The Wingham Advance-Times, 1963-06-06, Page 14Page 12 - Wingham Adtiartcc' nic s,
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BelgrpvePersonals
Mr. and A:rs. kaerald ;\::g.:s- kaaa L'^ttea.'l:i,..l . c'..;St
tine and Patsy Anne of B;;r1L: g- sl e ane. Mr. Fred S 10 -
ton, spent last weer with lie: c:a::.'f
parents. Mr. and Mrs, Albert -
Bacon. te: ana is . t'a:.:a. , .s.t-
Recent visitors v,:tl': '`.:r. and ed d':. 5..nelai. ii.t'. Mr. an
Mrs. Robert Higgins were N'., i;. s; Anderson ,.:Id fan..l: .
and Mrs, Jack King. of W tag- +".. ani' Vrs. l.es Vincent
ham. and f 'f Load..':. ; :situ?
'~:r. and Mrs. f.e n Alt.:i .and , w.t : his r a:e::ts. N`.. and Mrs.
daughter of Lt:6;:10h , site d :c- Ai' ... Vincent and Mr, and
cently '.ti le. Mr. and Mrs. clan- . lift Logan. f,: tl:e wecza,
old Procter and Miss M..arg::ret end.
Curtis. '1.:. and Mrs. .ia:old Safi -et
Mr. Al Stark of IN Ire*:t from ..:rs:t,:...le. Michigan,
Miel:'ga:., ‘:sited last ween sites:.., mo:i:', re:at:.es'_f Mr.
with Mr. and Mrs, Stewart ?rue- and Mrs. a*.
ter, the Netn-e nd.
Mr. and Mrs. Les Shaw. >..rs. C-eorac '.'.:antic: and `:r,
Sharon and Brian. spent the Martin crash .:sited on Sunday
week -end with her parents. '.:r. :with Mr. and Mrs. Lis Oliver
and Mrs. Jack Anderson. , at Walton.
The Evening Unit of the :'ni-
ted Church will be held this
month only, on Thursday, June Has your husband done any -
6, :n the basement of the .thing for h:s deafness': -
church. 'No. He's waiting until the
Sunday, June will 1,e An- children ha;e finished having
niversary and Flower Sunday at music lessons."
PINK SEAL
FANCY PINK
SALMON
1 -LB. TALL TIN
53c
VAN CAMP'S
Pork &Beans
15 -oz.
5far59c
KRAFT
DINNER
Cooks in 7 min.
7'4 -oz.
4 for 49c
Last Meeting
i:FlORAVF--The last meet-
;n of t}:., season of the
`�;roup was held o:i Friday, in
s: h. of room. Lynda.
• t.'o::ltos led :n gables and open-.
ed the ineet.ng with a verse of
the c. L' ,1. T. hymn, purpose,
'basic S cr:pt,,:re and prayer.
Miaates were read by Donna
,t.rrashy. Rath Michie read the
treasurer's report. Mrs. 11. J.
-Anderson announced that the
Mother a nd Daughter banquet
will
be held on Monday, June
.17th, and Miss Laura Lollar of
Wi gl:ain will he guest speaker.
Fina: plans were then made.
Ruth Michie led m a sing
;song. Doreen and Margaret
Pattison were in charge of the
iworship service and Doreen
;opened with the call to worship,
followed by Scripture read by
(Margaret. Doreen read the
;meditation on the Scripture.
!Offering was received by Brenda
(and Nancy VanCamp, "For the
(Beauty of the Earth" was sung
land the meeting closed with
prayer and Taps.
lit
CHRISTIE'S
CHEESE RITZ
BISCUITS
8 -oz. pkg.
25c
MAPLE <:
LEAF
COOKED MEAT
3 VARIETIES TO PKG.
49 c LB.
COLEMAN'S 45c LB.
NO. 1 WIENERS
FRASERDALE FROZEN FISH & CHIPS
24 -OZ. 55c
YORK FROZEN MEAT PIES
&OZ, PKG.
