.
George Bolander and John and
Mr. Cecil Lynn of London.
Mrs. A. J. Bouillon spent several
days last week visiting relatives
in Toronto,
Mr, and Mrs, Jack Winters spent
Sunday in Collingwood with the
former's mother and sister, Mrs.
Mac Sivil.
Mrs. William Clyne visited with
Mr. and Mrs, John Clyne last week
in Kitchener.
Mrs. Pearl Patterson, Leslie
Campbell and James Patterson
visited one day last week with
Mrs. Wilda Campbell at Riversdale
Isolation Hospital in Toronto,
Mr. and Mrs. Jim Hudson and
family of Hanover visited relatives
in the community one day last
week.
Mr, Alan Freis attended the
funeral of a cousin in Kitchener
one day last week.
Mr. and Mrs, Charlie Small left
Sunday on a motor trip for three
weeks through the Western pro-
vinces,
Mrs. Pearl Patterson accompan-
ied Mr. and Mrs, L. Jackson to
Cordova Mines, where they spent,
the week-end at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ross Barrons,
Recent visitors at the home. of
Mrs, Herb Rogers were „Messrs,
John and Charles Walkey, Mrs.
Beatrice 'Oldham of Toronto, Mr.
Fred Walkey of Preston, Mr. Geo.
Walkey of Harriston, Mr. Art
Crawford of SuMmerland, B.C. It
is 55 yezirs since Mr. Crawford
left this community so there Was
lots of reminseing during the af-
ternoon,
Visitors over the week-end at
the home of Mt. and Mrs. Jack
King were Mr. and Mrs, James
Valeriote and family of Guelph.
Mr, Mark Bellamy of Arthur Spent
the Work Of hospital Visitors, among
the French, immigrants, and the
Wprk of deanrametsca in various
centres.
Members were asked to pray for
the General Assembly, the highest
court of 'the church, which Meets
in Itnox Presbyterian Church, Tor-
onto, June 8 to Athe.1.1.. ' The open.
Mg Meeting, and the. evening !sea-
Siena on Thursday, Friday and
Monday will be of particular inter-
est •to all &Leather§ of the church.
DELEGATES REPORT
ON CONFERENCE
The Goforth Evening Auxiliary
was called to worship by the vice-
president, Mrs. L. Phillips. Reports
were brought back from the con-
ference of Evening Auxiliaries held
hi Montreal early in May. The
train carried three cars of Pres-
byterian women to the conference.
Among these women three Wing-
ham delegates, Mrs. K. Leitch, Mrs.
J.' English and Mrs. J. Donaldson.
All were met in Montreal by Miss
Jean Brown, secretary of Montreal
Presbyterial, conference hostess.
The work of a port worker be-e
gins overseas. She has names of
the immigrants and she attaches
a welcome card to the higgage of
each Presbyterian immigrant. She
is ready to help any immigrants
through customs and to put them
on the right trains or in charge of
a railway employee, Information
goes immediately to the commun-
ities where they will settle. Then
it is up to us to help the new
citizens and to invite them into
nth homes.
,After the Hungarian Revolution
if' 1,957, 36,000 Hungarian refugees
s ttled in Canada, 12,000 of these
in .Montreal. Supplies came In
abundance. The main barrier was
the language, and special classes in
English were held for them.
Miss I. Taylor, ,music teacher in
Formosa, was the Saturday evening
speaker. She said that the new
church of Formosa had great am-
bitions to send missionaries to
Asia.
The church was packed for the
11 o'clocke service and children
scented to be sitting everywhere.
Tile minister explained to the
children why the ladies were there,
and told them the story of the
quilt. A little old lady was too
frail to attend meetings, and she
wondered what she could do to
help. She gathered many pieces of
coloured print and made a quilt
for the bazaar. No person bought
the quilt, so it was shipped in a
bale to Africa. In that district
Missionaries had not been allowed
in, a tertain village. However, the
chieftain saw the quilt and asked
for it. lie wrapped it around him
and was delighted with its bright
colours, so delighted that he allow-
ed the missionaries to carry the
Gospel into his village.
