Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Times (1958-), 9 Jul 1966, p. 7

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SOME 150 DELEGATES from Oshawa. attended the Jehovah's Witnesses' con- vention in Toronto. Shown above, from left, are Fred Andersen, Leesa Andersen Lois Van Horn, Beanna G. Van Horn, Jean Van and John Andersen. hibition Park Grandstand in To- ronto, were from the Oshawa Congregation including Frederic G. Van Horn presiding minister The convention was termed the '"God's Sons of Liberty" District Assembly of Jehovah's Witnesses. It stressed the im- BAHA'I | WORLD FAITH Teaches, Oshawa Volunteers Active At Big Watch Tower Rally Among the thousands of de- to staff the 22 convention de-jheld this summer on the North) legates to the Watch Tower Con-|partments that were needed to| American continent. The cone- vention last week at the Ex-/operate the huge organization. Juding conventions of this ser- Over 25,000 rooming accom- representatives, modations were: secured in ho- Beach, tles, motels and private homes fer the out - of - town guests. Thousands were fed each meal- time in a cafeteria set up near the Grandstand for the conven- ience of the delegates An outstanding feature of the "Men must eliminate all those prejudices which divide man- kind" For information re: weekly meetings or literature Write Box AS Oshawa Times ee portance of the Bible in mod- Program was the mass baptism ern - day living, convention of- of 483 new Witnesses on the ficials asserted. Persons came| Friday Witness officials ex from all provinces of Canada, ---- gs gal si ey ab 45 states and from 14 other| (ad's. will as described a the countries to hear the sessions. Bible. Those baptized view this Volunteers from the Oshawa 4, their ordination date and will Congregation worked nearly tWO henceforth serve as ministers, months in advance of the con-|it was stated. All will actively vention to prepare for the giant) share in Bible preaching and task of caring for the huge! teaching officials commented throng that converged on Toron-! from the delivery of the wel- to. Volunteers from the general coming address in which Con- group of delegates then helped! vention Chairman L. K. Green- ZION CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH 409 ADELAIDE AVE, EAST _ PASTOR: REV, D. N. HABERMEHL, B.A., M.Th. 10:00 A.M.-MORNING WOR NURSERY CARE PROVIDED 7:00 P.M.--"THE GIFT OF HEALING" Radio Ministry Chr. Ref. Church: each Sunday at 9:15 P.M. (Back To God Hour), every other Sunday et 11 A.M. CKLB (churches in the area) ZION CHRISTIAN REFORMED CHURCH will hove @ Vacation Bible School from Monday, July 11 to Thursday July 21, Every Morning from 9:00 a.m. te 11:15 @m For children 5 to 11 years of age lees stated, "Pay especial at- tention to how you listen when God's Word is being read and discusses,"' to the clo, re- marks, the Bible was featured. The theme of using the Bible to buttress faith was held be- fore the gathering. This theme was presented in talks, discus- sions and live demonstrations of. practical methods of Bible study, research and preaching. Among those sharing in the speaking program were a num- ber of representatives from the New York World headquarters | of Jehovah's Witnesses. High- FAITH SHIP Lutheran Church BOND ST. EAST Eastern Canada Synod) The. Rev. Henry Fischer Pastor---725-2755 MASONIC TEMPLE BLDG, REV. RICHARD J, BARKER, Minister 9:45 A.M. -- Sunday School 91 Centre St. » 2:00 P.M. 11:00 A.M. and 7:00 P.M. THE REV. E. Editor of "The Evangelical Christian" Magazine 6:30 P.M.