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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1975-07-31, Page 9Oft Tiff*ICto at of, Mtfeilll: .eswnq.�,en May a two-week hoof ya On Shy Mr, and WO, Joe ' ► Josey and Joan and Mrs. OrvilleTiffin wore violtoro with Mr and Mro. Bhll Snow ns IR'bloom At the Lucknow l lon.BaU on Sa�y�'eveni ddin , a h weg 0 Friends Are A Nlco Thing To uave.., THIS EMBLEM IS THE SIGN OF GOOD BUSI- NESS AND GOOD FRIENDS. For information call: Phone • 357-3275' Smnivarow7 velebratiou was held for Mr. and MO, Bill Melts of Teeswa r. Attendingfromhere. were Mr. and Mia. Dan Main and - Joyce of Toronto, Mr. and Ma. Joe Tiffin, Joan, Jody and Mrs, °r e's , Mr. and Mrs, Rill Snowden,, Mr. and 2144,a: Tiffin. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Tiff fin. Miss Kathy Purfloll of Blyth spent the weekend with her par. eats, Mr. and Mr*. Archie Pur - don. Mr. and Mrs. l .;ussel McGuire of Wingham visited this week with his father, Bruce McGuire of .rnbury. Visitors on Sunda y and. the weekend with Mr. and Mrs. Dalton Schultz were Mr. and Mrs. Fred Harding of West Hill and Mr. and Mrs. Tom McMillan, Tom and Jim of St. Catharines. Albert Coultes visited on Sun- day with Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Majury of Paisley. .Ladies' Aid WHITECHURCH — Mrs. Edna Young hosted the meeting of the Langside Ladies' Aid which was held last week. The president, Mrs. Peter deBoer, opened the meeting with a hymn and Linda Young read the scripture. Prayer was given by Mrs. Visser. The roll call was answered by eight members. Jean Young gave a reading, "The Ladies' Aid", and offering was received and dedicated by Edna Young. Following' the singing of a hymn, the meeting closed with the Lord's Prayer and the hostess served lunch. Bray yetherefore hart*, t He forth 'laborer* into Mnt1hew 0:34, Working as laborers in Ills liar- ve'at, Pastor and ldro, .440 k'lietatra and :their family ( ....,. the W141141n Befit " cls; #> ►. Sunday morning, They are in Canada drying t4 Veale inte e t among 'anad1anyoungpe+� to serve the Lord under the leader- Bldg ea - shill of the Belgium Baptist Miss�ion- a A Hollander by birth, Pater Fhetstra . built the guest Church in Belgium to the Mage where it now serves more than 4,000,000 people as the only Flemish spm Baptist church in Belgium. Within .a radius of 30 miles, there are 100,000 people inAt BasiSunday MOnling kyr sialated Ross soy vices, Elietora saga number and lis. Jar ma sang a Solo in B Dutch,1 At the evening service, Pater' Smith spoke on the story of Rith frotn the Old Testament, Torn Shore led the congrereatiiM worship. Mrs, Raymond .114111 andDoug proms m inspirational muie, GRANDMOTHER'S QUILT BLOCKS—At n Tweedsmuir Tea held recently in Fordwich Mrs. Reta Higgins of Aurora (left) and Mrs. Eva Harris of Fordwich looked ata book made in 1958 which consists of quilt blocks. It was a Tweeds- muir project at the time. Displayed behind them are quilts r w go 0 lamr-iimmuramair SPRAY 'Hour DEODORANT 6 oz. After Hour 99c SOLID AIR FRESHENER l Airwick SPRAY AIR FRESHENER . �� kiuty 2 ,1+ $ ti Soil15 oz. • TOOTHPASTE • 100r1n1.+ UltraBrite50% Free .99, LIQUID DETERGENT ioy 24 oz. 89c LEMON UP . Shampoo OR 12 oz. + $139 Creme Rinse 1/3 Free • TRIANGLE DISCOUNT p PATfat .rf0/C/#fS • COSAYFf1(S • TOBACCOS Open 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. Weekdays • Sundays Noon to Six Joan' E I I ibtt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George Elliott, Brussels, graduated July 29 from Fanshawe College Nurs- ing Program', St. Joseph's Campus, London. She has ac- cepted a . position at St. Joseph's Hospital, London. over 100 years old. On the left is a quilt belonging to Mrs. Harris's great-grandmother and it is over 150 years old. On the right 15'e -hand-woven bedspread which is 100 years old, made by Mrs. Crosby Southern's mother: (Staff Photo) Wide variety of crafts shown at Tweedsmuir tea FORDWICH — The Women's Institute held a • very successful Tweedsmuir Tea in the com- munity ommunity hall. The tea was prim- arily to display the Fordwich Tweedsmuir History Book and to give the public a glimpse of past, present and future activities of the Fordwich Women's Institute. Handmade quilts,, dating back 150 years to the present day methods and styles were display- ed under the chairmanship of , Mrs. Eva Harris. Great interest' was shown in the book of quilt patterns made up by the WI. Crafts, including macrame, pnlntings, wooden carvings and afghans and ,many .others sere displayed while Mrs. Dick Alla worked on some macrame. This group of interesting articles showed the on-going of crafts from old to new. Mrs. Stanley Bride and Mrs. A. Demerling were in charge of photographs and the printed Meaning of prayer .topic at Chalmers WHITECHURCH — "Exactly What IS Prayer?" This was the question asked by Mrs. William R. Purdon as she spoke at the July meeting of the Chalmers Women's Missionary. Society, held at the home of Mrs. Johnston Conn, Wingham. Mrs. Purdon stressed the im- portance of prayer, saying that God wants to talk to us at all times. "Do you run to God when in need or use Him as we • use a shopping list?", she asked. She urged the members to ingijain ba�1 �''j�'� (�' (ct��' 'js 1Ifl Y Amend a I hssehi'e As ?94644toffon ,e`ar/ean4 Let us as'ist you with your plans for that all important wedding