The Goderich Signal-Star, 1973-08-16, Page 19solsolOselsollomelloollessolownsmooloommullmissimormerrems
JO jHESE FAREWELL
'' WICK
conducted
G.L. R° . st 15
rel eervic,e Barwick
late William ,�; the age
August 1? e and
AMa
ha tale olio g a
jaw. Mr. Barwiclh°` t ad
resident of 150 K
itr Goderich.
February 16, 1903 a
in, Manitoba he move()
family to Seaforth at
ofsix,where he lived for
ears before moving to
h. He attended school
orth and Goderich.
Barwick worked as . a
engineer and sailed the
ekes for over 50 years.
Barwick WAS married
to the -late Anna May
and then Gladys Eisler.
survived by his second
e was a member of Knox
erian Church.
surviving are children
of Orange California;
of Orangeville, George
derich; Richard of
ch; Jack, Lloyd and
Eisler,. all of Seaforth;
rant (Doris) Ellison, and
Kotyk, both
eh
of
h.
e 22 and=
e are alsogr
n and six great grand -
n; three sisters, Mrs.
(Hazel) Berry of Ed-
; Mrs. Les' (Josephine)
ter of Kalamazoo,
an; and Mrs. Murray
Hardy of London; and
others, Richard of Lon-
ers of Stratford; •Leslie
pf Keswick; and
jdacArthur of Lcm on.
arers were Bob Cook,
Willis, Sam Moore, R"on
gton, Don Barwick and
Fritzley. Flower'bearers
Jack Pollock, Ben
, Wilson Broadfoot and
anstor"i.
ment was in Maitland-
emetery at Seaforth.
MRS. FLORA
G. DONNELLY
Yru th„u*h I Wolk thruu1h the v011•y
1 the Omit.* .,1 Jeuth I shut' loot no
..,f her rhtw art with me
—13n1 Prelim
predeceased by her husband in
August of 1954. Mrs. Donnelly
has lived in Goderich since her
marriage.
Mrs. Donnelly was a member
of Blue Water Chapter, number
284, of the Eastern Star; the
Ahmeek Chapter of the
I.O.D.E.; and the Hospital
Auxiliary. She was a member of
North Street United Church.
Mrs. Donnelly is survived by
one step son, Harold, of Ap-
Teton' Wisconsin, as well as.
e sister, Mrs. Frank' (Ruth)
B'. es of Owen Sound and two
br s ers, Arnold' of Seagrave
and ordon of Ajax.
'hheBluewater Chapter
Numbe 4284 O.E.S. held a ser-
vice at tl funeral home Thur-
sday.
Pallbeare,� were John Ven-
ner of Ottaw., Tom Venner of
Toronto, Gus `feki of Niagara
Falls, Martin Fisher of
Seagrave, Dave .`SJewman of
Ornemee and BolA,Bowes of
Toronto.
MRS. MARGARET SN'yDER
Rev. Leonard arr conduc-
ted the funeral service August 9
from the Stiles Funeral Home
for the late Mrs. Margaret
(Allin) Snyder who died August
7 at Sarnia General Hospital at
the age of 63. Mrs. Snyder had
been a resident of Lot One,
Concession One of Colborne
Township.
Born September 13, 1909 in
Colborne Township she had
been a resident of that area all
her life.
'November 23, .1929 she
married- Iaawren ce--G:--'nyder
who predeceased her in October
of 1972.
Mrs. Snyder was a member
of Victpria Street United
Church.
She is survived by one
'daughter, Mrs. Ray (Jeanne)
Johnston of Sarnia as well as
two grandchildren and two
brothers, Clive Allin of Clinton
and . Arnold Allin of Colborne
Township.
Pallbearers were Harry
Westlake, Ed Linner, Charles
Mitchell, Bill Treble, Gordon
Fowler, .and James Fisher.
Flowerbearers were George
Vanderburgh, Ted Rowe,
Wayne Ailin and Carl Fisher.
Interment was in Colborne
Cemetery.