--PRAYER FELLOWSHIP SERVICE and PICNIC at Conservation Area. Greenwood COME WORSHIP WITH US! S. McVETY CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH Tues, 2:30 p.m. Wed. 8:00 p.m THE SALVATION ARMY 133 Simcoe Street South MAJOR and MRS. GORDON HOLMES oak AM | SUNDAY SCHOOL / H 11:00 A.M, -- "ALITTLE MEMBER-THE TONGUE" 7:00 P.M. -- "JESUS THROUGH THE EYES OF A THIEF" Ladies' Home League Proyer -- Bible Study "A Welcome Awaits You at the Army" (Anglican) Mary and Hilleroft Streets SERVICES 8:00 A.M. 11:00 A.M. We inesday OLY 10:00 A.M, COMMUNION GRACE LUTHERAN Lutheran Chur: Canada Mo. Synod PARK ROAD & HIGHWAY 401 Rev. Philin Fiess Minister Ronald A. Jansen, Vicar SUNDAY SERVICES 9:45 AM SUNDAY SCHOOL "MIDWEEK WORSHIP" FREE METHODIST CHURCHES WEDNESDAY 7:30 P.M 11:00 A.M MORNING WORSHIP Wg Sunset Heights School = wm Bars, Letters Awarded light of the convention was the Sunday lecture by Nathan H. Knorr, president of the »Watch Tower Society, dom Been Doing Since 1914? The Toronto gathering was the first of a series of 16 being | scheduled for Miami Florida, and Mobile, Alabama, at the end of August. Russian Tours Saskatchewan MEDICINE HAT, Alta. (CP) It was a big day, western-style for Dmitri Polyansky Thursday. The touring Russian deputy premier started in Regina, where the Prairie Farm Reha- bilitation Administration pr e- sented him with a white stetson hat He drove to the Kalium Chem- icals Ltd. potash plant, 20 miles west of Regina, to see the only mine in the province that uses the solution method. This pumps brine more than a mile under the earth to dissolve the min- eral, then brings it back to the surface where the potash is re- covered by a drying process. Mr. Polyansky then went to the federal agricultural experi- mental station at Swift Current, Sask He made a flying grain and cattle farms berta and Saskatchewan ing for his overnight stay in Medicine Hat, he was greeted |by Mayor Harry Veiner in west- ern garb and riding a pony. les are visit to in Al- Arriv- a; School. The staff was aided in nd letters were award- Sunset Heights Public Ber ed at the presentation ef these awards by T. J. Heath, inspec- tor of public schools and Mrs. Ray Hartley, president of the Home and School Association, The Citizenship Bar was pre- sented to not more than five pupils in each class chosen ac- cording to the judgment of the respective teacher. The award is on the basis. of: leadership, outstanding service to room or schoo! and the promise of -de- veloping "into" a leading citizen of the future. The following were presented with this bar: Laurie Culp, Ronald Greer, Jo- anne Hiemstra, Megan Kim- merly, Tracey Sager, . Chris Miles, Bill Bellinger, Janet James, Jane Charlton, James Krantz, David Houck, Debbie} Mellema, Valerie Richard, Cl I Beverley Graham, Georgia McMurtry, David Johnston, | Thorburn, Beverley Wiltshire, Richard Gamble, Sheila Kimmerly, Ellen Lat- imer, Cathy Neal, Nancy Tay- lor, Janet Crawford, Marilyn Forster, Janet Gilson, Sherri Henderson, Jane Krantz, James Bind, Wendy Eismont, - Jan Hodges, Stewart Low, Janet Reimer, Barbara Banfield, Jchn Hall The Scholarship Bar was pre sented to the pupils who main- tained an 80 per cent average V ads atl By. ANNE MASON ST. ALBERT, Alta. (CP)--In his lifeuume, Vital Justin Gran- din was. known and loved throughout Western Canada as "the lousy hishop."' The gentle Roman Catholic