Daily Times-Gazette, 13 Jan 1955, p. 12

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42 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, January 13, BR scad UTICA FLAG UNDER THE SEA As a symbol of his faith in the sea as a source of food and wealth, John Sweeney plunged into the icy surf near Halifax New Year's day and planted a flag of Nova Scotia in the ocean floor 60 feet down. He made the | BREEN KEDRON Ralph Ballard Chosen President 0f Columbus Kedron Young People KEDRON -- The quarterly com- | munion was held at the regular | afternoon service on Sunday, and | the first Sacrament of the Lord's | Supper for this New Year was dis- | ensed by elders E. Mountjoy, R, | e, and C, Werry, | Rev. R, H, Rickard chose as his | sermon theme, "Our Witness day | by day for Christ," and his text was "Ye shall be My witnesses unto the uttermost part of the earth." During the Sunday School hour, two classes newly formed, were taken over by teachers, Mrs Davis for Begioners, and Douglas Love, to be assisted by John . er, for older boys. Announcement was made of the forthcoming School Convention, which Is to held in Cleveland, Ohio, from July 27-31, when delegates will attend from this Conference. A name may be submitted from each Sunday School for a suggested delegate, with 30 to be chosen from the Bay of Quinte area, YOUNG PEOPLE'S UNION On Sunday evening, the Colum. bus - Kedron Young People held their annual installation service in 4 W.| Wer International Sunday | hearth, be PRAYER WEEK SERVICES! mn bh "Breaks Collar Bone InFal MAPLE GROVE ~~ The Wom- en's Missionary Auxiliary held iis first meeting of the year in the hassinent of the chure With >, Greenham, president, in charge of the opening and conducting business Very satis { were given by go Pg the" various secretaries, twas Seciled to hod the Asal ul ng on , Jan: A a the t, All the he can are requested to come in the morning and enjoy a pot-uck din- ner, H. G, Freeman was in charge of the worship service Mrs Cecil Jeffery read the seripiure and Mrs, Freeman led in prayer, Mrs. Russell Worden was in charge of the study which took the form of a dialogue, by Mrs, C, by Mrs, Greenham and Mrs, Brooks, Readings were given Mrs. H, Freeman and Mrs, C, den, OFFICERS ELECTED the following is a list of officers of the WMS for : President, Mrs C, Greenham; first vice, Mis Ross Stevens; vice-president for younger groups, Mrs, 8. Morton; recording secretary, Mrs, H, Free- man; assistant recording secre- tary, Mrs. Cecil Jeffery; treasurer, Mrs, Morley Burgess; Corres nding secretary, Mrs, lvison unday; Secretary, Christian Stewardship, said he felt that Nova Scotia has Mrs. A I hana. ug a right to have its flag planted | 204" Mrs. 1. Munday: supply cor under the sea because that Is a SALTY funda; apply eom- where "a great deal of our | aro.dey and M Fy " os y wealth will come from," y rb waiow: (CP Photo) community friendship, Mrs, F, R. 7 | Stevens, Mrs. M., Burgess; Associate members' secretary, Mrs. H, Foley; temperance and Christian citizenship, Mrs, . Brooks; Missionary Monthly, Mrs, Leslie Collacutt; mite boxes, Mrs, R. R. Stevens; planist, Mrs, A Beech; Assistant, Mrs, C. Snow- den; flower committee, Mrs, R, L. Worden and Mrs, H, Wright; liter. ature secretary, Mrs, F. R. Stev- ens; press secretary, Mrs, H, Free. man; program committee, Mrs, 8. Morton and Mrs, M. Burgess; Auditors, Mrs. H, Foley, Mrs, R. L. Worden; birthday box, Mrs Beech; senior Mission Band, Mrs plunge in a frogman's suit as the sea registered 38 degrees, He report showed that the class had | made a donation to help purchase # Sunday School piano, a donation | to the M. and M, Fund, also one to ihe Kadron Building Fund and ald for class supplies, | Pky a ps for the | J, Holthy and Mrs, Wallace Mun- present year, and a discussion on | $8Y Senior Mission Band, Mrs, projects for the class followed -- | Ken Flint and Mrs. C, Mills; jun. with Mrs. H, Farndale, Mrs. Grant | lor Mission Band, Mrs, Lloyd Snow- Glover, and Mrs, H, Werry to ar-| den, Mrs. R, Bailey; Baby Band, rapge the next meeting | Mrs, H, Bradley and Mis, J. Hur- rogressive crokinole was play. | rie; CGIT, Mrs, T. a uirk, Ns. ed, with prize-winners Mr. E | Mel Edwards and Mrs C, Milly, Mountjoy, Mrs, G, Gl , Mr, C. | ) Yd Mr. Sariover, Mr, C. | ing will be held January 20, begin- social' hour was enjoyed with| Ming with a pot luck supper. everyone seated at tables arrang- | PERSONALS tis ed in the living-room, in the glow | Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Beech and of a brightly - burning fire in the | family, Burketon, were Sunday | guests of Mrs, A. Beech, Mrs, Norman