Daily Times-Gazette (Oshawa Edition), 22 Mar 1956, p. 3

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

TEEN-AGERS SPRING RETURNED THIS as has the CRA and other simil- pls are, left to right, Betty Stezik, Patsy Hraynyk and Barbara SWING INTO BUSY SPRING SEASON OCCI Pair Get Prizes For Oratory Beverley Pine and Earl McInnis, two Oshawa Central Collegiate In- (stitute students who recently won public speaking contests sponsor- ed the Lions Club, were round- ly cheered by classmates yester- day when they received their awards -- handsome gold - plated es. e presentations were made at oy bly of 'students in tro Rigen the OCCI auditorium, The special assembly was open- ed with the recitation of the Lord's Prayer by the gathering and an introduction of three members of the Lions Club who were on stage. They were Messrs. M. C. Barnett and Lion Bill Dick was also in attend- ance. EXPRESS IDEAS Boy Barnett lod the Yodo ot Ww youn, e are conti Proving emselves on the plat- orm in public s expressing their A mented on the advantage of being able to speak before a group of people and of the excellent way in which the two young wiiiers de- livered their speeches. In closing, he said, ".Ar behalf of the Oshawa Lions Club and of Lions International, I would like to extend my thanks and apprecia- tion to the principal, teachers and t ,, who made this effort a The presentation was followed by a demonstration of four stu- | Machinery for a busy Summer, WEEK with its customary tradi- | tions. There was the shrill and gay laughter of children, togeth- aents on the trampoline. This was held as a preview to the forthcom- ing gymnastic exhibition to be held at OCVI on Friday night of Buldyke. Wilfred Wannemaker is ready to crack out his first hit Bob Malloy is catching. Lloyd Mapes iar organizations. A Times-Gaz- ette photographer records some | of the happier moments of the season er with baseball games on school grounds and corner lots, and plenty of skipping and games of marbles. The parks department already has started to gear its new in above picture. Girls in the top picture cast an | eye of admiration as one of them does some skipping. The three young ladies in the foreground | the season, top right. is throwing the ball on right. These pictures were taken at Simcoe Street School. ] --Times-Gazette Photos | Pre-Easter Services Feature Ancient Rites Old ceremonies which have not been invoked for centuries will be adopted to attach a deeper spirit- tual significance for the Catholic Church from Palm Sunday, March 25, to Easter Sunday, April 1. These services have been chang- "ed in order to give the laity a more active part in the rites and to make Holy Week stand out as the most important time of the Church year. The chief event on Palm Sunday will be a procession of clergy and laity in each parish during the morning- This procession would preferably be held outside the church and ideally from church to church. Holy Thursday will see preists gather with the bishop in all Ro- man Catholic Cathedrals to com- memorate the institution of the s priesthood and to bless the holy ja 1o.be used in the adiministra. "also see the consecration of the hosts to be given to the people on . Friday afternoon. There will be a mass in each| parish at night te commemorate! baptisms throughout the year will held. | the Last Supper. These masses will be held between 5.00 and 8.00 p.m. Although the new decree recom-| mends it, the pastor is not commanded to wash the feet of 12 members of the laity in imitation of Christ at the Last Supper, where He washed the feet of the apostles. For the first time in several cen- turies, all the clergy and laity may | receive Holy Communion on Good Friday. The liturgical rite takes place between 3.00 and 6.00 p.m. The Easter Vigil, formerly held on Holy Saturday morning, will be restored to its proper place around midnight, but some churches will {hold the ceremonies earlier. The | ideal service opens with the church in darkness and a new fire being lit, preferably outside the church, {and with all the congregation | | around. A large candle, symbolic| of Christ, is then lit from the new fire, As the