2 for 49c
YORK FANCY FROZEN PEAS
2 for 39c
STRAWBERRIES
85c
FRASERDALE
2 LBS.
FROZEN
WHOLE
WISHING WELL
GINGER ALE
30 -oz. bottle
2 FOR 29c
WITH DEPOSIT
YORK
PEANUT BUTTER
3 LBs. $1.19
HEINZ
TOMATO CATSUP
20 -OZ. BOTTLE
41c
HOLLY FANCY
PEAS
15 -OZ. TINS
2 FOR 35c
CALIFORNIA SUNKIST
ORANGES
163s 45c
WATERMELON AVERAGE
HOT HOUSE
TOMATOES
35c
LB.
Free De(iverY
THE LAST ARCH of the old Beigrave arena is seen just
before it was removed. A new arena will rise on the
site of the former building. Men of the community
removed the structure during a work "bee."—Photo
by Mrs. Ted Fear.
Three Youth Groups Met
During Morning Service
BELGRAVE--The Explorers,
Messengers and Junior Messen-
gers all met Sunday morning
during the regular hour of wor-
ship, in the basement of the
church,
The Explorers, led by Mrs.
Roy McSween, assisted by Mrs.
George Johnston, had 30 mem-
bers present and opened with
the purpose and prayer, follow-
ed by singing" This Is My Fa-
ther's World". The minutes
were read by Joan Bosman and
treasurer's report by Mary Gras -
by.
Worship service was in
charge of Rhonda Fear, with the
theme "Honest Workmen". The
call to worship by Rhonda was
followed by a hymn. Scripture
was read by Mary Ellen Walsh.
Meditation of the parable read
was given by Rhonda Fear, who
then led in prayer.
The offering was received
by Mary Grasby and Mary Ellen
Taylor, who also distributed
the World Friends. Mrs. Mc -
Sween read another chapter
from " Tiger Tail Village" and
a hymn was sung. A geography
match was conducted.
The Messengers, led by Mrs.
Jack Higgins with Marie and
Linda Coultes as assistants, had
17 members present. They
opened with the Messenger's
motto and prayer, A chapter
from the study book, "Sun Hee
and the Street Boy", was taken
by Mrs. Jack Higgins. A hymn
was sung. Mary Ann Wheeler
read the Scripture from the se-
cond chapter of Luke and Ken
Hopper led in prayer. Offering
was received by Neil Vincent.
World Friends were distributed
by Marie Coultes, Singing of
another hymn closed the wor-
ship service.
A short dramatization of the
story was given by the senior
Messengers, They worked on
their booklets that are being
made on the story from the
study book.
The Junior Messengers, with
Mrs. Stan Hopper as leader and
assisted by Marjorie Hopper,
Receive Gilts
BELGRAVE--Wendy Fear,
Frank Procter and Brian Hopper
were the three members from
Morris Township who received
two gilts from the Huron County
Hog Producers Association.
Each member of this 4-H
Swine Club received two gilts,
and must sell one of them in
the spring to repay the associa-
tion for the initial cost.
The gilts were distributed by
a draw in Seaforth on Thursday
evening.
had 10 members present. They
sang " Can a Little Child Like
Me" , followed by a story,
"Making a Garden" by Mrs.
Hopper. The children coloured
pictures and made book marks,
They also enjoyed games.
WHAT YOU SHOULD DO IF YOU DISCOVER FIRE
1. Evacuate everyone from
the building at once, even if
the fire is small. Poisonous
fumes and smoke can suffocate
occupants in minutes. And fire
spreads so incredibly fast that it
can quickly turn a house into an
inferno.
2. Next call the fire depart-
ment, even if you think the fire
is minor.
3. If you're sure the fire is
small, try to put it out.
For burning wood, cloth or
paper, use a hose or buckets of
water.
For petroleum products,
smother the fire with a blanket
or rug. Don't use water; it can
splatter the fire.
For electrical fires, use a
fire extinguisher (dry chemical
or CO2) designed for that pur-
pose. Or turn off the current
and use water. — The Safety
Counsellor.
