The Lucknow Sentinel, 1956-10-10, Page 7y l N'$AY,, �L:10th, 1958
MRS. WASHINGTON SPEAKS
T BLAII;ES . _ANKOFk'ERING_
• The Baake's W M.S .held! their
Thankof£ering Meeting in the
church on Friday, October 5th,
With Mrs. E. Zinn in -..Charge of
the meeting and had as their
guests Zion, Hacketts,• St. Helens.
,and Dunga inon :societies,
The meeting opened with hyann
262 arid prayer by M.rs Zinn. The
,scripture reading was read by
Vis, :-C, •Cooke!•: and ;prayer. by
Mrs, J, Arnold. The Welcome ad-
dress was given ,by Mrs. Zirin,
followed by a reading by Mrs..
M. Reed of Dungannon. Hymn.
250 was then sung and a .solo
by Mrs. Cook .of Zion. rhe offer-
ing, was, taken by Mrs. G. Saun
tiers and Mrs. Ham, Flrlllps~ Mr.
E.. W. Rice :- of St.. Helens sang
a solo. MTs. Washington. Was
,guest speaker and. gave a grand
address,
Mrs,' Zinn thanked . all who
took 'part in theprogram, also
the ladies' who. ' decorated '. the
church and hall with lovely aut-
umn flowers: Hyorm 249 . was
sung. and the bedediction. 'The
Blake' ladies served 'lunc'h in the
ball and • each :Society . thanked
there for thelovely kindh.'
THE • LUCKNOW SEly
T1NEl, Lt'iCKrtoW,
,1NITEQ. CHURCH WAS..
The Qcto ber meeting of the
Atty of
the United Cin
ei'noon W,MS Auxiliar
Church was held in
the fellowship room.. The presi-
dent, '-Virs. Neil MacKenzie, led
the opening devotions, The Bible
study theme "A dwelling place
of God',' .was led by Mrs. Brooks.
Reports were, given by the treas.,
Mrs, W. Anderson and Mrs. S.
Stothers, literature ,sec. She spe-
cally stressed the two bo_o,..lcs..
-"Great is the Company"
"Wide .Windows" be retuned to
her, Miss Margaret Rae contrib-
uted . a vocal -:'solo, Mrs. George
Andrew gave a reading, "Life's
little strings", Mrs. W Anderson'�
had charge of the program and
introduced conversatiori t;wn
ut east Asia focusing attention:
on Korea . Eby telephone conyersa-
tion a`hd was assisted by Mrs, R.
H. Thompson on "Religious Con-
fusion Mrs. R. Robertson on
orthopaedia hspital work; Mrs.
Horton, education., and Mrs. W;`
L. •IViacKen ie on evangelistic act-
ivity among young people. The
study of southeast Asia is not
just geography, it is history in
the making; it is not just, aca-
demic, .' it is urgent; it is, not .just
politics, it is people; it is not
KINTAIL WOMENs INSTITUTE
f>EAIt MRS. 0. McCHARLES
The October meeting of Nin,,
tail WI, was .helct at the home.
of- Mrs., Ray Dalto with. a Targe
attendance, -The ' Institute ode
and Mary Stewart Coh. et open
ed the: meeting. It wass.ecided
to send a .donation to the esti-
Lute ' for the Blind , Mrs. ed'
MacGregor is to be our delega
o the convention on October 15
and 1'7, in London,- A committee.
was -appointed to look into the
possibility of having a girls'
homemaking club.
Mrs. Oliver McCharles was the
guest speaker and told us about
the Agnes McPhail scholarship
fund. She gave us a few high-
lights. f her .eventful- life as our.
first woman member of parl-
iament and her. interest in bet-
tering the .conditions in penal
.institutions', and , reformatories, •
Mrs. McCharles -also showed.
us her hoabies of alarninum
trays, copper pictures a`nd . cost-
ume jewellery; •
•
material aspect's, it is the church.
The program and lunch were un-
der the •canyenersrhip •of Mrs. W.
'Anderson, Mrs. Brooks and Miss.