procession enters the the t is spread to all the congregation who are holding candles until the whole church is illuminated. During this service, | water for] be consecrated and adult converts will be baptized at this time. For many, the use of English in place of Latin will be used in some parts of the ceremony. On Palm- Sunday, there will be the usual services with thé blessing of the palms before the high mass. On Wednesday, devotions will be held in the evening. | Special morning masses will be said on Holy Thursday, with after- noon low masses and Solemn high mass in the evening. There will be distribution of Holy Communion § at both masses. | On Good Friday, there will be mass and communion in the after- noon and Stations of the Cross in the evening. The Easter Vigil and the blessing | [§ of the fire and water will be held in the morning of Holy Saturday and the Easter mass will be at 2 midnight. - | Masses will be said on Easter, Sunday as usual, until Solemn high mass at noon. Congregations are asked to check with the parish priest for the time of the different ceremonies to be i Present Handel's 'Messiah' The Oshawa Centre of the Cana- i dian College of Organists present- meant something to them. In an|sive. On the first notes of tenor ed "Messiah" by George Frederic| essentially "live" performance, the Robert Reid's opening recitative Handel at Simcoe Street United Church on Monday evening last. Handel wrote the "Messiah' in 1741 when in a trough of bank- ruptcy and he did it all in three weeks. The number of performan- ces of this stupendous effort of in- spiration and will power defies estimation yet such is its uplifting content that one never tires of hear- ing it. Under the expert and ever artis- tic control of Mr. R. G. Geen, the Centre gave a most memorable performance. It would seem that t this event is by way of becoming an Oshawa tradition and standard of this performance can be maintained, then it will surely become a tradition, by demand. The choir is not a regular *'chor- al society" but is a group of enthusiastic singers from all over Oshawa. The minute Mr. Geen un- leashed them to their first chorus, "And the Glory of the Lord", we , knew we were facing a group of people who could sing, wanted to {sing and did sing for the love of great music. The choral tone was very good, the response excellent COMING EVENTS if the| 'In Memorable Performance and obviously their conductor | choir showed great technique in | diction, attack and expression. {There was a particularly pleasing |erescendo in "Surely He hath borne {our griefs" that came off to per- fection while the expression in "Be- hold the Lamb" was particularly |good. "His Yoke is Easy" was de- |lightful and beautifully handled. The soft start in "Lift up Your Heads" was surprising but provid- ed the foundation for a thrilling build up. The choir was given an| {exacting task at the end in having {to tackle "Worthy is the Lamb" |and immediately afterwards the "Hallelujah Chorus' but they sail- ed through them with power, clar- ity and precision and with none of the confusing clamour one some- times hears. EXCELLENT ORGAN | Passing to individuals, one must first mention Mr. Geen whose guiding hand was responsible for so much of the success of this artistic evening. He has a sure ex- pert touch and the gift of inspiring in his chorus that confidence which is so essential to success. He pre- sented a performance hard to match in any city the size of Osh-| awa. | The excellent organ was in the| artistic hands of Kelvin James] ANNUAL SPRING FLOWER SHOW AT R. B. Reed and Sons Greenhouses, 'one never protruding beyond his sing-|itically. Sunday afternoon 1 to 5. p.m. Everyon welcome. Free admission. 68d BINGO AT CLUB BAYVIEW EVERY , Monday and Wednesday. Doors open 6.30 p.m. Five door prizes. Sponsored by and for the Whitby Brass Band. 67f TANNERY BINGO AT THE AVALON, Thursday, March 22, 8 p.m. Five jack- pots. 68b RUMMAGE SALE IN AID OF THE 9TH Auxiliary, Scout and Cub troops, to be held at the Scout hall, Athol Street on Friday, March 23, at 1pm. Pease + come. RUMMAGE SALE, old library, auspices Chapter, IODE. FRIDAY, 1 Golden Jubilee 63b BINGO THURSDAY MARCH 22, 8 p.m YSt. George's Hall, Albert Street, games, had and $7. 