missionary, whose virtues were approved in May by the. Vati- can Congregation of Rites, earned the nickname when he slept on the floors of native tents or huts during a three- year into the Mackenzie Valley to organize the vicariate of Athabasca-Mackenzie. The bishop, who died in thir Edmonton suburb in 1902 at the age of 73, will shortly be de- irip Urban Renewal In Calgary May Spur $75 By DON MacLACHLAN t CALGARY (CP)--Land - buy-|," ing "now is under way in the first stage of a $24,500,000 scheme to rip out and replace what city officials refer to with a shudder as "'the blighted area" of downtown Calgary. They hope that by 1975 or 1980, a planner's dream of mod- ern buildings, park and service areas will replace tattered homes and business buildings, scruffy rooming houses and criminal hangouts. The city planning department has estimated the urban re- newal scheme could 'spark a $75,000,000 boom of private and public spending. The whole plan entails major surgery on 31 blocks on the eastern edge of the main downtown business area. The first stage will cover eight blocks, or 38.3 acres, at a cost of about $6,600,000 The eight-block area now is a sordid jumble of industrial and commercial buildings, poor homes, cut + price depgrtment and second hand _ stores, crowded rooming houses, half- hearted attempts at beauty through whitewash. "It's a bad, bad eyesore," Says planning director Al Mar- tin. "It's not the real skid road 'area--we'll get into that later-- but an area of poor people, not necessarily poverty - stricken, just poor," RESIDENTS AGREE Renewal plans set aside one block for commercial use, an- other for housing the aged, an- other for a vocational school and others for school board, cultural, recreational, church and residential use. Some 482 persons live in the Finance Company ROSSLAND ROAD -- Pastor ---- Rey 9:45AM Wed. 8:00 P.M. P Tt Macs ERIE STREET off Simec i) Minister -- Rev. C nior Churct 00 A.M 1:00 A.M Sermor 7:00 P.M FAM 30 pr Prayer 24 Annua 1042 Rossland Road W. Fast of R.H -- LIBRARY TIME 10;00 A.M, +. SUNDAY SCHOOL 11,00 --- "REDEMPTIVE POWER" ayer and Bible Study E FRIENDLY COMMUNITY CHURCH Ip FAMIL HE HRISTIAN - FAMILY Mee Car np Meeting ot Pir A WARM WELCOME AWAITS YOU James, 725-1280 Tomorrow! Reveals the startling signi- ficance behind world news! » with PROPHECIES next 20 years! next after Bloor St.) Monday - Saturday 9:05 - 9:35 P.M, On Lacrosse Nights The World Tomorrow will be heard at 8:30 p.m, M. Bright, 72549872 to 8 yrs orvided: Y SUNDAY SCHOOL Y WORSHIP SERVICE HOME HOUR and Sunday | 10:30 - 11:00 F.m, GOSPE ind off 1350 RADIO | Takes On Giant By THE CANADIAN PRESS SEEKS CONTROL A small finance company, Se- curity Capital Corp. Ltd., has asked its secured noteholders to help it acquire control of a fi-! nancial institution about 10 times larger than itself. In letter to secured noteholders, President Oscar Rechtshaffen said the company has worked out a "bold new program" to| }purchase 51 per cent voting} stock of a company with total assets of more than $50,000,000 He didn't name the company. BUILD TERMINAL Construction of $3,000,000 ter-| minal and docking facilities at Hamilton was announced Thurs-| day by the Hamilton Harbor Commission and Canada Steam- ship Lines. Ltd school WE TILLED In the first years of the 20th jareas Stage of a Million Boom eight-block area and will have be moved, many _ perma- nently, to other areas. Of these, only about 100 have said they will need some