Robert L. Raymont con -
the funeral service
10 from, the, Stiles
I,Home for the late Mrs.,
race Donnelly who died
8 at Alexandra Marine
General' Hospital in
ch at the age of 68.
_July 9, 1905 at Strat-
Thomas Venner and the
Flora Sutherland, Mrs.
IIs has lived at Stratford,
a, Hamilton and Clin-
Donnelly was a school
, instructing. in Home
'mics, until her
ent in 1970.
945 she married Thomas
ley at Toronto. 'She was
inTown?
You'll find a
lend where you
see this sign.
more inforrfl3ticon
. cell
e524 -b086
ITU
JAMES REID .
The funeral service for the
late James Reid of Conception
Bay, Newfoundland, will be
held today .in that community.
Mr. Reid died Tuesday.
The lite Mr. Reid is the
father of William H. Reid of
R.R. 4M-Goderich.
E.F. ARMSTRONG
Rev. G.L. .Royalconducted
the funeral service' on Tuesday
afternoon for the late Ernest
Franklin Armstrong of 60
Gloucester; Toronto, who died
suddenly at his residence
August 10. Mr. Armstrong was
47 years of age. — '
Born August 7, 1926 at
Goderich he lived in Goderich
and Toronto during his early
years. He was,. a C.B.C.
newscaster on television and
radio working at stations in
Toronto, St.' Thomas, Kirkland
Lake, Montreal and Sault Ste.
Marie. He also served with the
Canadian infantry during
World War 2.
Mr. Armstrong is survived by
his parentla Ernest H. Arm-
strong and the former Lillian
Hutchins, 120 Sunset Drive in
Goderich; also by two brothers,
•
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William of Toronto and Harold
of Bala.
Pallbearers were Robbie Ar-
mstrong, Carol Armstrong,
Alan Corby, Gordon Fowler.
Clarence Armstrong and Ken
Hutchins. Flowerbearers were
Art Young, Marcel Buchanan,
George Hutchins and Charlie
Hutchins. .
Interment was in Maitland
Cemetery at Goderich.
Safety
tips
When'tvas the last time you
had an eye examination? If you
can't remember, it's time you
had one. Many Canadians lose
their sight every year because
of eye diseases. But many of
these cases of blindness can be
prevented if detected in time;
See an eye doctor now. The
Canadian National Institute
for the Blind is concerned. You
.should be too.
* * * *
Approach water with respect
and it can be a lot of fun,,. Ap-
proach it carelessly and water
can take your life. Make your
choice the safe one. Keep in the
swim with Red Cross' Water
Safety all summer long.
* * *
A beach ball should be just
that. Don't let your children
take inflatable toys ,into
- water. They -- am— s'quirt T5
from tiny hands and lure the
child into deep water. Keep in
the swim with Red Cross Water
Safety all summer long.
* * *
If you overcrowd your boat,
the crowd may wind up in the
water. Keep - in the seim all
summer long with Red Cross
water. Keep in the swim all
* * *
Food for thought
Light and life
Wait! Before you put up your
umbrella, look around you.
Don't poke someone in the eye.
Far Ioo many people .are
careless with their umbrellas, .
says The Canadian `National
Institute for the Blind, mainly
because they don't realize they
could ruin a person's eyesight..
Whether your umbrella is over
your„ head 6r folded under pair
arm, watch where you are
going, especially 'in crowds.
BY GWYN WHILSMITH
A little boy, sleeping away
from home, was asked by his
hostess if he wished the light
left on when he went to bed. He
declined.
"I thought," she said, "you
might be afraid of the dark."
"Oh no,"- he replied, "you
see, it's God's dark."
That little lad had already
learned that the psalmist was
true when he sang a' long time
ago, "Even the darkness is not
dark to Thee, the night is
bright as day; for darkness is as
light with Thee."
God's light always surrounds
us; in our,highest heavens and
our deepest hells. In our down -
in -the -dumps days and in our
brightest mornings His light is
there.
St. John refers to Jesus as
the Light of men.'The Christian
life thrives in this Light. Just as
a tree cannot flourish unless
the light of the sun shines on it,
a human life will not develop
fully unless the Light of Christ
touches it.
