C--O-M--M-U-N~I-T-Y C-H-U-R-C-H on Senior Sunday School, 'Sunday - October 6, 1957. 97290 8,m, 11:00 a.m, 2:00 p.m, Junior Sunday School, MORNING WORSHIP The congregation will join with -Christians throughout the world in the observance of Holy Communion, EVENING SERVICE. The Evening Service will be conducted by Mr. Andrew Grier, the young layman in charge of the congregation of St. Andrew's United Church, Schreiber, 100) 8 om, Te30) Dem, AUXILIARY MEETING - The regular monthly meeting of the Women's Auxiliary of the Community Church will be held on Monday, October 7 in the Church Hall. Mrs. Soughton and her committee. will have charge of the program, LIBRARY REVIEW - : 'i "The Lady" - Conrad Richter. The author tells a story of New Mexico a hundred years ago, Dona Ellen, the Lady, is a great beauty, born to wealth and position, She draws all who know her, with one exception into the silken web of her aristocratic charm. But inevitably she clashes with Snell Beasley, aman of money, forceful, coldly ambitious and a master of legal-intrigue., Because of this evil man her brother, husband and son are murdered. With no protectors left to defend the position she regards as hers by inalienable right, there is still a means of rescue, of terrible and wonderful triumph for "The Lady." Library Hours Monday and Wednesday afternoons - ao tO. 42.30, Tuesday and Thursday evenings - 7 to 9, BAKE SALE - The Women of the Moose are holding a Bake Sale at the Hudson's Bay Store, Saturday, October 12th at 1 o'clock, -2 S-T , M-A-R-T-I-N-4-S C-H-U-R-C-H SATURDAY, October 5, 1957. Confessions 3 -- 4 p.m, 7 ie 8 p.m. SUNDAY, October 6, Masses - 8:15 a.m, 9:30 a.m, Benediction Sunday evening at 7:30, fass during the week at 8:00 a.m, and Saturday - 8:30 a.m, HORTICULTURAL SOCIETY - The annual meetirg of the Horticultural society with election of officers will be held on Friday, November 15th, eee CENOTAPH (cont'd from page 1) Here was not a memorial to young men and women of Terrace Bay who answered their country's call in the two great wars, There was no Terrace Bay until 1946, ° When the Second World War was being waged, there was not a single human being living in the area of forest land which is now the -Site of one of the most up-to-date towns in Canada, Terrace Bay residents have'been recruited from every province in the Dominion. So it is that in building their Cenotaph they have made it a national monument, commemorating the sacrifice of brothers and sons, or rel- atives and friends who donned their uniforms in towns and cities scattered from coast to coast, aici This notwithstanding, it was a community spirit which spurred the people of Terrace Bay to the erection of a Cenotaph. Last Remembrance Day when war veterans gathered as usual to reminisce and to remember the dead in two minutes of silence, the question arose: why not a Cenotaph? Typical of the aggressive- ness of residents, the answer came swift}. Business firms, students, the service club, lodges, the unions, the Improvement District, the Kimberly-Clark Company and others furn- ished the money and a committee headed by E, A, Marostica went into action, ." That community spirit was reflected in the faces of th crowd that. circled the Cenotaph on the spacious lawn beside the Recreation Centre, From the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides lined up in their uniforms, to the veterans wearing the berets of the Legion to the men (cont'd page 8.)