Daily Times-Gazette, 22 Jan 1953, p. 3

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NEW CADILLAC FEATURES ADDED ATTRACTION 1953 Cadillac Coupe de Ville is one of the extensive line of Cadil- lac cars which is formerly an- nounced today, Cadillac en- gineers achiéve increased fuel economy plus added acceleration and performance through their 210 horsepower engine for 1953. A new8.25 to 1'compression ratio, high valve lifts, a new 12-volt electrical system and a low 3.07 1 rear axle ratio combine to deliver 'hew efficiency and driv- ing satisfaction. Air conditioping heads a list of features ch are optional at extra cost. New Cadillacs Mark 'Second Half Century {With the introduction today of the from almost all outside noises) throughout | The combination of quiet engine 1 1953 Cadillac models , Canada, Cadillac celebrates the be- | performance and the new insula- ! ginning of its second half - century [tion makes the ride in the 1953 : of car building. Cadillac as close to silence as the ! The most striking of many' new | | present science of motor car con- { trends revealed ip the 1953 Cadillac : are: Further advancement of the ! ¥ high compressiort V-8 engine to pro- . vide more effective and economical "use of fuel; greater reserve en- ¥ gine power that gives new and ; smoother performance; instantane- j ous power response and complete ease of handling providing en- ! hanced driving pleasure; proto- type development, for mobile appli- cation, of many of the most modern home - type comforts and conveni- ences. Cadillac engineers American in character. The , most striking advancement is displayed in the El Dorado Convertible, the newly created model making its debut in the 1953 line, This car combines a new design with those elements of structure, size and per- formance to which Canadian motor- i ists are traditionally, accustomed. The digtincitve El Dorade model will be produced in limited quantity during 1953. GREATER RESERVE POWER All 1953 Cadillacs are powered by a new 210 horsepower, high compression V-8 engine. This fur. ther development by Cadillac en- gineers is said to make it possible to convert even greater reserve power into economy and smooth- ness of operation. In the new i engine for 1953, compression ratio hag been moved up to 8.25:1 and a new high - lift valve system in- creases -the volume of charge to the cylinders. Additional fuel econ- omy is gained by the reduction of the rear axle gear ratio. Another outstanding feature claimed for the 1953 Cadillac ig extreme, quietness of operation, Extensive use of a new body and hood insulation shields the interior |2 COMING EVENTS ---- ------------ 3 bo ing that the new styling is entirely North | | struction can achieve, according to Cadillac engineers. Brake power has been increased for 1953, with 12 inch drums on all wheels. A new 12 volt electrical system designed for 1953 replaces the 6° volt system long standard on Amer- ican passenger cars. While provid- ing improved engine performance, quicker and easier cold weather starting and greater battery life, the 12 volt system generously serves the many electrical acces- sories. Full emphasis has been given to comfort within the car. New luxuri- ous interiors are beautifully trim- med in new fabrics, AIR CONDITIONING OPTIONAL Optional is the new Cadillac air conditioning, which provides the passenger with fresh dust - free atmosphere, cooled as desired. Even in the hottest weather this system immediately produces =a cool, comfortable interior atmos- phere. With this system the car may be operated through the warm months of the year with the win- dows closed, in fresh - air comfort at the desired temperature and without the noises' which usually accompany open - windbw driving. In cool weather, fresh heated air is provided evenly throughout the car by the new Cadillac dual heating system. Wheel appearance is accented in 1953 with new chrome. wheel discs. For added distinction chrome wire wheels and chrome spoke discs are available at the customer's option. Cadillac's 1953 line, in addition to the El Dorado Cpnvertible, is offered in seven body styles: In the series 62 -- the Hardtop Coupe, pe de Ville, Convertible Coupe Sedan; in Series 60 Special -- the superb Fleetwood 60 Special Sedan; and in the Series 75 -- the luxurious Eight Passenger and Ime perial Sedans. 12TH OSHAWA SCOUT TROOP ARE holding a euchre party on Friday, Jan. 23, Harmony Public School. 