assistance. "We conducted interviews at public meetings," explains Mr. Martin. "There was no real op- position to the renewal plan. We're working out details of how we can give assistance to those that need it." The federal government has agreed to pay $3,300,000 and lend the city another $730,000 to help it with the municipal share of $1,300,000. The Alberta gov- ernment has approved a con tribution of $1,980,000. The city y is Suying Jand and hopes to regain about $1,000,000 by re- selling areas for private devel- opment. As well as private and public building, to be completed by 1970, planners want a complete overhaul of. streets, improve- ment of services, at least 3.8 acres of parks and covered pedestrian walkways. COLLECT MORE TAXES Then, biock by block, renewal would cover the 31 blocks About 1,300 persons live in the area and the broken - down homes business buildings give the city tax department a perennial headache. Tax revenue could be 'greatly increased, some officials say tripled, by urban renewal, Rey- enue last year from the area amounted to only $372,000. Social siudies also were car- ried out as planners remapped the first eight blocks and the University of Calgary has ten- tative plans for a wide-ranging study of social problems in the remaining area. Part of the information will be used to solve the problem of what to do with the crumbling red-light, bootlegging and gam- bling neighborhood, of which Mr. Martin says: "I guess we have to iive with it.' Planners propose to move the residents a few blocks farther south (they've been drifting that way for some time) to an| area which would be provided with and offices for ana hostels counselling and social services. The first urban renewal plan is part of a long-range program for the whole downtown area, to be unveiled shortly, designed to meet city requirements into the 1980s. Under business, trial and the plan, residential, government, ind u s- hotel developments wili be grouped in specific and there will be fast transit and treeway travel The first ground will broken within six months, the initial eight-block area, for board administration buildings. Then comes the first six-acre housing de velopment for 200 local citizens be in century, most .of the workers in/and 200 old people from other Canada were male farmers. | districts, | for all subjects during the eel with no one subject averaging below 75 per cent. Peter Ander-) son, Alison Berry, David Car- son, Michael Engel, Douglas Fallow, Greig Hutton, Cathy Shemilt, Pauline Marsh, Tim Eaton, Carolyn Maxymuik, Les- lie Chambers, Marnie Conlon, Neal: Gould, Bill 'Heard, Ann Laughlin, . Alastair Simeson, Paul .Whitsitt, Stephen Bind, Susanne Lajoie, Janice Mun- day, Gordon Phillips, John Campbell, Christy Clark, Ron- ald Greer, Kathy Howard, Harold Graham; Danny Carson, Ricky Clark, David Johnston, Tommy Lang, John Peterson. Softball; Christine Greer, John Peterson, Dianne Sander, Robbie Woods, Arthur Watton, Ken Blakely, Marny Conlon, Ann Laughlin, JoEllen McGil- lis, Susan Fraser, James Krantz, Karen MclIndless, Rich- ard Gamble, Nancy Taylor, Debbie Bellinger, Linda Charl- ton, Cathy Heard, Elizabeth James, Michael Kalnitsky, Jane Krantz, Mark Thompson, David Megan Kimmerly, Cindy Lang, Tracey Sager. ; School Letters: The senior) letter is awarded to pupils of| Grade 8 at the end of June and! a Junior Letter is presented to the pupils of Grade 6 at the same time, Recipients of the senior school letter for this year