* sion chairman Gordon Dean . points to Eniwetok island on a . wall map in his Washington of- + fice after announcing at a dra- ! matic press conference that hy- drogen bomb tests had been suc- MITS 4-BOMB TEST MADE IN US. U.S. Atomic Energy commis- | cessfully completed at the mid- Pacific proving ground. Accord- ing to undocumented reports, the H-bomb explosion was the most devastating man-made blast in the history of the world. Central Press Canadian 50 Special Horses 'Needed For Royalty By ROBERT JONES ' LONDON (AP) -- The Duke of ' Norfolk wants to borrow 50 horses, but not just any horses. They must be bays, because tradition demands {hat the horses which drew the royal carriages in the Coronation procession of the * Queen June 2 must be of reddish- { brown color.. 4 | When he has found them, the 43-year-old duke can cross one more item off the long list on his desk. Plenty of items remain on this .|KEDRON Sunday School Officers Installed by Minister KEDRON -- Mr. and Mrs. M. Walter were Sunday tea guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Pierson of Oshawa. R. J. Luke and Miss Nora Werry spent Friday with their cousins, Mr, and Mrs. J. H. Wright, Misses Annie and Bffa Wright, Arthur Street, Oshawa. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Wood, Mar- lene and Sylvia, visited their cous- ins, Mrs. Berdina Elliott and Miss Freda White, Oshawa, on Friday evening, Mrs. Elliott ind Miss White have recently come to Osh- awa from Port Hope. Mr. and Mrs. H. Crossman, Mr. and Mrs. H. Pascoe were family dinner guests at Mr. and Mrs. Nor- val Crossman's, Oshawa on Satur- day evening. TEACHERS INSTALLED On Sunday last Rev. RB. H. Rick- ard conduct® Installation of Of- ficers and teachers of the Sunday. School. In addition to report pre- viously given Frank Lee will be teacher of the Young People's Class, and Mr. H. Farndale as- sistant, and Mrs. A. Young, pianist. Misses Mavis Tregunna, Jean Fow- ler and Diane Young, Missionary Program committee. Very appro- priately the sermon was on "Cast Your Bread Upon the Waters." On Sunday January 11, the pas- tor gave recognition to the junior congregation members at Colum- bus and at Kedron. We congratu- late Columbus on having 100 per cent attendance of Junior congre- gation present for their service. We wish for happy travelling to Mr. and Mrs. Morley Beath, who are on a "Free Lance" trip to California, and points of interest on their return trip. We regret Miss Fern Ledgett is in hospital. After a week in hospital, Mrs. Mark Hancock hopes to return home soon. Little Jean Hancock has so far escaped the mumos which has caused the recent family The fact that a Roman Catholic should stage manage the biggest trovbles. We extend sympathy to Mr. Nor-|\ man G. Bray, Mrs. M. C. Smith mother, Mrs. M. H. Langmaid, Oshawa, Tuesday. LARGE ATTENDANCE . Attending the funeral of their uncle the late Pavid T. Hepburn, youngest son of the late John Hep- burn and Jane Watson Hepburn, at the Union Cemetery on Wednes- day afternoon were Mr, and Mrs. Roy Hepburn and Mr. Ralph Hep- burn, Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Hepburn and Miss Luella Hepburn, Mr. and Mrs. Merlin Hepburn and Mr, and Mrs. Clarence Vice attened the ser- vice at Uxbridge and the Union Cemetery, Other relatives wr well represented. The late Mrs. David Hepburn, nee Florence Coul- fed, predeceased her husband in Mrs. Gerry Turner, Oshawa, has been spending a few days with her friend Mrs. H. Rose, and family. Mr, and Mrs. H. Crossman and Mrs. H. Pascoe attended the Ruby Wedding celebration honouring Mr. and Mrs, Merwin Mountjoy, Hamp- ton, Thursday evening. Congratula- tions to Mr. and Mrs. Mountjoy. Mrs. M. Woodcock is in hospital for observation. We hope for a speedy return to good health. Stomach flu has been very pre- valent. Mr. and Mrs. A, Wood attended the funeral of the late Mr. Achie Muldrew, at Elizabethville, on Tuesday afternoon. Mr. and Mis. Harvey Pascoe ai- ended a family _atheriug with Mr. and Mrs. Ellis Pascoe, Sun- day for tea, at Brooklin. HOLD CARD BARTY A fair attendance attended the riday evenng. Mrs. Roy Pereman and Mr. Bob Flett were highs for ladies and gents respectively, while consolations went to Mrs. W. Beath and Mr. R. Down. It was decided to hold another in two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. 'David Beath and Mr. and Mrs. H. Werry were in charge of refreshments. Four tables of Lost Heir and four of euchre comprised the party at Maxwell's School on Tuesday evening. Prize for Lost Heir went to Ross E. Lee, and to Mrs. Darling for Euchre. A pleasant social time was enjoyed. The next meeting, the latter part of February, will be a Family Night Event. Par- ticulars later. Executive in charge. Mr. and Mrs. A. H. Murdoch wete Sunday tea guests of her brother, Don Fawcett, at his fra- ternity in Toronto. Not even the oldest resident can remember such a 'winter as this. Leaving out the question of what the climatic conditions may have been on this date, or that, the lack of snow throughout, and the few dips of the thermometer to zero, and practically none below, is most remarkable, What to expect from now on is beyond our ken, but this is the 21 of January and the days are getting longer, and the sun is getting stronger. Also time to March 21 is growing shorter. "Want to buy, sell or trade? A Classified Ad and the deal is made. gard party at Pereman's School on. Catholit Monks Retunto Ancient Bindon LULWORTH, England (Reuters) Roman Catholic monks are to re- turn to ancient Bindon Abbey near this Dorsetshire village, than 400 years after they were ejected by King Henry VIII. The owner of the ruined abbey and the huge estates surrounding it, Lt.