Burgess, Toronto, The special Prayer Service held | wag a recent guest of Mr, and at Columbus on Wednesday, Janu-| Mrs, Lloyd Snowden, Kedron Church, Doug! ted the de- Love d Miss period, Elleen Jebson, who offer ay. er; John Medland who re t! Scripture and Mrs, H, Werry, who presided at the organ, Past President Ronald Werry an- nounced the YPU Skating Party to be held in Newcastle, January 17, and extended the invitation of Zion Young People to have the local Union be their guest onthe eve- ning of January 23. Ron thanked the members for the fime co-oper- ation evident throughout his term of office, and begpoke for his suc- cessor the same fine spirit of help: fulness. The President of the Presbytery Uoung People, with its 22 unions, John Medland-of Brooklin, gave the address of the evening and] spoke on "Watch ye, stand fast in| the faith, Quit ye like men, be| strong." | Mr. Medland inducted the new executive: President, Ralph Bal. | lard; Vice-Presidents, Misses Eil- | cen Jebson and Ann Snowden: | Secretary, Jeanine Werry and Treasurer, Bruce Searle; along | with the new Committee conven: | ers, and their assistants. | The local Union would apprest- ate it, if the Columbus - edron | folk would have their paper ready | for their first paper drive on Jon | tional riod i was held from the Like - McIntosh Funeral Home on Tuesday, Janu. have ben held at Kedron on| is deeply regretted that some did MANCHESTER Sympathy from Kedron com-| Mrs, Josie Bain was In Toronto who passed away. in Oshawa Hos- | Mrs, W. F. Crosier, et wine by Tuescay, Jami. Mr. and Mrs, Robert Ireland recent guest at a varty at the | Nancy of Toronto spent the week: ary 5, was attended by rather few ' people, on the evening of the ice-| ¢ i Furtiei Toronto, "visted storm, The service that was 40 | heir' sister, Mrs, H. R. Foley. Thursday evening was cancelled | by Rev, R. H, Rickard because of the treacherous road conditions, It not receive word of the cancella.-| MANCHESTER -- Mrs, Jessie tion, and were disappointed after | Robertson, Port Perry, visited to the service, | Mrs. Gladys Archer on Sunday, munity Is extended to Foster | over the weekend, Snowden and family, In the loss | Mr, and Mrs. Jack Ronald, Ajax of his father, Richard Snowden, | spent Friday evening with Mr, and pita} on Saturday, January 8, in| Mr, and Mrs. Harry Thorne, is 88th year. The funeral service | Oshawa, were Sunday guests with Mr. and Mrs. W. D, Munro, ay 11 with 4 | Bruce and Karen, were weekend "emetery, y , rs, Ken PERSONALS |junts, Mr. wn Mr, and Mrs. Walter Davis were| Mr, and Mrs, Bud Black and home of Mr, and Mrs, Kenneth end with Mr. and Mrs. A. Roach Brown, Oshawa, | Billy Thompson of Brantford Mr. and Mrs. William Werry, | pent' a week with his grandpar- Donald and Dennis, visited on Sat- | ents, Mr, and Mrs, W, D, Munro, urday with Mrs. Werry's sister, | With the Franklin family recent Mrs, Arthur Rowan, her husband | ly were: Mr, and Mrs, and children, at Yelverton, Franklin, Oshawa, Mr, and Mrs, Mrs. D. E. Knowles, Dundas, | Harold Bentley and family, Ajax, spent the wekend with her daugh- | Mr, and Mrs. W. 8. Croxall and ter, Mrs, H, Rose, Mr. Rose and | daughter and Mrs. Jessie Weir, fampy. sd Miv. Fred Mount) d A. Roach wis in Detrol on a Mr, a rs. Fr ountjoy an ess tri st week, Miss Elda Mountjoy were redent | busing 2 D Jan Wee guests at the home of Mr. and | Ra Grant o| Russia Releases Last American borne of Oshawa visited at the Ross Lee home, ern Ontario Angus Association, on | WASHINGTON (AP) The Thursday afternoon | United States' announced Tuesday M Howard Farndale attended the banquet at Uxbridge for the East r. and Mrs, Harold Werry, | that Russia has agreed to release Jeanine and Ron, with the Misses | Pte. William Verdine of Starks, The annual congregational meet- | Austin | SS As the first atomic power sta- tion in Britain nears completion, plans for another soon to be built at Dourneay, North of Scotland, ATOMS CHANGE SHAPE OF POWER STATIONS diameter, Inside it will be duced steam for generating ae pe Called a breeder reactor, it produce more "fuel" than it consumes, are revealed, This is a scale model of part of it. The dominant feature is the ball-like steel reac- tor which will be 150 feet in Home Too Big, Englishman Decides To Live On His Boat (From the BBC London Letter) Past, the heron that settled on the Anton Delmar, a bank employce, | sald in a talk in the BBC's Home | Service that 47 years ago he found himself With a- house 'that was too big for him and he cou'd not find another of the right size, One night, he suddenly thought that he would like to live on a boat, Hundreds of people live