Wednesday, September 2, 1959 THE WILLIAMS LAKE TRIBUNE Page 3 Around Town FRANK LEE journeyed to Kelowna last week for a family reunion with his three brothers. Two came with their families from San Francisco and Los Angeles to meet at the home” of the eldest in Kelowna. It Was the first time in 38 years that the four brothers had been together, Four nieces and a nephew and their families who live in Kelowna joined in the big family celebration along with John Lee and his family of Vancouver, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Lee’s son. MRS. B. HIGGENS returned Tecently from a six-weeks’ visit to Ireland. MR. AND MRS. J. Phillipson and daughter Joan were brief Visitors in town last week. Mr. Phillipson was principal of the Williams Lake High School for many years, and is now super- intendent of a large district with his office at Prince Rupert. VISITING WITH Mr. and Mrs. Jack Esler this week are and Mrs. Ritchie LeQuesne and three children of Victoria. — a Go To Church on Sunday LISTED BELOW ARE PLACES OF WORSHIP IN WILLIAMS LAKE ST, PETER'S ANGLICAN CHURCH ' Corner Carson Drive and Fifth Avenue Rev. E. H. Wallace 15th Sunday after Trinity September 6 8:30 a.m. Holy Communion 11:00 am. Holy Communion 3:00 p.m. 100 Mile House ST. ANDREW'S UNITED 8rd Avenue at Cameron St. Rev, A. Anderson Sunday, Sept. 6, 11 am., Church Service. SACRED HEART CHURCH 4th Avenue at Yorston Street Redemptorist Fathers Sunday Masses, 9 10:30 a.m. First Fridays and Holidays of Obligation, Mass at 7:30 and pm. Benediction Saturday eve- ning, 7:30 p.m., followed by confessions. CALVARY PENTECOSTAL TABERNACLE 2nd Avenue North Pastor: Rev. E. P. Funk Sunday, Sept. 6, 10 a.m., Sunday School; 11:15 am., Morning Worship; 7:30 p.m., Evangelistic Service. KINGDOM HALL OF JEHOVAH'S WITNESSES 4th Avenue South Friday, Sept. 7:30 p.m., Theocratic Ministry School. 8:30 p.m., Service Meeting. Sunday, Sept. 6, 7 p.m., Bible Study. LUTHERAN WORSHIP SERVICES The Church of the Lutheran Hour Rev. Dan Pfotenhauer Every second and last Sun- day of the month, 7:30 p.m at United Church. The Lutheran Hour over CFJC, Kamloops, Sunday, 10°20 a.m CHRISTIAN SCIENCE GROUP Quesnel, B.C. Sunday School and Church Services held 11 a.m. Sundays. Wednesday evening Testi- mony Meeting, first Wednes- day of each month at 8 pm. These services held In :he Masonic Hall. All cordially invited to attend. Radio program: ‘How Christian Science Heals,” station CKCQ at 1:05 p.m., first and third Sundays of each month. wk ok The Tribune will be pleased to include any _ religious notices in this column such as title of service, name of preacher, etc. Information should be available by noon, Monday. ——— SIGNING THE REGISTER Signing the register following her marriage last Wednesday is Mrs. Gordon Armes, the former Miss Rhona Stevenson. The popular young couple were married at St. Andrew’s United Church. © Photo by Williams Laks Photo Studio WHITH TRENE meeting at a limitless horizon has a beauty of its own, and I could understand when one woman said she “couldn't live anywhere else.” We missed by behind my last e you with us The column was to ta’ on our trip through B.C., then idea Alberta, and eventually finish off at our destination of Bounty, Saskatchewan. Well, I got one day the experience of through B.C. all right, but seeing a prairie hailstorm. from there on the boys in the pyr we saw the damage. back-shop loused the type up, Windows had been smashed in and I got to Saskatchewan be-) ARMES-STEVENSON WEDDING Two well-known local families united in lovely afternoon rifes The first grandchild of ‘pioneer merchant Roderick Mackenzie to be united in marriage is Rhona Mackenzie Stevenson, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. Douglas Stevenson, of Williams Lake, who exchanged vows last Wednesday, August 26, with Gordon James Armes, second son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Armes, of Williams Lake. Summer flowers were arranged by Mrs. R. A. Moon through- out St. Andrew’s United Church for the 2:30 p.m. ceremony, performed by Rev. A. Anderson. An exquisite gown of white of the groom, was ring-bearer. silk organza and lace was 30° ‘ chosen by the bride, who was Dest man - his brother given in marriage by her Gebers. aM iad Armes, father, A front panel of lace). ce erred ieee in the billowing organza ski , Mr. Hank Unrau, and S Grganza skirt wr walter Richardson. In matched the fitted lace bodice . ‘: keeping with the Scottish an- with squared neckline. A , striking feature of the gown pay’ 00 tHe bride, Mrs. F. was the soft drape of organza Goin the apne, Maurie caught at hip-line with a lace Ore. Genes OF the and organza rose, tied at the [rege OTSanist was Mrs, back, then drifting down to . : make