day. COKE IN AND SEE OUR COMPLETE SELECTION OF • INVITATIONS • ANNOUNCEMENTS • INFORMALS • ACCESSORIES Your choice of various paper stocks, type styles and sizes. ask for .. . Select your wedding invitations, announcements and accessories with complete confidence as to quality and correctness of form. WE ALSO HAVE PERSONALIZED WEDDING NAPKINS, MATCHES AND CAKE BOXES spend some time of each day in prayer. "Go to God believing that He is ready to talk to you. No is- sues are too small to take to Him." Mrs. Purdon also urged her listeners to have a notebook with them when they read the Bible as they will often find passages that will require thoughtful answers. A discussion followed her talk. Mrs. Bill Rintoul, president, opened the meeting with a poem, "Thy Days", and a welcome to visitors, former members and present members. A hymn was sung with Mrs. Andrew Gaunt as organist .< — Scripture reading and medita- tion were given by Mrs. John de - Boer who stressed that we must pray for the great and final Day. Until this Day arrives, we have much to do for Christ. "We must be diligent and successful, mak- ing all the moments a witness for Him," she said. Mrs. Wallace Conn led in pray- er and an organ solo was given by Mrs. Johnston Conn. Mrs. James McInnes gave a reading. The roll call was answered by the 16 pres- ent naming a child of the Bible and quoting the scripture verse where the child is mentioned. The minutes were read by the secretary, Mrs. Dawson Craig, and a letter was read about Fost- er groups. The Chalmers group is E and the meeting is September 7 at 7:30 at Lucknow. The financial statement was given by Mrs. Victor Emerson who also received and dedicated the offering. Mrs. Maime Caslick gave a reading, "A Good Les- son", and all sang a hymn. The August meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Wallace Conn. After the singing of the closing hymn, the closing prayer was given by Mrs. Rantoul and the Ladies' Aid held their meeting. Offering was received and Grace was sung. The hostess served lunch, following which Mrs. Wal- lace Conn gave courtesy re- marks. word. Their booth contained photos and valuable frames from the 18.30's to 1975, as well old printed word showing a "Globe", announcing "Armistice Signed" 1918; old magazines, etc., to the present Centennial Listowel Ban- ner. Shakespeare's work, belong- ing to three generations, was also\ displayed, making one realize that good literature is as much appreciated now as in the 1890's. Mrs. Austin . Stinson demon- strated her bobbin lace work and ;.had several pieces of the lovely lace on display. 1.n�f'.WIvv.is' at Whitechurch WHITECHURCH — A recep- tion was held Friday evening in the Community Memorial Hall here in honor of newlyweds Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Huffman. Music was furnished for danc- ing by Joe Tiffin's 'orchestra. ^ At lunch time, the newlyweds were called to the platform and Clifford Huffman read an ad- dress and presented them with a gift of money. Dancing was resumed until closing time. —Wilbert Hodgins returned from Ottawa hospital on Wednes- day, July 23. He is convalescing at his home here. Mrs. Bruce Agla had charge of mats — hooked rag, wool and braided mats, as well as unique sketches and wall hangings. To show that the Tweedsmuir project is an "on-going" project the 4-H girls' club under the leadership of Mrs. F. McCann and Mrs. J. Robinson had dis- plays of their work as well as the senior project, "Sewing- with Knits." The reason for the tea, the Tweedsmuir History Book, was attractively displayed, sections being laid out on black cloth so that viewers could pick up whdt- ever was, of interest to them. This wasto have been chaired by Mrs. .C. Sotheran,but on accost of ill- ness in the family she was unable to be present. The president, Mrs. Clarence Carswell, assisted by Mrs. Stan- ley Bride, greeted the visitors at the door. Mrs. John Winkel had charge of the guest book. Mrs. John Freeman entertained with music during the evening. A number of 4-H girls, Donna Harding, Cathy Gibson and Cathy Clarkson, under the guidance of Mrs. Elmer Harding, Mrs. H. Gibson, Mrs. Scott Clarkson, Mrs. M. Penny and Mrs. Doug • Harding, served cake, ice cream and tea in an old fashioned ice cream parlour. About 130 people attended the showing, including WI members from Palmerston, Clifford, Gor- rie, Wroxeter, Bluevale and sur- rounding territory. TWEEDSMUIR TEA—At the recent Tweedsmuir Tea held in Fordwich many crafts were on display. Mrs. Dick Agla of RR 1, Fordwich demonstrates the craft of macrame. Old books, newspapers and cameras were also on display at the Community Hall. (Staff Photo) Pastor and Mrs. Ynte: Fiietstra Jack, Kathy, and John PHONE 357-2320 TUMBLE FOR EXTRA CASH Put . money in your pocket by selling f un- wanted items in the Want Ad Column SPtE BATHING SUITS GIRLS size28to MISSES size34 Also LADIES size36 YOUNG BOYS size 24 to MEN'S sizes -Excellent Selection - NEW SHIPMENT JUST ARRIVED - STOTTER ACRYLIC TUMBLERS * Great for patio and household use! * Available in following patterns: lemon, strawberry, 'loisy, anchor; Stripes - red, white, blue; red, white, green; green, white, yellow; brown, white, black. WM. RINTOUL LUXyRY PRODUCTS SWIMMING POOLS AND SAUNAS (1/2 Mile North of Wingham on Hwy. P4) MON.-SAT. 9:00.5:00 FRI. EVENINGS 7:00.9:04 PHONE: 357-2628 Ammetemelsommelmem