This Light enables us to tell
the difference between good
and bad. It is in this Light that
all motives and actions must be
tested. Sinful men love
darkness and hate light
because it shows up their deeds.
O PP
4`s-ruf 8u(FiC .0 •
' —
5/ ys : 1---- lfi'1p,
The light of God also shows
things as they are and strips
away .all disguises.
We never see ourselves until
we dare to look at ourselves in
the light of Jesus eyes. The best
way to rid society of any evil is
to drag it out into the light. So,
the surest way to cleanse the
depths of our own hearts is to
expose them to the light- of
Christ.
As Christians, we often need
to be guiding lights.
Lighthouses save lives because.
their warning lights tell where
the danger lies.
Sometimes it is our duty to
give our fellowmen necessary
warnings. This is difficult to do
in a way which will not execute
more harm than good. Never-
theless, this is the chance we of-
ten have to take. for, how badly
we feel when someone
reproaches us by saying, "Why
didn't you warn me about that
before it was too late?"
If warnings are given, not in
danger or condemnation but in
love, they will usually be effec-
tive. Florence Allshorn, a
famous teacher, said if ever she
had to rebuke a student she did
so with her arm around his
shoulders. .r
A light makes the way clear.
What the world needs most is
people who are not afraid to
shed some light on the evils of
our day .... people who will
stand up and be counted in
stating that a thing is wrong.
We know about the healing
that is in the rays of the
sunlight; the light of God is like
that, it cleanses and heals.
* * *
I am only one,
But still I am one;
1 cannot do everything,
But stili I can do something;
ro c'Uc F.e And because- I cannot do
P<,i# FtlR TOi�tiltca/ OW 41 4/
WILLIAMS
CEMETERY
MEMORIALS
And Inscriptions
Stratford - Ontario
Bob McCallum
Representative
11 Cambria Rd., Goderich
Phone 524-7345
FOR THE FINES' rIN -
HUNTING
FISHING
a SPORTS
EQUIPMENT
.4
--SPORTING
GOODS
—HOBBIES
—CRAFTS
HUCK'S
SPORTING GOODS
73 Hemline' St. 524-6985
residential Lighting Display.
Electric Heating
•"INDUSTRIAL - COMMERCIAL"
RESIDENTIAL - WIRING
CUSTOM TRENCHING
r ►
GRAHAM.
EIECTRI(
62 CAMBRIA RD. N. GODERICH 524-8670 ,
Rev: John Campbell Z
0
'r-
TheHorstFamflr
FROM
ALBERTA
WILL SPEAK
40.
WILL SING
at
WESTFIELD 'FELLOWSHIP HOUR- CA
....1
2:00 P.M.
HURON MEN'S CHAPEL
AUBURN
Ate
ALL WELCOME
Evil provalls ,when good mon do nothing -
everything,
I will not refuse ' to do the
something
That `I can do. (Anonymous)
GQDERICH SIGNAL R, THUR8DAY; AUOU$T 16, ir7i.--PAGI °' A''
FROM INE MINISTER'S $TUDY
•
REV. JAMES REDDpCMET. .ANDpEW'Ii, UNITtD
CHURCH �AYFtID
Scripture Reading: John
Chapter, 14.v.1-14.
Philip was among the fret of
the young men whom Jesus
called to follow Him. He had
been present when Jesus taught
the multitudes the things con-
cerning the Kingdom of God.
He had been with Jesus when,
he went about doing good. He
had been there when Jesus
taught the disciples privately
the things coriterning his
Kingdom.
He had been in the company
of Jesus for about three years -
in the presence of 'the Word
made flesh' and yet, he had not
realized it! He said, 'Lord show
us the Father and it sufficeth
us'.
It is little wonder that Jesus
replied, 'Have I been so long
time with you and yet hast thou
not known me Philip? He that
hath seen rue hath seen the
Father. How sayest thou then,
'show us the Father?' •
The ctuestion which Philip
asked is {,otie which men have
asked in, one form or another
since the beginning of time. J'ob
exclaimed, 'Oh that I knew
where I might find him that I
might come e''en to his seat; far
behold I go forward and he is
not there, and backward but I
cannot perceive him'. Both Job
and Philip were expressing the
deep' desire to know God which
has always been in the hearts
of men.
