Daily Times-Gazette, 8 Jun 1949, p. 3

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Distric Governor Praises W / THE | A {Mr 10t strengthen * OSHAWA DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE WHITBY | Combining The Oshawa Times and Whitby Gazette and Chronicle VOL. 8--No. 133 OSHAWA-WHITBY, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 8, 1949 PAGE THREE Civic and Regimental Band Opens Summer Programs o n Thursday Heads Bankers 4 ro ---- ! The Oshawa Civic and Regimen- tal Band will open its series of summer band concerts at the Mc- Laughlin Band Shell at 8:15 p.m, tomorrow when the band will be as- sisted by the General Motors War Veterans' Pipe Band under the di- rection of Pipe Major Jack Reid. Rev. George Telford will be the master of ceremonies and Ald. R.| D, Humphreys, K.C., who is acting mayor in the "absence of Mayor Michael Starr, will inaugurate this --+the eighth series of summer pro- grams from the band shell. One of Oshawa's outstanding ten- ors, Ken Mayberry, will be the guest soloist. He will be accompanied by Matthew Gouldburn at the piano. The band, under the direction of Bandmaster Jack Broadbent, has prepared an interesting program for the occasion which includes the | overture, "Bohemian Girl", the se- lection, "Zampa" and "Songs of Scotland". | The program to presented by | J. U. BOYER General manager of the Provincial Bank of Canada, who has been elected president of The Canadian | Bankers' Association. A native of | the province of Quebec, he started | his banking career in 1918. Prior | te his appointment as manager of the bank's main office in Montreal, he had served in various positions in Montreal, Ottawa and Windsor. P.C. Youth Holds Rally The Pickering "Township Young | Progressive Conservative Associa- | tion last night held a rally in Ajax | Legion Memorial Hall.. About 300] young voters who packed the hall, heard candidate Frank McCallum and enjoyed a social evening. | Speaking briefly Mr. McCallum | | | (did not make a direct appeal for | personal or party support but asked | the "young people to avoid snap udgment and to examine objec- | ively the platform and record off ntesting parties and candidates. 'Many of you will cast your first, 'ot in this election," he d I strongly recommend a examine carefully the past per-| ances and future planning of | sarties. This is an intelligent | oach to an important act, and gledge, not a motion should *n your decision," he said. Mr. allum voiced his appreciation . e turnout and told his audi- that young peopie's interests » governing of their country have an important bearing future. duced by Gordon Hood, pre- of the Pickering Young Pro- e Conservative Association, n Attersley, Ontario Riding t, told his audience of the ¢. the organization. He e strongly against the in- of socialism, drawing at- mi to the unhappy conditions yermany, Russia and Italy had resulted when their + had accepted socialistic rule it considering the loss of al freedom which was bound low. ie quoted the socialist _d Westwood, who sdid: "Yon the weak if ¢en the strong. You .can- lift the wage roll if you 5 lift the wage roll if you he wage payer down. You establish courage and char- you take away the means of 7e and independence. You do for men permanently hey ought to be able to do mselves." Mr. Attersley com- 4, "It would be a good thing 1 Canadians to beware of who would make the state ae 'over our lives." ite Three 1didates To bor Council 2e three Dominion election ididates in Ontario Riding have en invited to explain their party's bor policy to the monthly meet- g of the Oshawa and District bor Council, next Tuesday, Jupe M. J. Penwick, secretary-treas- er, said today. ! "Arthur Williams, MJP. and | Mank McCallum have already ac- cepted the invitation and will be present," he said. "We want to give each candidate an opportunity to give his views on needed labor le- gislation and industrial relations. "With unemployment increasing we also want to know what the candidates propose be done to help keep the workers fully employed," he continued. "We have invited union mmber; generally to come and hear the candidates." peer, Coming Events @ARDEN TEA, MRS. WOTTONS, 317 Burk Street, 2:30-5 p.m. Thupdey, June 9. Auspices St. George's W. hf (1330) Trombone Solo, { : Soloist Musician Selection--"Songs of Scotland" | we shall continue to drift back to i for parents to spend so much effort the Civic and Regimental Band | and assisting artists is as follows: | March--"The Conqueror" ! . J. Moorhouse Overture--"The Bohemian Girl" | "e +... M. W. Balle, Vocal Solo--(a) - "The Song of | Songs" Lucas & Moya | "Smiling Through" . Arthur A. Pen | Soloist--Mr. K. Mayberry, accom- panied at the piano by Mr. M Gouldburn, Selection--" "ampa" { ( Herold | "The Kangat '00" | H, Mos 5 . Jack Lee! GM.C. War Veterans' Pipe Band | March--"Imperial Echoes" Vocal Solo--(a) "One Alone" i . Sigmund Romberg | (pb) "A Little Bit of Heaven" . Ernest R. Ba Soloist--Mr. K. Mayberry, accom- panied at the piano by Mi. M Gouldburn | Round | Hymn---"St, Catherine" i | Regimental March--"John Peel' God Save The King Sermon Marks 50 Years In The Ministry On Sunday morning at Cedar-| dale United Church an unusually | large congregation heard Rev. G. Crozier of Whitby preach | sermon commemorating the 50th anniversary of his ordination to the | ministry. Ordained in 1899 in Manitoba as a minister of the Presbyterian Church he spent 19 vears in West- ern Canada. Mr. Crozier aeturned tg Ontario and when church union took place in 1925, he