8:15 o'cloek. (7b) RUMMAGE SALE, ATHOL ST. SCOUT Hall, 2 o'clock Friday, January 23. (18a) RUMMAGE SALE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 23, at 2 o'clock, Simcoe Street United + Church basement. (18a) BRITISH-ISRAEL MEETING, ORANGE Temple, 15 Bruce i Sunday, January 25, 3 o'clock. Speak: Mr, M. G. Hof- stetter, B.A. Subject: "A Creative Gos- pel". - Everyone welcome. (Jan22,24) ROBBERS GET RICH HAUL LAHORE, India (Reuters)-- Three masked and armed men forced the Begum Habibullah Asad to hand over keys to a safe eon- taining $145,600 after they entered her home Tuesday night. Her hus- band, a Punjab government offi- cial, slept undisturbed in the next room. The money had been drawn from a bank earlier to buy jewelry. Classified Ads are sure to pay. Phone 'The Times with yours today. Cpl. John Tate, Treasurer; DINNER SPEAKER Dr. Lois Scott - Thomas, & teacher on the staff of the Ryer- son Institute of Technology, To- ronto, who® will be the guest 'speaker to the toast to '""The Immortal Memory" at the Burns' Night dinner of the St. Andrew's Club of Oshawa in thé Masonic Temple on Saturday. TANK TRACKS At a meeting held last week in the Trooper's Canteen the follow- ing Canteen committee was elect- ed to head-up the organization for the coming year: Cpl. F. G. Flem- ing, Pres.; Cpl. C, G. Bould, Vice- Pres.; Cpl. G. Reynard, 2 Vice- Pres.; Cpl. T. Collis, Secretary; and Cpl. W. Hurst as Chairman of the Entertainment Committee. Plans are pretty well lined up for the forthcoming visit of the On- tario Sergeants' Mess visit to the Mess at the Queen's York Rangers on 31st January, SSM Jonassen re- ports. Any further information will come through the Mess Committee. Ajax is receiving considerable at- tention 'at the moment from SSM Costello and Sgt. Lamb. .Plans are being made now to. enlarge our re- cruiv advertising program to "in- clude this town and signs are be- ing made to erect at the Ajax Armories. A recruiting team ex- pects to be in Ajax on Saturday 7th February. The Commanding Officer has or- dered a formal mess dinner to be held on 6th February in the Offi- cers' Mess "at which the guest speaker will be Mr. Paul Davoud. Further information about time, ete., from the Mess Committee. A Regimental dance is being planned for early in March and a Story of Noan T. 1 Tl... i neice of 4 Gin Ed Midura, Don Ankerburg, and Marv Honory featured the Wednes-~ day night World Vision Rally at Simcoe Street United Church. Ed Midura, speaker of the even- ing, told how Noah pleaded with the people to come into the ark. They refused. Noah entered the ark and God shut the door. The people would not listen to this fanatic named Noah until the flood began to rise. Then they were ready to listen, but God said "My spirit shall not always strive with men" Gen. 6:3. With this in mind, Mr. Midura asked the people to accept Jesus now while God will still have us. Don Ankerburg acted as master of ceremonies and also gave a challenge concerning the evangel- izing of the world with a special emphasis of Europe. A Negro tenor soloist by the name of Marv Honory was used by God to proclaim the Gospel in music. Marv trained for opera, but since his conversion, he has been singing for the glory of God and not for his own glory. Beautifully sung were all three of his num- bers, "Down from His Glory,' "His Eye is on the Sparrow," and "Love of God." Don't forget that Thursday night is Redd Harper Night! HAYDON Turkey Supper Helps Repairs MRS. HILDA CROSSMAN Correspondent HAYDON -- About 70 attended the turkey supper which was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ar- thur Read on Saturday evening. After supper they were asked to go across the road to the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jack Potts where the evening was spent playing cards. Proceeds of the gathering was for repairs for our church. When ready for home' everybody had to drive or walk very carefully as it had rained and frozen and the roasd were covered with ice. This Friday evening, the National Film Board is showing its films in the school house at 8 o'clock. On Sunday evening, January 25, a Fellowship meeting will be held at the Tyrone Church, * Mr, and Mrs. Harold Gay, Osh- awa, were recent visitors at Charlie Gauard's. * Mr. and Mrs. Wm, Corrigan, To- ronto, spent the weekend with Mr. and s. C. Rankine and Margot. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Walker, Oshawa, visited at Mr. J, Walker's. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Rundle, Bow- manville, visited, Mr. and Mrs, A. Bell and family on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs. Doug Colbary and son spent the weekend with Mr, and Mrs. Wilbur Blackburn, Martin and Cameron Olesen, Osh- awa, visited at their home on Sun- day. