AJAX & DISTRICT NEWS John Mills, Representative -- Phone Ajax 426 gos AJAX WEDDING AT HOLY TRINITY Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Neil Tait are shown signing the register in the vetry of Church of the Holy Trinity, Ajax, following their marriage last Saturday, Mrs. Tait, formerly Shirley Elsie Pep- per, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert Pepper of Ajax and Mr. Tait is the son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Tait of Simcoe, Ontario. Rev. J. E. Harvey, rector of the thurch, performed the marriage ceremony. Photo by John Mills. Shirley Pepper Married in Ajax AJAX -- The Church of the Holy Trinity was the scene of a very retty wedding on Saturday, Octo- pre 10, when Miss Shirley Elsie Pepper became the bride of Mr. Cecil Ncil Tait. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. Pep- per, Ajax, and the groom is son of Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Tait of Simcoe, Ontario. White chrysanthemums on the al- tar and baskets of bronze and gold mums in the chancel made a lovely setting for the ceremony at which the Rev. T. E. Harvey, rector of the church officiated. Given in marriage by her father, the bride wore an ankle-length gown of gardenia white nylon net and chantilly lace over taffeta. The bouffant skirt was topped with a fitted strapless bodice and a jacket of matching Chantilly lace; button- ed to the throat, with long fitted sleeves ending in lily points over the hands. A coronet of matching nylon net held her finger-tip circu- lar veil of nylon net, bordered with chantilly lace. She carried a bou- quet of red roses and white stephan- otis and wore a single strand of pearls, a gift of the groom. Her attendants, Mrs. Donald Pep- per, sister-in-law of the bride, as matron of honor, Miss Gwendolyn Pepper, sister of the bride, and Miss Donna Ariss, the bride's cou- sin, as bridesmaids, wore identical gowns of net and lace in shades of pink orchid, deep mauve, and pale man, Mr. David Ariss, Niagara Falls, Ontario; Mr. and Mrs. Frank Corsars, Niagara Falls, New York; Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Ariss, Rosseau; Mrs. E. Ridge, Mrs. John Broad- bent, Mrs. R. Vickery, Oshawa; Mrs. Edith Tait, Miss Jean Tait, Mr. Clifford Cribbie, Parry Sound; Miss Catherine Tait, Toronto. Bridal Shower For Ajax Girl AJAX--Mrs. Harvey Ariss and Miss Donna Ariss were hostess to a group of ladies who met at their home on Durham Street recently to honor Miss Shirley Pepper with a bridal shower. On her arrival the guest of honor was presented with a red ..se cor- sage. In the large living room, love- ly with autumn flowers, was a de- corated bridal chair, to which the bride-elect was conducted, and pre- sented with a huge basket of gaily wrapped gifts for her home. Delicious refreshments were serv- ed at the close of the evening by the hostesses and their assistants who wre Mrs. W. Griffith, Mrs. R. Pepper, Miss Gwen Pepper, Miss Betty McDonald and Mrs. W. Piot- rosky. HOLY TRINITY CHURCH NOTES AJAX -- Every member visita- tion and Canvass will take place in this Parish on Sunday, October 18, blue, and carried cr q of gold and bronze mums with matching ribbons. The flower girl, Miss Kathy Pep- per, niece of the bride, was very sweet in a floor-length gown of yel- low embroidered organdy, fash- ioned with a three-tiered hoopskirt, nose gay of white and bronze mums and pink carnations, tied with mat- ching ribbons. Mrs. B. J. Severs was the soloist, accompanied by Mr. A. V. Price who played the wedding music. Be- fore the ceremony, Mrs. Severs sang 'The Lord's Prayer" and dur- ing the interval of signing the regis- ter, "Oh Perfect Love". Mr. Robert Tait, brother of the groom, was his groomsman, and Mr. Lionel Griffith, cousin of the bride and Mr. Alex Hall, cousin of the groom, acted as ushers. At the reception held in the Church Hall, the bride's mother re- ceived the guests wearing a gown of navy blue nylon and crepe, navy accessories and a corsage of pink carnations. She was assisted by the mother of the groom wearing plum crepe with black accessories, and a corsage of white carnations. When the happy couple left in the late afternoon for Niagara Falls and Buffalo, the bride was wearing a geranium pink knitted suit, small black