This failure on the part of
Philip to realize that he was in
"the presence of a supreme
revelation of God is a common
failing. Jacob was at first
unaware of God's presence
when he' 'Dreamed a dream,
and behold a ladder set up on
the earth, and the top of it
reached to heaven, and behold
the Angels of God ascending
and descending ore it'.
It was a wonderful vision
which Jacob had of the Divine
link between heaven and earth;
between the spiritual and the
material; between time and
Eternity; and the continuous
unbroken communication bet-
ween God and Man.
But the remarkable thing is
that 'Jacob awakened out of his
dream and said, 'surely God
"was in this place and I knew it,
not. This is none other than the
house of God, and this the very
gate of heaven'.
This is the common ex-
perience of men, to be in .the,
presence of God and 'know it
not'.
Why should this be so? Is it
not 'because man always looks
for some spectacular and ex-
traordinary revelation of God
and thus, fails to see God
revealing Himself in the or-
dinary affairs of everyday life;
in the daily -round and the com-
mon task?
The Jews eagerly awaited the
coming of the Messiah, but they
looked for his coming in some
_extraordinary event. They
failed to see that the Messiah
had come in the person of Jesus
of Nazareth.
'He came unto His own, and
His own received Him not'
• They asked for a 'sign'. They
demanded that God speak in
their `way, and fulfil their con-
ditions before they would
listen: They rejected Jesus
because, they said, 'is not this
the carpenter..=.and they were
offended at .him'.
They failed to see in Jesus
the 'Image of the Invisible God'
because they were blinded by
their prejudice. They had.,
closed their minds against him.4,
Had Jesus been born in
Nazareth!
Said Nathanial, when told by
Philip that he had found the
Messiah, 'Can any good thing
come out -of Nazareth?
They also .said, 'How
knoweth this man letters never
'having learned?' Meaning of
course that_.Jesus had not sat at
the feet of Gamaliel like Paul;
nor was he a disciple of the
great Rabbi Hillel, or Sham -
• mai. He was the carpenter from
--Nazareth!
We should be very careful
LUTHERAN SERVICES
Robertson Memorial School
(BLAKE AND ELDON STREETS, GODERICH)
SUNDAY SCHOOL Y10 A.M.
WORSHIP SERVICE - 11 A.M.
Pastor: Bruce Bjorkquist
333 Eldon Street, 524-6081
'1'hurufury 1,i/e.cfnu•Iiidc tI lull!) 1. jUSkifit•d 14,..jit.tlh wilhuul
thy (frills ref (ht. fi,w. Itu uitis 3 20.
FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH
(Baptist Convention of Ontario and Quebec)
MONTREAL STREET near The Square
REV.. W. H. McWHINNIE F.R.G.S.
• Organist: Mr. =Frank Bissett
10:00 a.m.-.Sunday School
Sunday 11 a.m.
Preacher: Rev. W. H. McWhinnie
Special Music
- This Church accepts the
authority of God's Word
ALL ARE WELCOME
The Free Methodist Church
Park St. at Victoria Pastor: H. Ross'Nicholls
Phone: 524-9903
10:00 a.m. Be part of a growing Sunday School
11:00 a.m. Speaker Rev. Ron Curl
6:30 p.m. Bible Study and Outreach
Everyone Welcome
,1
CALVARY BAPTIST CHURCH
BAYFIELD ROAD AT BLAKE STREET
EVANGELISTIC - FUNDAMENTAL
REV R BRUBACHER, Pastor
10:00 a.m.-BIBLE SCHOOL -FOR ALL AGES
-11100-a:m-MORNING-PRtAGHING-S€RVICE----:-
7:30 p.m. EVENING SERVICE
-Wed. 8 p.m. PRAYER & BIBLE STUDY
WELCOME TO THE FRIENDLY CHURCH
lest any pre`,)tfdices we may
have, or any preconceived ideas
of the way God should speak -to
us, blinds' us to the revelation
which He gives. Let us not paw
over the too familiar thin* and
expect God to speak only in
that which we see to be extraor-
dinary and .unusual..