in cara- vans and enjoy it, What's the dif- ference between a caravan and a boat except that one has wheels and the other floats?" he sald, A boat could be bought comparative. pA cheap, there would be no raughty passages or staircases to cope with, housework would be reduced to a minimum and the hol- iday question would be settled for all time for there would be nothing [ to do but cast off with his home | and all his belongings about him | and no packing to be done. In | fact the holiday feeling would start | every evening when I got home," | he said, "Most inriguing of all, when I got fed up with the view all T had to do was start the en- gine, pull'up the anchor and crulse gently along until 1 found a spot to my liking. I could have a dif- ferent view every day if I liked." FOUND BOAT He then set about finding a boat, The third he saw was a real beau- ty and he fell in love with it and bought it almost at once, "Adven- ture' was a converted naval pin- nace 33 feet long with a beam of nine feet six inches, She had two cabins, plenty of storage space, a fully equipped galley and a large cockpit in the stern, Under the cockpit were fuel tanks, fresh wa- ter tanks and the 23 horsepower engine which, although 30 years old was in fine condition, Hegnoved in in October concentrated on two main jobs, covering the cockpit and installing a generator for el ectric light which provided all cur. rent needed to keep Nghting bat- teries fully charged and gave A.C, current for electrie iron, vacuum cleaner and television, We're quite civilized aboard the 'Adven- ture', "' sald Mr. Delmar, proudly. For heating he used blue paraffin and the "Adventure was far warmer and less draughty than a house, His dog loved every minute of life on the boat and spent hours sitting on board watching the ducks and swans in the water, and en- joyed jumping over the side, swim. ming around the boat several times then clambering up the bank and returning jauntily via the gang plank. Cats, too, seemed to adapt themselves easily to life on a boat despite their reputed dislike of water, Nearly all the craft moored near him had cats, all with nauti- cal names like Stoker, Bosun and Spritsall, He knew one cat that lived in a boat moored in mid. stream; puss just jumped over the side and swam ashore when he wanted to go visiting, Friends had asked "What about navigation? Don't you have to have a mate's ticket?' The answer was that this was unnecessary unless fare-paying passengers were taken, Navigating "Adventlire" was far easier than driving a car although negotiating locks was tricky at first. The main point in favor of "Adventure" was that the cost of living was far cheaper than in a house, entailing the saving of about | bows and greeted him w EAT LESS MEAT CANBERRA (CP)~--A report by the Australian meat board says Australians now are eating about 220 pounds of meat per capita each year, compared to 253 pounds be- fore the Second World War, The drop is attributed to effects of ra- tioning during the war years. hen he came on deck in the mornings. "Give me a boat every time", he | sald, Mother Of Priests Learns Tragic News MONTREAL (CP)---~The French- nad 12 World Situation Is Chief Concern OTTAWA (CP)--International af- fairs likely will be the main sub- Ject for discussion by the Com wealth prime ministers at London, The view here is that trade and economic matters will rank no bet. ter than second at the conference, opening Jan, 31, The conference probably will The freighters Vivita and Bir te Hugo Stinnes lie side by side LOADING GRAIN on the Halifax waterfront to load ' ping busin last at least & week, giving ample time for an exchange of views on a host of topics, One of its more important as. |With the West. pects, informants say, is that it| The conference is not being brings Asian members of the NEW LOW A &P COFFEE PRICES Dovande Commonwealth into closer contact | problem. 1t is regarded as routine held | Decause such meetings are held to discuss any particular pressing | about once every two years, ALP COFFEE TASTES BETTER.COSTS LESS CLUB | C t at| Marie and Helen Cole of Mark. La, the last of three Americans Doubles Club met at; oo iC Col nner guest on Satur. held for years inside the Soviet | day evening at the Laurence Al. | Union, {len home, Oshawa. | State department press officer Since the Woman's Assoclation | Henry Suydam sald Soviet Foreign may be soliciting the ald of the | Minister Molotov notified the US, our | embassy at Moscow that Verdine | would be turned over to American 100 pounds a year, There were dis- advantages in the many chores that had to be done but these draw- backs were