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Ashton at- tended tite wedding anniversary of Mrs. Ashton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Wm, McLaughlin, at Burke ton, on Saturday night. Wilbert' Mark, having been in poor health, has been in Bowman- ville Memorial Hospital for several weeks. He was taken to Graven- hurst Sanitarium on Monday. We hope his health will soon be im- proved. FOR THE LATEST NEWS on what's available in rentals, mer- chandise, jobs, read The Times- Gazette Classified ads regularly! Committee with members from each of the Regimental Messes will be set up in the near future. The dance will be held in Armories which, we hope, will be suitably decerated for the occasion. Further information on this affair later. THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE | OSHAWA ~ The { G 7iwice h Se Gila Whitty G Gaszeiie and Chronicle SX TY YI TIIRY WIllADX VOL. 12--No. 18 , OSHAWA-WHITBY, THURSDAY, JANUARY 22, 1953 PAGE THREE Violinist And Pianist Noisy Children Spoil Lecture There were two kinds of wild life in the auditorium of the Osh- awa CCI last night. On the screen, in a technicolor film, were well- behaved insects, reptiles and birds. The -other kind of wild life was in the auditorium gallery where doz- ens of Oshawa school children shouted, sang and fought while an Audubon Society lecturer attempt-| ell to describe life in Mexfco. Ignoring an appeal from H. E. Murphy, principal of the CCI, to "'pipe down'"' the youngsters made the screen tour miserable for the many adults in attendance. There were no school teachers in the gallery to maintain order among the gangs of 12-year-olds. Indignant people, who had paid 50 cents admission, lodged complaints. The lecture was one in a winter series presented by the Audubon Screen Tours and sponsored by the | local Board of Education. Fran William Hall, of Minnesota, showed the movie "South of Siesta Land" that he and his wife made during two summer trips to Mex- ico. Last year Mr. Hall visited Oshawa to show a film on the Uni- ted States. He was introduced to last night's restless audience by Mr. Murphy who has been studying Mr. Hall's films to aid his hobby of photog- raphy. "Mexico is a very different and very foreign country although it |is rt of this continent" explain- ed Mr. Hall. Few people in the areas away irom the Pan-Ameri- can highway spoke English. In a slow, leisurely tour suth, | Mr. Hall showed magnificent views {of mighty mountains, churches which appear in all aspects of Mexican life, the poor beasts of burden known as burros and a few shots of a lively bullfight. Taking his exploring camera in- [to little-visited parts of Mexico Mr. [Hall captured many shots of +a teeming insect life. On the screen were flashed close-ups of tarantula spiders, only a few of which are Elegant and ancient Aztec and LECTURE I (Continued on Page 5) Calvary Baptist Has Most Successful Year in History Calvary Baptist Church is this year celebrating its Silver Jubilee Special services on Sunday, Feb- ruary 1, and a congregational sup- per on Monday, February 2, will mark the occasion. At the church's 25th annual busi- ness meeting held last evening an- other very successful year in the church's history was reflected in the annual reports covering all de- partments of the work.o Under the devoted and able leadership of the pastor, Rev. R. W. Wighton, FRGS, the church has gone forward and all of the public services are exceptionally well at- tended. Membership has increased, financial receints are at an all time high figure, and spiritual results are evidenced. regularly through the ministry of preaching and per- sonal testimony. Since its incep- tion, Calvary church has always had a strong missionary emphasis, 'and at the present time it is di- rectly interested in eighteen mis- sionaries, eleven of whom are members of the church. MEMBERSHIP 271 The report of the Church Clerk showed total membership at De- cember 31, 1952 as 271, an increase of 11 over a year ago. Twenty- one new members have been add- ed to the rell during the year and ten removed from membership, of whom two were taken by death. During the year there were 20 baptisms. CHURCH RAISED $29,600 The report of the Church Treas- urer, George C, Norman, showed total receipts handled by the Gen- eral Treasurer of $27,012.01, This amount was divided as follows: | General Fund $10,283.58, Mission- ary Fund $10,920.66, Building Fund $5,807.77. In addition to the funds handled by the General Treasurer, financial reports of other depart- ments added other sums which brought the total givings