became a minister of the United Church of Canada. After Mr. Crozier had related these and . other very interesting things about his past 50 years, he said he knew they would like to know something as to the conclu- | sions to which he had come as a re- sult of his long experience as a minister, i He then went on to say that| when he began his ministering he | did so with the hope that he might be able to do something to bring about a better world. He had found that during the fifty years he had bzen fighting a losing battle. He was sorry to bg pessimistic about the immediate future though he was optimistic about the ultimate triumph of Christianity. As things are today the concentration of people in our cities was making it very easy for people to hide them- selves and go wrong, and very difficult for the church to stem the tide of unrighteousness which is spreading over the world. He was sure that the light of Chist- ian principles was still and would always be the highest possible guide, and that only as we look chistian- ity seriously would we begin to over- come the evil in the world and achieve ultimate victory. What we need more than any- thing else in men and women who "are not always minding first their own concerns and blinding, their couls' eyes to higher things." The truth is that man in taking his own way has made a mess of things in the world,, and unless we realize that God's laws as given in the Sermon on the Mount, are the true basis of true prosperity, pater seis | the dark ages of Paganism. These laws, he said, were not mere opin- ions which may be right or may be wrong, not. maxims which may be observed or neglected, but they are the principles of true prosperity and happiness. The speaker warned young mar- ried couples not to waste opportun- ities given them to train their children while they were young. That opportunity was limited to a few years before they entered their teens. After that the opportunity as a rule was gone, never to come again. It was the height of folley in feeding and clothing their child- ren at the same time forgetting to lead them to the house of God where they would receive the in- struction so necessary for their A. satroni | Ok | said, | spent {teaching than to take up our papers | {and read of wars, !situation at home. This he said wi | ago, was discovered by archaeolo- Newly Installed Officers Of The Oshawa Junior Chamber 7 - At its closing dinner meeting of the year at Adelaide House on Monday | night, the recently elected officers of the Oshawa Junior Chamber of Commerce were installed. The new executive of the jaycees is, left to 'Chamber Asks 'Co-Operation Get Vote Out contribution to the cam- go right: b Behm, vice-president; Dr. president, and Hayward Murdoch, treasurer; future happiness. Family worship in the home was a great blessing to the home. "From scenes like these d Scotia's grandeur sprang' and Canada would be a great and pros- perous -country if the teachings of Jesus Christ were but given a chance | to change the direction in which many young people were drifting {Bernard Shaw was right when he| 4 Jud 'Christianity has been found B2.€ Ro on the ore on Mom [difficult and has not been tried") Commerce has circularized its 3 lof g hat in a nut-shell explains out y an 3 . . ie hb present prediciment {members with copies of Section 47! an associate company of the Hunt- v Act Mr. Crozier said nothing was so! |of the Dominion Elections ting Aviati on Group. announces | discouraging t minister who had! which sets forth the obligations of ! {Gat nh has appoint ed 3g 20 2 a hin C and} {employers as regards providing time | ! preagang qd/6f for their employees to enable | new Hiller helic crimes, murders {them to cast their ballots i at Palo Alto, Calif fi i "1 The section reads as follows: i v Ap This situation he | ! Helicopters Inc. warned must be 'changed: but ag] 1) Every employee who Engineer Bill iri 5 Re Laa Re : Y J jguali fied elector shall, while the aj. is ande ye he ehipen in She many polls are open on polling day at Ainow at the IMB S CN Overseas missions wa {Dominion Election, have three con-| plant 'ang will r a Ea apparently unable to change the] ie hours Tor the purpose of pla t, ar ill return fully qualifiec his vote: and if the hours | [0 SuPervise maintenance of the em Yoviment d not all ">| new - machines. Two demonstrator I irl 4 ty Jol Y aircraft have been ordered. with i. Sk 'S, | delivery of the first one to Oshawa expected this month. s employer shall allow him such! The Hiller machine features sim- Local Firm 'To Distribute 'Helicopter G. R. Wooll, general manager Weston Aircraft Limited, O sits has been and drunkenness. is a |be done when church members| {take their religion seriously and be- {gin to cooperate to fight all unright- eousness at home and abroad. At the conclusion of his address, Mr. Crozier led the congregation in the celebration of the {additional time for voting as may | be neces y to provide - the said Nlihree consecutive hours; no em-! . Lord's | plover shall make any deduction | obligation |Supper. In a few closing remarks | fiom the pay of any such employee | employee { he observed how significant was| hours, : 4 nor * impose upon or exact from him the wisdom of Jesus in emphasiz- lay penalty by reason of absence !open, in which to vote. It is to be ing the importance of the new world | L foo his work during such con-|noted that one of the three community, the Kingdom of God, ecutive hours; the additional time |secutive hours may be the and not just individual personal sal- | ro). voting above referred tp shall hour. The hours in which the vation. ; {be granted at the convenience of {will be open, according to A good friend of Cedardale. Mr.