are: Greig Hutton, Sheila Kim- This was en-|pawne Warner, Jimmy Young,|merly, Ellen Latimer, Cathy titled, "What Has God's King-| Larry Banks, David Kimmerly,|Neal, Nancy. Taylor, Cheryl Benks, David Houghton,|Banks, David Houghton. Junior) Richard school letter: Barbara. Banfield, | Alison Berry, David Carson, Michael Engel, Wendy Ewart, Jan Hodges, Susan Ramshaw. Sports Bars were presented to winning teams of the school's House Leagues: Football: Brian Green, Brian Roberts, Donnie Brooks, T Scero, George Pernokes, Russell, Danny Carson, Kindratiuk, Robbie Paul Greenway, Mark son, Jim Nicholson. Bill Thomp- Whitsitt, Alison. Berry,.lames- Bind, Debra Demeter, Kathy| Ireland, Randy Anderson, Der nis Flintoff, Lloyd Metcalf, Jeff| Paterson, Grant Whittington,| Ricky Sheehey, Greg Smith, Arny Goldman, Kathy McNab, Dianne Newman, Tom _ Scero, | John Hall, Doug Brooks, George Pernokes, Jay Schwarz,| Cathy Shemilt. Hockey: David McNab, Tasso} Pernokes, Doug Rollo, Barbara! Banfield, Karen Burk, Peter |Clarke, Deborah Payton, Lu- 'anne Peleshok, James Bind, David Carson, Michael Engel, Marilyn Greer, Kathy Ireland, Bryan Jackson, Wendy Liston, Cathy Neal, Debbie Bellinger,' Paul Greenway, Duncan Me- Dougall, Jim Nicholson, Bill John Reimer, Paul Kent, Nancy Rob- Hagerman, Carolyn McCartney, inson, David Mouck Scott 7 : eal' en "é f 1 Motschen- Woods, | Brinning, Marny Conlon, Cindy} Ann Laughiin, Liann Motschen Clement, Lanny Rusnell, Bobby Gilson, Christine Greér, Lorne Simeson, John Russell, can Recognizes Work Of Northwest Missionary Soccer: Clare Allingham, Steve Bird, Tasso Pernokes, Basketball: Gary Lyon, Rich pure ' -- ard Downey, David Kimmerly, Jim Krantz, Tom Scero, David Whitsitt, Bob Hutton, David) Carson, Stewart Low, Bradley} Jackson, Stephen Kascor, Gary} Anderson, Ricky Kuchma, Doug Rollo. Volleyball: Pauline Marsh,! Beverley McMurtry, Debra De-| clared venerable by papal de- meter, Kathy Ireland, Cathy cree. If two miracles can be Neal, Cathy Heard, Sherri Hen- officially credited to him, he derson, Carolyn McCartney, may be beatified. Beverly Wiltshire. Born into a large, poor family' Track and Field: Ruth Neal, in the French village of St. Linda Sanders, John Dienst- Pierre-sur Orthe, Bishop Gran-huber, John Banfield, Darlene din never enjoyed good health Gamble, Joanne Hiemstra, Jim from his childhood although he Young, Frank Diensthuber, grew to a height of six-foot-two, Marny Conlon, Christine Kolod-| and was ruggedly built. ziejezak, Jeff Keenan, Nick! e He joined the Oblate Mission- Janetos, Yvonne Hiemstra, aries of Mary Immaculate and|Cindy Clement, Tom Scero,| was ordained at Marseille in| David Kimmerly, Kathy Ire- 1854. He arrived at St. Boni-|land, Janice Brooks, Michael face, Man., a few months later| Engel, Ray mond McMullen,| to. minister to a diocese that Lindsay Hagerman, Susan| stretched from the Arctic to the Ramshaw, John Neal, Stewart! United States border and from!!.ow, Dianne Newman, Linda the Lakehead to the Rockies. oe bang Rick Kuchma, Arthur For the next half century, Vatton, Christine Greer, Janet Bishop Grandin travelled cease- semen Richard Gamble, lessly, establishing missions, are geo Cathy Neal, schools and hospitals and aren Burk, James Bind, Bill spe : |Reimer, Judy Gilson, Eleanor Se ictig to the Indians 'and) snderson, Wayne Young, David Johnston, Dianne Sander, Doug OFTEN SLEPT OUTDOORS Rollo, 'Tasso Pernokes, Jane Johnston, 4 fils : "You just don't realize what Brouke 'on