MacGregor.
ammo
Presbyterian , Sr, Auxiliary
The Senior ,Auxiliary of the
Presbyterian W.M.S. met in the
•Sunday School room on Wednes I
day afternoon, October 3rd with
an attendance of 19, Mrs, C, Ag-
new presided, Mrs: Russell gave
an interesting. -Bible • study from
ist Peter,, on the ministry .of suf.
tering. A note .of • thanks from
the- Mission Band was read for
those .who -had contributed candy
to the 'Mission Band •liooth at-lthe
all Fair. Arrangements were
m de to quilt a number of quilts
:wh'ch have been donated to the
Au 'nary. Mrs. Porteous gave
the topic from The Christian
Missi n. • She said that the first -.1
respon ibinty of the church is to
presen . Jesus christ and: his gos-
pel to a needy•world. T'hechurch.
should also be concerned for the
iwelfare • of 'the World's citizens.
Mrs..'H. Agnew gave the 'mission.
study from "They reach for Life"
which told• of • the .struggles of
the industrial workers in Japan;
and also something of what :the
church is -tryingto do for these
forgotten people. Mrs. • 112oClean
closed the meeting with prayer,
PAGE SEVEN
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ATLAS TIRES
Always look to Imperial
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J. E.' MacDONALD
Phone 3, Lucknow
PURPLE .GROVE
Cecil •Hill of Sarnia is vis
iting:.rwith. Mr. and Mrs: Ralph
There's . no fool • like an oiled •Hili. '
Far -
fool. 'Miss�es� .Ethel . and Helen Far-
• Tell of ;London spent the :. week-
end with- their parents, Mr. and'
Mrs. Herb Farrell. •
Mr: and Mrs. John Norman : of
;Kinaadirie were visitors , at the
home of Mr. and Mrs. John Em- .
erson on Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. ,Donald McC ish
and family left roe '1llionda7 fog a' �m",
rhotor trip to the States.
The •Purply Grove Institute •'
was largely'.attended at the home
of Mrs. Jack Emerson on Thurs.
Mr. and Mrs trayher & tarn-. .
1y_ ofL..:London and . Miss Edith°
Stanley spent Thanksgiving with
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Stanley.
reat wi
sprkiing
:o.ca
oia
ti•
4.
4 • •f.
•
.�..
•
f
hrow a basked party !
-4-.•.M • .:
A basket for. every •guest. Pile 'ens high v; ith: crispy; golden -brown
Southern -fried chicken, plenty of potato -chips and a decorative
border of good to -munch scallions. Now',make sure, each gues'tiYas
his ice-cold bottleiof sparkling Coca -Colla, What a treat—your
flood food and. that .great taste of Coke ! •
...with Coke - to put you at your sparkling best!
6.Bottles
t+otbei•Oin
'. 5-6,1 o7'X
Coke is o registered trodamork.
GODERICH BOTTLING WORKS'
55 . Kingston St., • Phone No. 489'
1
Authorized bottler of Coca-Cola undet contract with Coca-Cola a
•
REMEMBERED HOL' YROOD'
S MA -$TER AND PONY
•
In an isuse of : the 'Sentinel in
1936, a •letter appeared Written
by .Mr..Joahn Elliott, . Who. taught
school at Holyrood, and. in 'later,
years . wrote many interesting
historical articles for:. The ..Sen-
tinel. •
In view; of the recent centen-
•nial.observance . of theestablish-•'
ing of postal service at .Holyrood,
the following paragraph 'from Mr.
• Elliott's •article . is' especially in-
teresting:'.
"My father died; at Holyrood
after Serving. only' one year as; •
storekeeper. :and .postmaster. Mr.
Andrew T; Campbell was his
successor. He and Mrs. Camp-
bell had come from Huntingdon,.
Quebec, seeking ai location for
store and Holyrood suited them.
They brought .a sturdy black,
pony and Mr.. Elliott, as a lad,
made a trip to; Goderich behind.
the pony.: There was no railway
into Lucknow then .,They set : out,
before. ;daybreak one August
morning -so that. the' --return trip`
with, a load of store' goods might
be made the same day, thus
avoiding double toll :at the toll
gates strung , along ' the gravel
road. from Lucknow to : .Goder-
'_ich". .
•
9 �•
Tooled To Repair All Makes Of
Traitors, Machines & Shop .Work.
ACETYLENE &- .ARC WELDING
KINL.OUCH GARAGE
BRECI LES •
Phone 1$-r-20, Rii ley
THE HOME Of QUAII1YSEIIViCE
and Genuine;JOHN DEERE PARTS