7-340 jackpots 69a BRITISH -- ISRAEL MEETING, SUN- day, March 25, 3 o'clock, Orange Tem- ple, 15 Bruce street. Speaker Mr. Tho- mas Ransom Subject "Vital distine- tions." Everyone welcome, Mar, 22, 24. + HARMAN PARK ASSOCIATION BINGO, Friday, March 23, 8 p.m. St. John's Hall corner Bloor and Simcoe, 20 games 55 and $6. a game. 5-340. jackpots. 69b ! EUCHRE IN SCOUT HALL, CORNER Buena Vi sta and Gibbons, Friday, March 5 prizes. Admission 35 cents 69a 2,8 pm RUMMAGE SALE AT OSHAWA AR- mories on Friday, March 23, 1.30 p.m 1 69a NIGHT OF CARDS AND PROGRESsivE that the treasury note was miss-| negotiable Fuchre, Friday March 23, & Queen Elizabeth School, 68b | P.M Missing Million who gave a real accompaniment to |this "Messiah" in perfect taste ers but so careful of mood that is| fitted like a glove. In the famed, "Pastoral Symphony' we had aj soft smiling wonder of real music played by a real organist. | | Her The soloists were most impres- we sat up and took notice. A splen- did presence, a robust voice, dram-| atic powers and great sureness| were there. All his numbers were| most acceptable and especially "Thou shalt break them" Here is a strong tenor who will go far, In order of appearance comes Mr. James Whicher, bass. Here, we consider, is a find! Only 22, he| has a smooth, amply compassed voice of most pleasant tone and| under splendid control. He is ex- citingly full of possibilities and is bound for the top. { FINE QUALITY | Contralto Ruth Repchuck is ob-| viously gifted. She has technique, quality, assurance and some love- ly notes. She is definitely good but| needs more size to her voice for| Handel in large places. We thought | she was singing a little out of prac-| tice. Finally Dorothy Walker, a so- prano of superior quality with a great command of technique and a lovely voice. She has crystal pure notes, sure pitch and plenty of feeling in all that she sings. "Rejoice Greatly" taken at a nice clip especially delightful and of course with that voice and her sincerity of singing she scored heavily with "I know that my Redeemer liveth". She was a real joy to hear technically and aesthe- The result of this combination of leader, artists and organist result- ed in an utterly satisfying render- ing of a monumental work -- DCMH. Insurance Firms | Asked To Pay NEW YORK (AP)--The million-| {dollar U.S. treasury note missing t {from the Chase Manhattan Bank | {still has not turned up--but the! bank got its money back Wednes-| day. An official said the bank had| |entered a claim for the loss with 18 insurance companies acting as surety and that they had paid the! million to tne bank. "Nobody will lose over it, though," a Iman said. "The panies eventually money back from ment." The bank discovered March 6 any money bank spokes: Insurance com-| can get their| the govern-| | for AMBROSE FUND HAS STARTED A trust fund has been started Harvey Ambrose, 12-year- old Oshawa boy who lost an eye recently in a BB-gun accident. The fund will be used for Har- vey's education and will be given o him when he is 18. The fund is under the personal direction of a board of three members --William Babar, S. G. | Saywell and Thomas L. Wilson. Donationsw ill be published in The Times-Gazette up to and in- cluding April 15. | Those wishing to contribute | should send their donations in an | envelope addressed: The Harvey Ambrose Trust Fund, | The Times-Gazette, | Oshawa, Ontario. | The first donation has been | received. It is from E. M. Thompson for $15. | bv anyone--theoretic-| p.m. ing. Diligent search failed to re-|ally. But anyone trying to cash it 69 veal any trace of it. The noteds|would face extensive questioning.' poration has offered to sell the old post office and customs building in Oshawa to the city council for council approach to buy the same building for $35,000. ment's counter-offer with the provision that council also agree to sell to thelthe federal offer. {Simcoe street north at about | Fluoridation of Oshawa's water supply will continue, Mayor W. John Naylor said today. Fluoride has been added to the | water supply here