doses ae it was like," says Rev. Emile ley Blakely, Steve Bird, David Tardif, archivist of the order. Piney, Sherri Henderson, Deb- The most comfortable modes? pie ' of travel were by primitive Red Tony Bellinger, Paul Roberts, River cart, on horseback or by dogsled. But some journeys of hundreds of miles were on foot, Young, Leslie Chambers, Jan Hodges, Marilyn Forster, Danny Scorgie, Richard Downey. or by snowshoes in winter, with garety, Patrol: Cathy Neal,| a native guide. ; {Gary Shiels, John Neal, Lind- If no shelter was available, say Hagerman, Luanne Pele- they would sleep in the bush orjshok, Janet Gilson, Wendy a snowbank, wrapped tightly in fewart, Debbie Payton, Chris- animal skins. Canoes were used tine Hudson, Beverley wWilt- where possible but the frail shire, Jane Krantz, Barbara J 18 OSHAWA TIMES, Saturday, July 9, 1988 7 Lesley Cook, Dianne san-| Heard, Ann Laughlin, Cathy |Moore, Valerie Richard, Val- Attendance: Richard Graham,/erie Scilley, Richard Gamble, John Peterson, Beverley Wilt-|Greig Hutton, Sheila Kimmerly, Larry; Ellen Latimer, Cathy Neal, Jay Darlene|Schwarz, Nancy Taylor, Bill Barber, Debbic Bellinger, Sev. erley Blakely, Linda Chariton, Janet Crawford, Marilyn Fore ster, Janet. Gilson, Harold Gra- ham, Lindsay Hagerman, Cathy Heard, Elizabeth James, Jane Krantz, Elizabeth Laugh- lin, Carolyn McCartney, Dun- can McDougall, Allan Mouck, Jim pag ~ vot Megan Kimmerly, Karen Mot-|Chris Salmers, Cathy Shémilt, dchapbacer, Greig Hutton,| Debra Demeter, Wendy Ewart, Sheila Kimmerly, Ellen Lat-)Janet Fallow, Marilyn Greer, imer, Janet Crawford, Linda) Yvonne Heimstra, Jan Hodgés, Charlton, Janet Gilson, Harold Susan Ramshaw, Janet Reimer, Graham, Lindsay Hagerman,|Karen Schoenau, Barbara Ban- Bob Hutton, Elizabeth James,| field, Chery! Banks, Carol Dain: Michaet~KaTHitsky, Jane ard; Judy Giison, Wendy Gould, Krantz, Carolyn MeCartney,| David Houghton, Beverley Me- Cathy Shemilt, Mark Thomp-/Murtry, Richard Payton, son, . Alison Berry, Michael! Naomi Platt, Paul Roberts. Engel, Wendy Ewart, Paul Yearbook: Richard Gamble, Graham, Robbie Graper, Mari-| Beverly. McMurtry, Gary An- lyn Greer, Yvonne Hiemstra,|derson, Marilyn Banfield, David David Horne, Susan Ramshaw,| Houghton, Doug Fallow, Gréig Barbara Banfield, Karen|Hutton,-Sheila Kimmerly, Ellen Burk, Peter Falik, Sue Graper,|Latimer, Cathy Neal, Jay Lorne Lean, Deborah Young,|Schwarz, Nancy Taylor, Gall Marilyn Banfield, Cheryl| Walmsley, Beverly Wiltshire, Banks, Steve Bird, Carol Dain-|Christine Greer. ard, Bruce Graham, David) yanny Hislop Prize Winners: Houghton, Kathy Janetos, Jane representing the highest aver- Johnston, Pat Kerry, Naomi age mark in each of the Grade Platt, John Russell 8 classes Cheryl Banks, Orchestra: David Kimmerly, Richard Gamble. Larry Banks, Tim Eaton, Home and School Plaque for Terry Clark, Brian Warner, the highest average marks com- Jeffery Lang, Kathy Ireland, pleting the Junior and Inter- Janet Crawford, Lindsay) mediate School -- Junior: Peter Anderson and Alison Berry. Senior; Chery] Banks and Rich- ard Gamble. Physical Education Plaque for winning event in annual public school field day at Alex. andra Park -- Jane Johnston. shire, Tony Young, Banks, Tim Eaton, Giahaii, David RKiimimeily, Sherri Lott, Roger Pym, Leslie Chambers,: Ann Laughlin, Jeff Rogers, Valerie Scilley, Karen Shemilt, Paul Whitsitt, Grant Whittington, Jimmy Young, Janice Brooks, Jane Charlton, Ken Chapman, Jeff Clarke, James Krantz, Nancy