of the church and all its departments for all purposes up to approximately $29,600. The church buildings are now entirely free of debt and $5,584 is on hand in the building fund as a start toward the cost of a resumption of the church's build- ing program, which includes a new auditorium and Sunday School building. TREASURER THANKED The report of the Board of Man- agement, presented by the Chair- man, W. Simkin, paid a very high tribute to the retiring Tréasurer, George Norman, for his untiring efforts during the past twenty years. The meeting passed a reso- lution of grateful appreciatién to Mr, Norman. Improvements in the interior of the building, the cover- ing of the church annex with insul brick siding, the purchase of two pianos, public address system, etc. was recorded in the Board's re- port. : The Envelope Secretary, Claude Coombes, reported 139 sets of dup- lex envelopes in use during the CALVARY BAPTIST (Continued on Page 14) poisonous, according to Mr. Hall. Please & ad ' Second Recital Well Received Violin artistry and controlled piano technique were glor- iously allied in last night's second recital of the season of- fered by the Canadian Concert Association of Oshawa before a capacity audience in the UAW Hall. The artists were Elie Spivak, violinist and Earle Moss, pianist. MAJOR WORK , The major work of the evening, | presented by Mr. Spivak, for many years the distinguished concert- master of the Toronto Symphony, | was'the Bruck Concerto in G Minor. He was at his best in the brisk and melodic double-stopped pass- ages of the Finale: Allegro Ener- gico. The program began with the! sustained and plaeid line of the | Handel Sonata No. 4 in D Minor, in which he was ably complement- ed by Mr. Moss at the piano. A rewarding program substitu- tion was his playing of the Cour- ante from a Healy Willan sonata instead of a Bach Presto. If Mr. Spivak had ced the fact in his courtly manner people would not have known 'one from the other, as regards the c sical content of the piece. He ol- lowed this with his own arrange- ment of the Bach chorale, "Ich ruf' zu Dich, Herr Jesu Christ", lovely in its simplicity. Mr. Spivak's "Bagatelle", a sprightly bit of nonsense, was toss- ed of by its composer, who fol- lowed it with the Sarasate trans- cription of Chopin's Nocturge in E Flat, Op. 9, .No. 2. Perhaps the finest playing of the evening was reserved for Kreisler's Praeludipm a Allegro, in which the violinist enunciated the broad and noble prelude with suavity and compas- sion. Haled back by the enthusiastic audience, he played the same com- | poser's Siciliano and Rigaudon with | deft precision. 4 | PIANO SELECTIONS | Earle Moss provided a subtly in- tegrated accompaniment for the | foregoing selections, and for: his own part of the program chose Chopin and Liszt. In the Nocturne in B Major and Scherzo in C sharp Minor by the Polish romantic, his pianissinio were feather light, and his dynamic conception of both pieces in-the grand tradition. A certain' hardness of tone was noted in Liszt's Mephisto Waltz, in which the composer was obvious- ly at odds with himself anyway, There seems to be a warring in this piece between the rothantic bombast on which the Abbe made his reputation and foretastes of the Impressionism which was to bur- geon later in the works of Debussy, Ravel, Faure and Scriabin. The pianist showed a thorough grasp of the piano dynamics involv- ed, however, and his subtle sense of program was demonstrated by the choice of Schumann's tender Traumerei for encore. WORLD VISION CRUSADE SIMCOE STREET UNITED CHURCH JANUARY 22 TONIGHT -- - = 24, 7:45 P.M. / REDD HARPER (Mr. Texas in Person) TED ENGSTROM---Japan ond Formosa HAROLD JORDON--Evangelist TOMORROW NIGHT -- JACK COCHRANE--The Irishman KEN ANDERSON--Author PHIL GARVIN--Orgdnist and Pianist EARL DAVIS--Soloist JACK HAMILTON--Dr. Hi-School Bible Clubs RS fos, ge ee BREAKFAST BACON 2 us 75. BLACK TEA THIS WEEK'S LINE-UP.OF~ CHOICE STEAKS BUEHLER'S SIRLOIN, PORTERHOUSE Our Own end LB. 45. ° eC. 3 & CHEESE pg h ® DUTCH LOAF, ® CHICKEN LOAF ® POLISH SAUSAGE Ib. 49* LB. Sliced BOLOGNA By the Piece 1b. 25° Shankless, Smoked PICNIC SHOULDERS Ib. 35¢ 29: SLICED LEAN PEAMEAL ROLLS 2 Ibs. 35° PORK LIVER - 21bs. 39° PORK HOCKS PORK KIDNEYS 21bs. 31° 2 Ibs. 41° FRESH MADE SAUSAGE MEAT SMOKED BACON SQUARES SKINLESS WIENERS SAUERKRAUT FRESHLY GROUND CANADIAN MINCED BEEF -- Ih. To MILD CHEESE - - 1b. 4¥ 69:-F Ib. 49¢ 1b. 29 Ib. 39° 2 Ibs. 21° BUTT PORTION 15. 43¢ - SHANK PORTION Ls. 47. CENTRE CUTS 'und SLICES is. '69¢ HOCKS LB. 25¢

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