since 1953 fol- § We | lowing an agreement between the d | board of health and the PUC. | The city council has no by-law | authorizing the PUC to add fluor- ide to the city's water supply. | Mdyor Naylor said that fluorida- {tion will continue unless there is "tremendous objection' from the | people. | TORONTO RULING 4 | This week the Ontario Court of Wl | Appeal quashed the by-law author- izing fluoridaton of Metropolitan Toronto's water supply. Chief Justice Pickup, in judg- ment said: "I do not think the Legislature intended that a mu- nicipality should be' given power to prescribe medicinally for the health of its inhabitants by adding to the water supply anything such as fluoride for the purpose of im- proving the general health of the community." Mayor Naylor sald he would] W. JOHN NAYLOR consider bringing up the matter in council next week. Dr. James, who is also a dentist, "We will have to have some | said that there is no need to cut legal basis. for what we are do- out fluoridation of Oshawa"s water ing," he said. supply. FAVORS CONTINUATION He claimed that the board had Dr. H. B. James, chairman of NOt received any complaints about the board of health, said t-day the addition of fluoride. that he favored continuation of KILLED NO ONE | fluoridation, despite the court rul-| "Fluoridated water in Oshawa Je in Toronto. hasn't killed anyone that I know Customs Building Offered For Sale The Crown Assets Disposal Cor- federal government the parking lot on Church and William streets. The CADC offered the city coun- cil $10,000 for this land. Council has been contemplating {renovating the basement of the building for public washrooms and renting the upstairs part to busi- ressmen. In the 1956 budget only $20,000 has been allocated for public wash- Council received and filed $175,000. The offer came in reply to a city lide is definitely beneficial," said|sion general manager Dr. James. |Shreve today. "It has helped cut down the in-| He said that during the three the federal govern- was made | the city |rooms. However who have been resident in the city [system in Oshawa, the PUC had for a long time," he said. |received very few complaints. BENEFICIAL TO CITY "Surveys have shown that fluor-|of," said Public Utilities Commis-|came from new mains, George | cidence of tooth decay in children|years operation of the floridation|estimates for expenditure of $3,500 "We had one complaint once upon a time, but that was from a Toronto woman who came to Osh- awa," he said, Addition of fluoride to Oshawa's water supply is carried out at the main pumphouse of the PUC. Mr. Shreve said it is added on the authority of the medical offic- er of health, Dr. A. F. Mackay. Chlorine has been added to the water supply since 1919. Ald. Christine Thomas, council representatiye on the Board of Health, said today that she believ-|3¢¢d ~ ed fluoridation had proved benefi- - cial to the city. It had helped improve the teeth of the city's children, she said, and was approved by dentists. "It was operated successfully and certainly isn't harmful," said Ald. Thomas. tion City Sanitary Inspector J. Slaght said today that tests are made of the city water supply every week. TESTS MADE | These tests revealed that the ad- { dition of fluoride to the water made ino difference to the taste of the | water. Fluoride, he said, is added tn the ratio of 1.2 parts per million. Test samples of the water supply are taken from city mains and the pumphouse, both before and after fluoridation. In 15 years there had been only two bad water tests, sald Mr. Slaght. In the 1956 budgets provision has {been made in the board of health lon fluoridation of water. In 1955, 143,427 was spent on this work. RW Eagle Explains | His Withdrawal Aderman Orville C. Eagle today sion no members of either the| explained why he withdrew from|above groups be on the commis-| the newly appointed North Osh-| sion. awa Outdoor Ice Skating Rink| «Ag other committee members| Commission. p | declined appointment, I likewise | Ald. Eagle withdrew suddenly on| gid not accept. 1 feel I can be of Monday night when a by-law au-| more service to the North Osh- thorizing the commission was in| awa community group but not be-| the second reading stage before|jng on the commission. | council. 