Norwick, Nancy Robinson, Ron Greer, Cathy Shemilt, Dawne Warner, bacher, JoEllen McGillis Choir: Beverley Wiltshire, Debbie Banfield, Jane Makar- chuk, Leslie Chambers, Laurie MRS, ALINE HAIME OF OTTAWA, ONT. y boise (WILL You BE, THE NEXT BiG WINNER IN OUR EXCITING. CONTEST ? SEE DETAILS IN CARTONS OF craft frequently capsized in Banfield, Sheila Kimmerly, rough water, Oratory: Debbie Mooney,| At 28, when he had been in Georgia 'Thorburn, Peter Vice. | the field three years, the young Beverley Wiltshire, Tony! missionary was created bishop Young " Sherri Lott Carolyn| of Satala and coadjutor to the yayymuik, Paul Whiisitt How-| bishop of St. Boniface. ard Kalnitsky, Lindsay Hager- When the news reached him man, Michael Kalnitsky, David by slow prairie mail six months Whitsitt, Alison Berry, Wendy later, he was overwhelmed and jawart Barbara Banfield. David wrote his superiors that he was Houghton. unworthy of the honor. But he Writing: Marily was ordered back to Marseille hap Bina: Sanat Raat and consecrated in 1859. Two)? 2™es Sedsiakes mm af Ame : ; ;,|Cathy Neal, Nancy Taylor, years later, he began his trip Debbie Bellinger, Sherri Hen. into the Mackenzie and became eubeLg gea at ge c Santi je A ; derson, Christy Clark, Cathy Veveaue pouilleux -- the hishop Howard HUT. Hallinwet Jane! covered with vermin, hi dad ger, 7 ; Charlton Leslie Chambers In 1871 he was created bishop . : > He | of St. Albert, responsible for Al-|Datlene Graham, Carlyn Maxy Banfield, oR Sprit GOLDEN ORANGE a-Cola", "Sprite" and "Fanta" are registered trade marks which identity the products of CocaCate Lap Authorized bottler of Coca-Cola, Sprite and Fanta under contradd with Coca-Cola Ltd. HAMBLY'S BEVERAGES on ee ee ee iTh hi We Paeanentea berta and much of Saskatche- wan, CONVERTED CHIEFS He encouraged the nomadic Indians and Metis to settle and farm the land and converted some of the hostile Blackfoot tribe, including two chiefs, to Christianity after building the tribe a hospital and three schools, including the first in- dustrial school in the West. The bishop made several trips to France to recruit missiona- ries, church workers and settlers and to raise funds. Many mis- sionaries died by massacre, were drowned in floods or were frozen to death. Supplies were lost in swollen rivers, posts were destroyed by fire and fre- quent crop failures caused food shortages. But the diocese eventually prospered, During Bishop Gran- din's 31 years in St. Albert, he established 30 parishes with priests, 25 missions, two semi- naries, 31 elementary schools, eight boarding schools, five hos- pitals and two orphanages. Fifty-two priests, 24 lay broth- ers and 136 nuns came to the diocese. During the Riel rebellion of 1884-5, the bishop sheltered most of the settlers from nearby Fort Edmonton and Fort Saskatche- wan. St. Albert itself was not attacked, First steps toward Bishop Grandin's canonization weré taken in 1930, 28 years after his death, when a diocesan tribunal appointed by the bishop of Ed- monton found that he practised all the virtues to a heroic de gree, His cause was officially accepted in Rome in 1038. BUILD MORTAR MI BRICKS SHINGLES McL 110 King St. W. 'LAUGHLIN SEWER PIPE WEEPING TILE SHEATHING - COAL AND SUPPLIES LTD. Fast Delivery Service OSHAWA, ONT. : ING SUPPLIES 7) or Suppliers of: FLUE LINING FIBERGLASS INSULATION *" GYPROC LATH HARDWALL LIME PRE-CAST STONE PATIO SLABS AUGHLIN x 723-3481 }

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