The /5th anniversary of Maitland
Presbyterial will be held in Tees-
water on Thursday, May 28, after-
neon and evening sessions, Ti is
hoped to have someone attend the
Leadership Training program at
McMaster, Hamilton, during the
first few days of July.
Miss Ida White, missionary on
furlough will be guest speaker at
the, June supper meeting, Miss
White lives in Goderich. The 'dt-
vOtional part and the Andy boOk
Were taken by the May group of
MentberS, *those Studies included
BEST ECONOMY
Official figures on all car dimen-
sighs make this clear. For example,
Chevy front seat hiproom is 'Un-.
surpassed . . almost six inches
wider than one of its competitors.
..00.000 May 01, Ism: W41404ina..A4y.snc44tacur W ..„ FURNITURE TRENDS.
SUBJECT OF .GUEST NEVER in
.ORRO
HEED-
LESSLY !
ROW'f
Theatre
At Howebold Finance yoU
can borrow money for any
reason Y(14 think worth,
while. Loans are made
without bankable' security
or endorsers. And 1-1F0
specialises in same-day
money service. If a loan
is the answer, it's good
business to do business
with IWO,
ji4ASII! If1171N161111T
WVIINCSOAN, MAY 27
Brigitte Berclut
Madarnoiselle Striptease.
Entrokinmont.)
Liaise, Jungle Grukies0
Trapped like an. Animal, She, be,
came a Prize he defied any mau
to touctl
Marian Michael, Hardy Rimier
... just when you must. Then borroor .
from the oldest company, from folks
you trust. Borrow confidently from HFC
HOUSEHOLD ,FINANCE
Cri;e•linatii",v.ryi areada,
M. R. Jenkins, Manager
35A W~sT Street — Telephone 15011
GODERICH
THURSDAY, FRIDAY and
SATURDAY, May 28, 29 and 30
WALT DIPTEY'S
"LIGHT IN THE
.....,.. FOREST!.
Plus Xeaturette
"SCOTLAND"
Auxiliary Meets at
Mrs.. *'Strong's Home
The May meeting of the lroting
Woman's • Auxiliary of the Wing.
ham United •Chnrch was held -at
.the home of Mrs. J., ;941;rono with-
Mrs. G. 'Gibson in charge of the
worship service.
The meeting opened with a
prayer by Mrs. . .Rosenhagon,
followed by "Guide Me, -0 Thou
Great Jehovah". Mrs, 13, St
George read the !Scripture, after
which Mrs. W. King led in pray-
er, Mrs. R. 7urbrigg .presonted
a chapter from the -study book on'
Hawaii. A poem, ."4Vfother', was
read by Mrs, A. Green. The wor-
fillip service closed with the sing-
ing of ",lion's King Shall Reign
Victorious",
Mrs, McTa.ggart presided'
over the business portion of the
meeting. Mrs. G, Gibson offered
Plans were made fop the, 0,G.I.T
supper' and the Meeting closed
with "Blest Be the Tie that Binds"
followed by the Mizpah .benedicl
tion. SIMPLE CONTROLS--,-The new Budd diesel rail .car which will go into .service on the C,N.R. line through
here next month is iwite simple in its controls, The engineer in the photo above is holding the throttle
of the new ear Which will travel at speeds up to 80 miles an hour, depending 'on rail conditions. The
outfit has exceptionally fast acceleration, and is po wered .by two 250 h.p. diesel:engines mounted under
the floor -of the coach. A blister on the top of the ear houses the exhaust and the air 'conditioning
system.
MON. TUES, WED. - THUR.
June 1, 2, 3 and 4
"Separate Tables"
David Niven, Rita Hayworth
Deborah Kerr
Niven in his Academy Award
winning role,
,The Wx. mep for.,
the May meeting at the heine of
MrS. A, K. Winston, with the pre,
aident, Mrs. Anson DemerlIng,
• 'residing. Devotions were taken
by Mrs, Harry East, Mrs,. Russel
Nichol gave the motto, "A man
-thould.nt plant more garden. than
'Os wife can hoe", Roll call was
,,nawerecl by naming something
that bad been made, grown or sown
he past week,
A committee was named to .or..