-Col. J. W. Weld, a Roman Catholic, is a descendant of the original Weld 'family which has owned Bindon since 1641. He has offered the property to the monks of Ealing Priory, West London, a Benedictine foundation which runs a large Catholic board- ing school. Originally the abbey and mon- astery were owned by the Cis- tercian Order. They had been there since 1172. Henry VIII ordered the dissolution of all English monas- teries in 1536, The monks were turned out, the abbey pillaged, and the monastery destroved. Dom Philip Clarke Novick Mas- ter at Ealing Priory, said '"'we hope eventually to establish a foundation which 'will restore Bin- don Abbey to its former glory." With the abbey goes a 12-acre farm. The foundation will prob- ably be almost self-supporting, like most Benedictine foundations / 'in Britain. J THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, Yanmware 28 1058 ¢ more, SEE THE "ADMIRAL Refrigerators BARONS Priced From $299.9 Feature for feature you'll love. the ADMIRAL REFRIGERATOR. New -- Different + Low Priced. See it soon! TERMS ARRANGED 0 3 RADIO and ELECTRIC PHONE 5-4822 ' i BAR 426 SIMCOE ST. S. Deluxe as can be for 53! religious ceremony of the Church |and Robert N. Bray, London, cn of England doesn't bother him -- the death of Helen (Willmot) Bray, nor does it bother Britons a loving wife and mother, at Len- : don, Ontario, January 1. Mrs. The duke has sole charge of |smith, nee Betty Bray, is a grad- Westminster Abbey until after the |yate of Oshawa General Hospital. Coronation. On Jan. 1 the doors were locked and the massive keys handed to the duke. Even the dean of Westminster cannot enter with- out his permission. The duke -- a reputed multi- millionaire -- lives most of the time with his wife and four daugh- Miss Beryle Mountjoy, London, was home for the weekend. Mr. and Mrs, B. Starr, Oshawa, joined [he family for Sunday tea at Mr. W. L. Mountjoy's: | Mrs. Norman Mooney, Wayne, Betty Ann, Judy and Jimmy Moo- ney spent the week-end with rela- tives at Bancroft. Mrs. E. Mountjoy visited her list, for the duke, as hereditary ear] marshal of England', is master of ceremonies for the whole of the Coronation ceremony. His job takes in royal funerals and weddings as well, but these are comparatively minor compar- ed with the glittering pageantry that surrounds the crowning of a new monarch. tPor this, the duke must decide who will be invited, what they will wear, where they will sit. And check all details of the complicated ceremonial. All problems eventually are re- to him ferred . 1] He" won't have to bother about the actual religious ceremony -- the Archbishop of Canterbury, pri- mate of All England, who per- forms the actual crowning, ar- ranges that. Neither will he have to:worry about the actual decoration, fur- nishing or provision for the pub- lic to see the procession. That's the job of the minister of works, David Eccles, working under warrant from the duke. If he runs up against a particu- larly knotty problem, he probably can find the answer by diving in the family archives. The job has been in the family for nearly 300 years, ever since Charles II gave it to the sixth duke to pass on to his heirs. But you can't run a modern coronation on a blueprint 300 years old, and the duke has already run up against two problems his an- cestors never dreamed of. One was the problem of dress. Impoverished peers breathed a sigh of relief at the duke's edict that they can wear their robes of Parliament and caps of state on the great day if they don't possess 'the plush coronation robes and cor- The ' other problem has been 'whether to televise the actual relig- Jous ceremony in Westminster 'Abbey. . The Coronation Executive Com- mittee, headed by the duke, drew 'howls of rage from television own- .ers when it announced cameras would be switched off during the «ceremony. So great was the outcry 'that the committee finally lifted its ban on televising the crowning % permit the first TV coverage of 'an actual coronation. © Only the most religious part of the ceremony -- the anointing with + holy oil, the communion prayers FREEZER mad the administration of the sac- DRAWER Po ol PE ia | problem -- the part to CT ? \ at played by the Duke of Edinburgh--| ROOM FOR EE SUL IN may be left for the Queen to solve. TALL BU! R * Bernard Marmaduke Fitzalan.| BOTTLES ; Kecree Howard, 16th Duke of Norfolk, Earl | = ) of Arundel, Baron Maltrayers, Earl HOLDS ANY of Surrey, Baron Fitz Alan and SIZE OR Baron Herries is a member of one SHAPE OF of Britain's most prominent Roman Foop | Catholic families. ters in historic Arundel Castle in southern England. 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