easily outweighed by the unfettered, carefree atmo- sphere that came of living afloat "Not to have to go back to one of a row of houses, all exactly the any 24 DOUBLES The C. K Kedron on Friday evening, Janu- ary 7. The worship service, led by Helen and Willlam Werry, was fol-| Jowed by the installation of officers | 85 © q +R BR for Js conducted by Rev | Kedron men to serve tea at If money ever did grow on trees, it sure doesn't today. And that's one of the reasons thrifty AaP Coffee is first choice in Honorary were: Rick- Those elected Presidents, Rev, and Mrs ard; Past Presidents, Mr, and Mrs. Marshall Francis; Presi. dents, Mr, and Mrs. Walter Davis; Vice-Presidents, Mr, and. Mrs, | fring Bazaar, we might suggest at the gentlemen hereabout take | authorities at Berlin, The date will hetter care of themsel set later, more 3 J TalAven tinted | Two other Americans, Pte, Wil- faces, cracked ribs, etc, caused |llam C. Marchuk, 30, of Norristown, by minor. accidents recently, Pa. and John H. Noble, 31, of De- Anyone travelling along the trolt were released by the Rus. swamp road just one mile North of like pocket handkerchiefs; to sit on the deck ein the cool of the evening and feel it lift and fall beneath your feet and to be lulled to sleep each night by the gentle rocking of the boat and thee soft 'lap-lap' of same, with their gardens laid out; more and more and more Canadian homes. AaP COFFEE IS ALWAYS PRICED LOW! That's because Percy Mountjoy: Secretaries, Mr. and Mrs. William Werry: Assist. ants, Mr, and Mrs, Ray Scott: | Treasurers, Mr. and Mrs, Gordon ¢ | slans last Saturday at Berlin, could the water against the sides," said Delmar, There were other sights and sounds that only the river could offer, fish jumping at sun- A&P keeps its own buyers in South America to select pick-of- plantation coffee. A&P processes and packages it, and only A4P sells these three superb blends. All along the line, AaP guards against extra expenses, passes s#vings along to you in the form of thrifty prices. Many who have changed to AsP * Coffee from other coffees of comparable quality SAVE UP TO 10¢ A POUND. EIGHT 0'CLOCK Mild and Mellow Kedron Church last Sunday, | dardly fall to be impressed with | background of the cedars, and in Corner; Assistants, Mr. and Mrs. | the breath - taking beauty in the | the hush of serene tranquility per- Gordon Pereman, woods as the pure clean mantle of | vading the whole, one felt a rush For program, Albert Eddy of | White noisclesly covered the land: | of gratitude for blessings that are | down, swans flying over, the king: of his| scape. Against the dark green 'ours, in a Canadian Wintertime. fisher that occasionally flashed Taunton showed pictures trip to Great Britain, with Mr Eddy as commentator, 3 was decided that the first Friday in each month be the regu- lar time for Doubles Club to meet, and further business was left with the Executive, During the Social hour, Mr. and Mrs, W. Davis, and Mr. and Mrs, W. Werry served a delicious lunch, ADULT BIBLE CLASS Members of Kedron Bible Class were guests on Monday evening of Mr. and Mrs. Ross Lee and all enjoyed the warm hospitality of the friendly folk at Cloverlea, Worship was conducted by Wal- ter Davis, who had chosen for his theme for this January meeting, "Forgiveness. Following the reading of a poem on the theme, by the leader, Ross Lee read scripture' from the newly-revised A hor in Luke, Chapter 15, Mrs. Ww. Davis led in prayer, and the hymn "Come, let us sing of a wonaerful love," concluded the devotional period tu the absence of Rev, R. H, Russel Down fckard, President . bie for election of oflicers ) ro which resulted as follows: Presi- ar 4 \ dent, Harold Werry; Vice Presi: dent, Grant Glover; Secretary, Mrs. C. Werry; Treasurer Mr Mountjoy: Pianist, Mrs, R. Lee Previous minutes were read aod approved, and the treasurer's Tee + wes. JANUARY 18 - 19 RETURN LIMIT 7 DAYS Return fares between OSHAWA RED CIRCLE Rich and Full: Bodied n.7.05 ». 99e¢ 3.1h. Bag 2.89 coffees A POUND BOKAR Vigorous and Winey mn. 1.07 3-Ib, Bag 3.15 ond MONTREAL ..... OTTAWA TORONTO +80 Bargoin fores alsa opply between TORONTO SAVING $2.80 y 3.00 ' 8.65 5.50 ® Also between points listed ond Intermediate stations with proportionate ngs. ® These fares do not n RDC "Deyliner" service and Intermediate points, an LONDON ves ply [between Toronto- Windsor WIT RCL other o Baggege allowance 150 Ibs, ¥ » Haren under 5 free ~~ 5 ond under 13, half AS hanged RY , ality SA wh ble qv mpa'® D p 10 10 have are, Watch for Bargoin Coach Fores effective February 15th « 16th, Many , foo of ¢

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