Beef Calf Club
Holds Meeting
The regular meeting of the
Blyth-Belgrave 4-1-1 Beef Calf
Club was held at the home of
James R. Coultes on Monday.
The meeting was opened with
the 4-H pledge, and the min -
Group Activity deports Lies roll oll call were read by
Lila Blaand
A film strip, "Selection of
Given at LCW Meeting
Breeding Beef Cattle", was
shown by the associate agricul-
tural representative, Don Pul-
len, who pointed out the spe-
cial characteristics to look for
in judging and selection of
cattle.
The meeting was adjourned
and a delicious lunch was serv-
ed by Mrs. Coultes.
BELGRAVE--The United
Church Women met for the gen-
eral meeting in the church par-
lour with Mrs. Stewart Procter
opening the worship service
with hymn "We Plough the
Fields and Scatter" , followed
by prayer. Scripture and medi-
tation of the Scripture were
read by Mrs, Stanley Cook.
The theme of the program was
"Christian Education in Our
Church", and a delegate from
each of the church groups re-
ported on activities in her
group: Junior Messengers, Mrs.
Stanley Hopper; Messengers,
Mrs. Jack Higgins; Explorers,
Mrs. Roy McSween;
Mrs. H. J. Anderson.
At this part in the program a
trio from the C.G.I. T. girls,
Ruth Michie, Marilyn Camp-
bell and Helen Anderson sang,
"Jesus, Thou Shepherd" and "As
Pants the Hart". Reports contin-
ued with Hi -C Group, Marie
Coultes; Cubs, Mrs. Ken Wheel-
er and Mrs. Harold Vincent.
Mrs. Ross Anderson, presi-
dent of the U. C. W. reported
that the afternoon and evening
units were studying "The Word
and The Way" and also doing
mission study. A hymn was
sung and the offering was re-
ceived by Mrs, James Coultes
and Mrs. George Johnston. The
secretary's report was read by
Mrs. Laura Johnston, who also
read an invitation from West-
field Church to join them for
their regular meeting on June
12. This was accepted.
Mrs. James Coultes gave the
treasurer's report, which showed
a balance on hand of $315.80.
A motion was passed to pay the
$15.00 for the Messengers and
$50.00 for the United Church
Observer, which had previously
been budgeted for. There will
be a work bee on Monday, June
3, to wash the walls in the base-
ment of the church. The mat-
ter of a delegate to Keswick
Conference and delegates to
Alma College was left to the
unit meetings.
Mrs. George Michie announc-
ed she was packing a bale and
asked for volunteers to help.
Mrs. Lyle Hopper asked that all
articles for the overseas bale he
in as soon as possible, so the
bale could be packed the first
week in June. Next general
meeting will be July 25. A
hymn was sung and the meeting
closed with the Mizpah benedic-
tion,
ADD GLAMOUR
TO YOUR WINDOWS WITH A NEW PAIR OF
Drapes or Lovely, Sheer
CURTAINS
DRAPES --
A special purchase enables us to offer a selection of
ready -to -hang drapes in smart modern designs at a very
attractive price. These drapes are pinch pleated, with
pin -on hooks supplied, at this very low price
$9.95 pr.
Our selection of DRAPERY FABRICS is equally at-
tractive and a number of interesting designs in semi -
modern or abstract is on hand in beautiful blending
tones of today's popular shades
Price $1.98 and $2.98 yd.
Customized Drapes --
will receive our prompt and careful attention, and
we welcome you to view the many delightful samples
now on hand.
CURTAINS --
Tailored or frilled curtains are available in lovely
sheers, complimented by dainty designs that are cer-
tain to add beauty to your windows
Priced from $2.98 to $6.95 pr.
WINDOW SHADES, SCATTER MATS,
PILLOWS, BLANKETS, ETC., ALWAYS
ON HAND IN OUR HOME FURNISH-
INGS DEPARTMENT.
EDIGHOFFERS
(Wingham) Limited
'r111r F'11EN'DLY STO1RE"
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