a20â€"THE LONDON FREE PRESS, Saturday, Dec. 19, 1959 MARKS CHURCH SITEâ€"This stone chapel, five by three feet and little under six feet high, stands in the West Zortra Town Line Cemetery, marking the spot s where the Town Line Methodist Church once stood. ~ ,ijf"daéw The Town Line Methodist Thurch, a red brick. building which was erected in 1861 on the West Zorra side of â€" the boundary between the two townâ€" Shlps, was torn down shortly after church union came into being "in the early 1920‘s. Church members . joined with other district congregations to form Lakeside United Church. The small stone chapel is on, the spot where the front door: of the church once stood. The old cemetery which surrounded the church is maintained under sponsorship of descendants of pioneers whose family _ burial plots are there. HARRINGTON, Dec. 18 â€" A tiny stone chapel which stands in the centre of a small cemetery on the boundary between West Zorra and East Nissouri townshipsfi was erected about 1925 to mark the spot where the old Town Line Methodist Church once stood. But while the chapel officially +â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" marks the old church site most of the peoplé in this area like to think of it as a monument s § to the men of a fast disappearâ€" ing art â€" stone masons, It was stone. . masons who built the little chapel and stone masons built the scores of picâ€" turesque honies whose colorful stones decorate the undulating land of this section of Perth and Oxford counties, Stone Art Area Heritage Free Press Stratford Bureau