|ihe employer. * Dominion Elections Act, are from Crozier is always assured of a| (2) (This subsection applies to|8 am. to 6 p.m. Standard Time. ie warm welcome and the congrega-|employees of Railway Companies). '9 am. to 7 p.m. Daylight Savin tion joins with the community in| (3) Any employer who, directly | Therefore, if an employee's reat wishing him and Mrs. Crozier con- or indirectly refuses, or by intimi- hours end at 4 o'clock tinued good health and happiness. | dation, undue influence, or in any |Saving), then the employer { other way, interferes with the] _|granting to any elector in his em- {On the. other hand, Lullingstone, Kent, England -- ploy, of the consecutive hours for hours end at 5:30 p.m. (D.S.) then (CP)--The imprint of a child's!yoting, as in this section provided, {the employer would have footstep, believed made 2,000 vears |is guilty of an illegal practice and |the employee one and that the consecutive is has ensure three fo poll 2,000-YEAR-OLD FOOTPRIN T him and one- as would be obliged to pay jusual wages for this one the employer's half hours. 1] gists in the grounds of Lullingstone |ishable on summary Castle. The area once was a Ro- |in this Act provided. man villa, | © As will be 'seen, conviction HON. PAUL MARTIN Minister of National Health and Welfare» Oshawa Collegiate 8:30 p.m. Don 8 Douglas Langmaid, past president. | plified de. Canada p 'a prize | an | Entries close June during the hours the poll is | con- | noon. the | i Daylight | would ! not have to grant him any time off. | if the regular | to allow | one-half | | of an offence against this Act pun- | hours off work, i.e. from 4 pm., and | his | ¢ 'nd oon, wn, Hare, first president; Jim Photo by Campbell's Studio 1 'and increased s red with other ers. It will ce idifion to feature 1 ead control st cont r is expected to sell in for just less than '$25,000 of spare parts and well- ry two the pilot. the self- ick rol ile cost accessories Al ft is fully equipped fielicopter mainte 4 uccessfully main 11 M47 operated by Ke Limited for more than ston the B two years. $1,000 PRIZE June §--(CP)- nw 1atic group with the performance in a three tlie Halifax bicen-tem festival Aug. 29-31 will be of $1,000, it was a The competi productions * theatre, with a cast than seven chara 30 and all Canada Tuesday must use open-ail more group: of rot > groups In vice- | The ama- | awarded | nounced ! € ork of Oshawa Lions Club el Slate of Officers For Ensuing Year Chosen Last Night as Wolfe M. Miller succeeds John Borrowdale presi- | dent of the Oshawa Lions Club while Bill Williams was elec- ited first Vice-President. Edward Bond was selected as the second Vice-President and Robert Brown third Vice- President. George Hood will resume his office as treasurer fand Stanley Turner will accept: the office of secretary for his second term. Directors for two years are William Hutch- (ison and Raymond Greentree while Gene Gorman will serve for one year. Robert Handzuk will perform the duties of {Tail Twister while Robert 'McPhee named Lion | Tamer. The election was held last | in the Blue Room of Hotel Genosha with 28 members and several guests {in attendance. Present at the ses- sion was District Governor Stanley A. Darling from Peterborough whe paid his annual visit to the club. Mr. Borrowdale will act on executive as past president of the club, Wuen requested to serve in the capacity of President for a second term Mr. Borrowdale de- clined, saying that his civic posi- tion would not allow him to devote the necessary time to the office Mr. Borrowdale was highly praised by the district governor for his hard work in developing the group into a tiue Lions Club. He | congratulated the members of the six-month-old organization on their fine effort in founding the chari- table fund. Present Golden Key In retiring from his position as president, Mr. Borrowdale was pre- sented with a golden key bv the district governor who also bestowed the honor emblem on the new pre- sident, Mr. Miller. ! The crest is considered one of the highest honors to be given any member of the international or- 1. ~Mr. Darling pointed Oshawa Lions Club the fastest organized that now! is was as Lions President the WOLFE HI. MILLER Who was last night elected presi= dent of the Oshawa Lions Club. He succeeds John Borrowdale, - first president of the ¢lub when it was the organized last fall clubs roughout Lions wi 1 members ver 0 Mr. Darling told to pron.ote good ci tizenshi p amongst gathering The di the Lions C service and con itse: governor s being the ¢ the 39 was his the club has proven powerful in promot- for individuals Lions promote wimnming pools, and summer name of Lions ry stated emphasiz= the neces= ve projec longest tion that the most We 1fare need it One Lions club located in Jancroft district, with a little than 1.000 persons, built a arena i n six months le the governor swrengrtl > speak of aidir wao the more $10.000 This ased aircraft, create X le sire large pens 1it Y plit an above | 1081= the people, can build nations to develop next door suitable for | they want", he speaker cters. |S dra- | are elig- | | of Aid For Delinguents The present interest in a number clubs throughout the district is LIONS OFFI (Continued on 498 SIMCOE SOUTH South School Opp. Simcoe ...Continues This Week ONLY! ... 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