velvet hat and black acces- sories, and a corsage of pale yellow carnations. On their return Mr. and Mrs. Tait will reside at 20 York Street, ax. The bride's gifts to her attendants were pearl hoop earrings to the brides maids and to the flower girl a sterling silver bracelet. The grooms gifts to the best man a ushers were brown leather wal- S. : _Out-of-town guests at wedding in- cluded: Mr. and Mrs. Ian Duff, John and Shirley, Mr. and Mrs. Austin Duff, Mary and Billy, Mr. John Beith, Miss K. Brawley and Bl Miss Eleanor Farago, all of Toron to; . s. W. Hill, Mr. Alex Hill, Mrs. Neil Anderson, Moorefield; Mrs. J. Moyer, Mrs. A. Phillips. Parry Sound; Mr. and Mrs. Floyd McGary, Whitby; Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Duff and George, Alma, Ont.; Miss Alenina Duff, North Bay; Mr. and Mrs. P. M. Chap- com ing at 2 p.m. The canvas- sers will meet in the church on Friday, October 16 at 7.30 p.m. The Young People of High School age are invited to a meeting in the church on Sunday, October 18 at 3.30 p.m. The men will be fencing at the church on Saturday, October 17, starting at 9 a.m. and hope to fin- ish this Jroject if everyone will lend a helping hand. The Woman's Auxiliary Guild will hold the de- votional and business meeting in the church on Wednesday, October 21 at 8.30 p.m. Mrs. Egerton Denni- son, the secretary of the Dorcas Department of the Diocesan WA, will be guest speaker. Confirmation classes will commence on Sunday, October 25 at 8.15 p.m. Choir practice, Thursday, at 7.30 p.m. TROUSSEAU TEA AJAX -- Mrs. R. Pepper was hos- tess at her home on Edward Street when she entertained at a trous- seau tea for her daughter Shirley. The rooms were very attractive with chrysanthemums in cream and bronze, and some fifty guests signed the bride's book during the afternoon and evening. EUCHRE CLUB The Weekly Euchre Club met on Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. S. English. Prize winners were: 1. Mrs. W. Hannon; 2. Mrs. G. Galley, and consolation, Mrs. E. McAllister. The next meeting will he at Mrs. E. McAllister's, Windsor Avenue, on Thursday, October 22. SHAKE DOWN CRUISE GLASGOW (Reuters)--The new trans-Atlantic liner Olympia, 24,- 000-ton flagship of the Greek line, sailed from here Thursday on a shakedown cruise before her maiden voyage to New York. The glistening white liner, $14,000,000 answer to increasing competition from airlines, will take passengers on an around Britain cruise, with stops at Belfast, Liverpool and Dublin before sailing from South- ampton for New York Oct. 20. The Gregorian calendar devised by Pope Gregory in 1582 was adopted by England in 1752. If you're in a spot financially right now, with expenses like fuel, clothes for the children, and plans for the holidays ahead, think this over. You can borrow $50 to $1000 promptly on your own signature at HFC. One-day service. Then take up to 24 months to repay on a plan that you select yourself, IT'S BUSINESSLIKE! IT'S MODERN! OUSEHOLD FINANCE * 25th year in, Canada C. H. Brook, Manager : 11%a Simcoe St. South, second floor, phone Oshawa 35-1139 OSHAWA, ONT, Silver Cross Mothers Plan Special Book The Oshawa and District Chapt- er of the Silver Cross Women of Canada Remembrance Association, is compiling a memorial book which is to be placed in a 'niche in Oshawa's new municipal admin- istration building. It iz to be made up of pictures and names, notes on the regiment and service and other information regarding the men who did not return from World War II, and who were living in Oshawa and the surrounding dist- rict at the time of their enlistment. The Oshawa Chapter of the As- sociation would be grateful if any mother or wife, who is a recipient of Memorial Silver Cross award- ed by the Canadian government at the time of the service man's death, and who has not as yet received a letter from the Chapter, would communicate at once with Mrs. V. A. Cope, 170 Athol Street East, Oshawa. LJ The area to be covered by the Memorial Book includes Oshawa, Whitby, Brooklin, Bowmanville, Newcastle, Columbus, Court- ice, Pickering, Port Perry, Orono, Newtonville and other immediate districts. The members of the Chapter are anxious to have the book complete, and feel sure that every wearer of the Silver Cross will appreciate the