Jesus exhorted the people to
,think about The wonder and
glory of God's handiwork. But
their thoughts of glory centred
on Solomon in The distant past.
Jesus said they were treading
underfoot things of greater
wonder' than_ anything
fashioned in the days of
Solomon!
'Consider the lilies of the
field, how •they grow; they toil
not neither do they spin; and
yet I say unto you that even
Salomon in all his glory was
not arrayed like one of these'.
' The wonderful works of God
were all around them, but they
only had eyes for the glory of
their own choosing. They failed
to see the revelation of God
which lay at their feet.
As Elizabeth Browning
wrote:
- Earth's crammed with
heaven, And every common
bush afire with God; But only
he who sees, takes off his shoes;
The rest sit ,around it and pluck
blackberries.
• We should become more
aware of the revelations of God
which are all about us. We
should see in Jesus 'The Image
of the Invisible God' for he still
knocks at the door of our heart
waiting for us to respond.
If we, like Philip, should say,
'Lord show us the Father, that
-is all we ask', the Eternal
Christ will reply, 'Have I been
so hong time with you and yet
hast thou not known me?
sounds eke rosttgl
�` cation? Guess melt?
n It's newspaper UIII
�.Jy for a Orae tolun *
Iandr it Too small
to be noticed? Yours
reading . pie we, .
�br eobrrith
SIGNAL—STAR
COME TO A GROWING S;'NDAY SCHOOL.
-IF YOU NEED. A RIDE. WE HAVE A BUS
,.Bethel Pentecostal Tabernacle
Affiliated with the Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada
CORNER OF ELGIN and WATERLOO STS
REV PETER G ST DON, Pastor
SUNDAY, AUGUST 19, 1973
10:00 a.m.—SUNDAY SCHOOL
11:00 a.m.—MORNING WORSHIP
'.00 p.m. EVENING SERVICE
Tues. 8:00 p.en. BIBLE STUDY AND PRAYER
Friday 7:30_ p.m. -Youth Service
"The only sermon that never
wearies us is that ofb.,g, Godly life
For further Information about church services call 524-8506
ST. GEORGE'S CHURCH
AUGUST 19, 1973
TRINITY IX .
Holy Communion at 8:30 a.m.
Holy Communion and Sermon at 10 a.m.
Nursery at 10 a.m.
Please Note Summer Service Time
sector: Canon G.G. Russell, B.A., B.D.
Victoria Street United Church
HOUSE OF FRIENDSHIP REV LEON/ RD WARR
SUNbAY, AUGUST 19, 19'
11:15 A.M. - Worship Service
-Sermon.. THE HEROISM OF SELF- EFFACEMENT."
BENMILLER UNITED CHURCH
10 a.m.- Worship Service and Bible School
Mrs. J. Snider - Victoria St, Organist and Choir Director.
Mrs. L. Warr - Benmiller Pianist .and Choir Director
Knox Presbyterian Church
THE REV G LOCKHART ROYAL, B A , Minister
THE REV RONALD C McCALLUM, Assistant
. WILLIAM M CAMERON. Director of Praise
SUNDAY, AUGUST 19, 1973
Summer Schedule
Service Is at 10:00 a.m.
Sermon: "A Sense of Service"
(Mr. Royal.will preach)
(Nutjery Facilities)
Fellowship and Re reshments on pro Front Lawn
Enter to Worship Depart to Sere•
North Street United Church
REV. ROBERT L. RAYMONT
SUNDAY, AUGUST 19, 1973
(Nursery up to 9 year-olds) '
10:00 a.m. Morning Worship
(Coffee served'on lawn after (hunch)
flee. Raymont returns to pulpit today
Lorne H. Dotterer • Director of Music
Mies Clare McGowan - Maisie* VIsiltr
,
0