!-r- more rlishos -for -the commun-'
-ay ball and $10.0(). was donated to
ka.c.tuy at t,..orrie who recently
oat their home by fire„ Plana
were dismissed for the July ,hu$
trip, to be .arranged 1;)y Miss
McElwain and Mrs, Crosby
Sothern.
Mrs, George Richards reported
en the district annual held recent-
t13Id Odle: •MrS,,Villitint"CattinP,:,
bell introduced the -guest speaker,
Swart Whitfield, of Gorrie, who
.spoke on "Trends in Furniture",
displaying pictures and also many
samples of floor coverings and
Chesterfield materials. He was
Presented with a small gift.
The meeting closed with the na"-
tional anthem, Hostesses . were
Mrs. 0, Carswell, Mrs, C. Sothern,
Mrs, .E. „Williamson and Mrs, E.
Moore,
11111111111114111111U11111111111111111
Liashmar
DRIVE-IN. THEATRE
Listowel, Ontario
Two Shows Nightly Rain, or Clear
Box Office Opens at 8.00 o'clock
First Show at Dusk-
Children Under 12 in Cars Free
Cartoon at Each Performance
"Sheltering Doors"
NEW RAIL CAR—The new diesel rail car which will provide passenger service on the Canadian National
Railways' line "through Wingham, arrived on a dem onstration run last Thursday. The new .service will,
go into effect late in Juno. The car as it sat at the Wingham depot for inspectiOn is shown above: A
number of local citizens took a free ride to Khicardine and. 'back and reported the new car as extremely
comfortable.
THURS. - FRI. - SAT.
May 28 - 29 - 30 .
"THE BIG COUNTRY"
Colour CinemaScope
Gregory Peck, Jean Simmons
Burl Ives, Charlton Heston
-MOO. - TUES. - WED.
June 1 - 2 - 3
"WITNESS FOR THE
PROSECUTION"
Tyronne Power, Marlene Dietrich,
Charles Laughton
all last week at the same home.
Mrs. Nellie Gamble spent last
week at the home of Mr. and Mrs,
Ted Harris in Brownsville.
Mr, and Mrs, Carl Bender and
family of Gowanstown, visited on
Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. a Har-
grave.
Mr, and Mrs. Ross Tomlin of
Durham visited Sunday with Mr.
and Mrs. Art Forester.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hambly and
Janie visited on Sunday with Mr
and Mrs. Jim Bissett in. Kitchener
Mr, and Mrs, T, J. Ellis of Gu-
elph, Mr. and Mrs. Stan Gallaher
of Wroxeter were Sunday guests
at the horne of Mr. and Mrs. Tom
MeClement and Mrs. Ida Gallaher
on Sunday.
Anniversary services will he ob-
served at Newbridge Church on
Sunday next. Rev. Clarkson Small
of Arthur will be guest speaker.
The young men's quartet of Arthur
will sing at both services at 11 a.m.
and 8 p.m,
Sunday visitors with Mr. and
Mrs. Mel Allan were Mr, and Mrs.
Norman• Lewis and two children
of Mount Forest, Mr. and Mrs.
Fred McEachern and Allan and
Mrs. Henry .Allan of Conn. Mrs.
Allan remained for a longer visit.
Birth
FOSTER—To Mr. and Mrs. Har-
old Foster, a son, op May 17,
1959, in Victoria Hospital, Lon-
don: Take it from the experts-
EVYGIVES YOU 1 BIG LIONS CLUB
GIRLS' AND BOYS' BAND
Band Concert Take it, not from us, but from the published opinions of outside,
independent experts and from on-the-record facts and figures: '
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WINGHAM TOWN HALL
FRIDAY, MAY 29
AT 8.15
Silver Collection
Geo. Wonch, Leader
• OM
• • • •
.
BEST BRAKES Tn direct com-
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CHECK ACCIDENTS Wingliani Itiranai W. 0. Strtithers v Manager #4.106,
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