value of a mem- orial book of this kind. One of the difficulties experienc- ed has been that of changes of address of many of the recipients of the Silver Cross who have mov- ed in recent years. Mrs. Cope would be grateful if any such would send their new addresses to her, and also to anyone who knows of such changes of address and can send her the corrrct addresses in these cases. FAMED WINDOWS Each of the windows known as the "five sisters" at York Minster in Eagisng is 50 feet high, five feet wide. LIVESTOCK: --- TORONTO (CP)-- Cattle prices were generally 50 cents to $1 lower on steers and heifers and steady on cows and bulls at the Ontario stockyards this week. Calves, sheep and lambs were firm. Hogs gained $1. Holdover at the close was 800 cattle. A moderate run of 7,13¢ head was added to a carry-over of 900 from last week. Included in fresh receipts were 3,000 western kill- ers and stockers mixed. Choice light and weighty steers $19-20; one lot at $20.25; good steers $18-19; medium downward to $16; plain steers and heifers downward to $10; good heifers $17.50-18; good cows $11-11:50; good light western cows $12.50; canners and cutters $5-: good heavy bulls $12-13; com- mon light $8-11; good to choice fed yearlings $20-22; a few tops $23; mediums downward to $16; good stockers $18-19; a few calves up to $20.25; plain stockers $12. Calves totalled - 3,626 including 2.400 westerns. Choice veal calves $22-24; a few tops $25; medium to good $15-21; grassers mostly $8- 10; market was slow on heavy calves. Hogs were 2,457 head. Prices were $1 higher at $35 for grade A with dressed sows $23. Sheep and lambs totalled 2,039. Prices were steady at $20-21 for good ewes and wethers; bucks $1 discount; heavies $Z discount; feeder lambs $15-18; good light sheep $8-10; culls downward to $4. MEN'S CLUB (Continued from Page 3) to say to ancient civilizations that these things are uncivilized.. If mil- lions of Spaniards have been ena- mored of bull fighting long before Columbus stumbled on America, who am I to say there is nothing in it," the speaker explained. Then he described the beauty and pageantry of the bull ring. climaxed by the charge of '800 pounds of black dynamite on the hoof" and the artistic and ritual. istic mode by which the matador makes the kill. There is less hu- THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Friday, October 16, 1953 § man blood shed in the bull rings of Spain in a week than on a night of hockey in Canada. SAW REVOLUTION Travelling on through Italy and Greece to Egypt! Captain Rawson happened to arrive at Cairo in the midst of the revolution which de- posed King Farouk. Amid the tenseness and warlike atmosphere of the country, visitors were offer- ed complete protection. By chance, he heard the first address given by Naguib after King Farouk was Geposed. i In Egypt, said the speaker, "Westerners are loathed and our way of life is not appreciated. The trouble there was caused basically because the rich 'had no sense of stewardship and the poor had no sense of their own abilities. They had no freedom and the govern- ment became so corrupt that trou- ble was inevitable. Farouk was "a sophisticate who has never grown up." As to the state of religion in Egypt, there is little today. The Christian religion has ade no impression upon them because of practice and the influgnce of Mo- hammedanism waning. PICTURE OF ISRAEL Conditions in the 'Bible' coun- tries today are not such as to in- spire or protect one's. Christian faith, said the speaker. In Pales- tine all the holy places are in charge of unscrupulous men. But when one enters Israel, it is like coming out of midnight into the sunlight. "They have the cream of the crop in Europe. They are a people on the march," observed Captain Rawson. But conditions are yet so unsettled that farmers take their op to the field. Having alienated e whole 'Arab world, Israeli is in a, STave situation. It cannot live without the goodwill of the Arab world. In the brief span of 80 minutes, listeners to Captain Rawson were given a picture they are not soon to forget. Political chaos, heat, poverty, racial friction, persecution and sometimes hope for the future, are all encountered by the travel- ler. 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