a slight train, A small I spite of threatening weather, a charming reception pearl crown held her finger- 7 was held in the lakeside home tip veil of sheer net and lace, and she carried a beautifui 224 garden of the bride's par- bouquet of red, white and pink 2S. Mrs. Stevenson was roses. gowned in a teal blue lace dress with matching small hat and shoes, and a ‘corsage of pink roses. Mrs. Armes wore a rose crepe and lace dress with navy accessories and a corsage of golden roses. Three senior attendants, a tiny flower girl and a ring- bearer preceded the bride up the aisle. Miss Elizabeth Stevenson was maid-of-honor for her sister, while her other with a three-tiered wedding cake and low bowls of dahlias. Serviteurs were Mrs. R. Nor- berg, Miss L. Moon, Miss M. Gardner, Miss B. Gardner, Mrs. J. Carson, Mrs. R. Armes, Mrs. H. Unrau, Miss S$. Stevenson of Penticton, Miss D. Wiper, Miss M. Wiper and Miss @. Wiper, all of Victoria. The toast to the bride was proposed by her uncle,. Mr. Alistair Mackenzie. For their motor trip through Alberta, the bride donned a smoke-blue suit with mink collar, light blue feather hat and navy accessories, enhanced by a corsage of small blue orchids. The young couple will make their home in Vancouver, where they will both attend the University of B.C. Out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. A. Mackenzie and sons of Squamish; Mr. and Mrs. K. Wiper and daughters of Victoria; Father of Daw- son Cree and Mrs. T. Stevenson and daughter of Penticton; Mrs. C. Couves of Victoria; Mrs. M. Armes, the groom's grandmother from Vancouver; Miss Gillian Old- field of Australia; Mr. and Mrs. Mulhern of Vancouver; Mr. Roderick Mackenzie of Victoria; Mr. Harvey Armes of Naramata; Mrs. G. Baldwin and daughter of Port Alice; Mr. N. Perry of Kamloops, and Mrs. J. Haramia and daughters of Nanaimo. sister, Miss Jean Stevenson, The lace-covered _ bridal and Miss Sharon Meagher table on the patio was centred were bridesmaids. They wore identical dresses of blue silk organza designed with short full skirts and draped bodices blending into a large silk bow in the back. They wore match- ing blue velvet bows in their hair, blue shoes, and carried delicate bouquets of yellow marguerites. Little Delores Unrau, niece of the groom, was flower girt in a sweet dress of yellow or- ganza with tiny puffed sleeves and very full short skirt. Young Donald Armes, nephew Clive’s sister's home by hail the size of golf balls, and in many of the fields only a few stalks of wheat were lett standing. My chief shock there was in seeing the three nepliéws whom rs, but nothing prepared me for these three giants (the smallest weighed a mere 130 pounds.) I felt singularly petite in comparison, but also singularly old when they addressed me as “Auntie Irene.” Our chief delight at the farm Four Continued on Page fore I went through Alberta and ended up wandering around lost in Edmonton It has taken me two weeks to tind my way out again, and I'm too discouraged to write about the trip home. They might have me stranded on the Big Bend, a fate worse than death (It certainly has not changed in the ten years since we travel- led it last; it is still a monot- onous bone-jarring trip.) Our trip, of necessity, was a quick journey there and back so we could spent most of our holiday with Clive's sisters and family. This of course left little time for sight-seeing so our trip is a confused im- pression ot highways, mount- ains, restrooms, prairie, cates. lakes and Esso stations LOTS OF ONE KIND HEY, KIDS! DON'T MISS THIS CHANCE TO OWN A SLIDE MULTI- PLIER PENCIL BOX BOX AND TUBE OF COL- GATE DENTAL CREAM BOTH FOR 98c Possessing every kind of credit card ept Esso, the multitude of Esso stations be- came a standing joke before we got back home. Every | little hamlet of 100 souls in, Alberta. and — Saskatehewan, boasted an Esso station on the highway, and if we delved into the back-streets in desper- ation for a Royalite (Chevron and Shell seemed to be extinct) our search only revealed more Esso stations. I was sure that if we had got lost on a desert island there by would have station instead of a traditional oasis. Our first meal in a cafe after ‘ makes dreams come true, easy for mommy and for me, too. means snarl-free curis, no nightly pin-ups for little girls. hitting real prairie-land in Only Alberta was a distinct disap- permanent pointment. At the counter sat specially a character in a shimmering red made for and silver shirt, an Al Capo) children type in double - breasted 2 t0 12 blue suit lounged up the aisle, and the jukebox rocked “Waterloo, Waterloo.” Where, oh where was the farmer with the wheat straw locked between his teeth? 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