2 "As my name was placed on} His action necessitated amend-|the commission list without my ment of the by-law and his re-| consent, I had no other course than placement by Ald. J. L. Lovell. |ts withdraw when I did." | In a statement to the Daily| -- ---- -- Times-Gazette, Ald. Eagle made . two points, | hd "Firstly, I have every resect [loud aille Unit for the citizens of Oshawa who have been appointed to this com-| mission, and I concur in their ap- ears pointment. MEMBER The Houdaille COMMITTEE Industries Ltd. | "Secondly, as a member of the unit of Local 222 UAW-CIO will Sommitiee appointed by the Mayor hold its 10th anniversary banquet 0 out a satisfactory set-| i tlement of the affairs of the North and dance : March 24 in Oshawa Oshawa Neighborhood Association union hall, it was announced today and the Oshawa Community Arena|by John Craggs, chairman of the Association, we recommended that | entertainment committee. a commission be appointed. A special cake will hold the spot- '""We recommended further that|hght for the banquet, which begins at the inception of the commis-at 6.30 p.m. Driver Guilty Careless Driving As a result of an accident wHich fix a wire beneath the dashboard completely wrecked his car, Ross Of his old model car, and "must Allen Patterson, 30, of Bobcayeon, (have pulled the wheel at the same appeared in Oshawa court yester- time" to cause the accident. day and pleaded guilty to a care-! He said he had been told to re- less driving charge. port for work at 7 a.m., following Patterson, a GM employee, was (the strike at G.M., and intended fined a minimum $10 and costs af- [lc spend the rest of the night at ter Magistrate F. S. Ebbs com- his brother's home in Oshawa. mented on his honesty in the court-| Magistrate Ebbs commented that room. {he would have to start early any- The crash occurred Feb. 28 on (Way, driving a car that was nearly 3.30] 0 years old. | =; when Patterson's car fam. Sgt. E. Barker, chief of the Osh- | ed a parked aufjomobile ow fl awe i » squad, sugges | : ia} é Jyde ley ay ney gs Srali Ay oh who stands seven feet high, is | nent Fg te tall buildings Patterson said he leaned over tocould find a place to park. | one of the sights of Rome right | py not tall men, HE ATTRACTS MUCH ATTENTION > 5 D Sea Lamprey this week. PRUPER GRAVE FOR MOZART ; The composer Mozart I buried in a pauper's grave? Yes, that's all that's known. The exact spot has never been located, but the, grave is somewhere in Vienna,* Austria, : To sell or buy something, cribs to cemetry lots, use Clas" sified ads. That's where the folks you want to reach are" looking. Call RA 3-3492 for am pp hy Durham Wins Seed Judging PETERBOROUGH (CP)--A Dur- ham county team won Wednesday for the 26th consecutive time the judging contest for junior farmers at the central Ontario spring show, ' The team, coached by BE. A. : of B ile ed 1,959 points to edge out the Lem- nox-Addington county team whieh hy : i compet er coun - mn, which involved "of oats, barley, wheat, alfalfa, red clover, weeds and forage seeds, were Victoria, Hastings, Prince Edvast: Ontario and Peterbor- ough. Deepening Lakes Is Authorized WASHINGTON (AP)--President Eisenhower Wednesday signed legislation to authorize deepening of the connecting channels in the and these|Great Lakes west of Lake Erie at a cost of $110,000,000. This would provide a 27-foot minimum depts from Lake Super- for to the Atlantic ocean. It would rmit big ships to sail from the tlantic ocean to Duluth, Minn. The work is contingent upon Con- res: appropriating money to pay or it. The channel deepening ties im with the St. Lawrence seaway, now under construction. Eisenhower in his budge! mes- sage to Congress early in the year Said Electric OTTAWA (CP) -- A McMaster University scientist has discovered that the parasitic sea lamprey sends electricity out of its head. Now the lamprey's generator is being sought. The fisheries department Wed- nesday described the findings of Dr. H. Kleerekoper, zoology pro- fessor at McMaster in Hamilton. He was able to use the eel-like parasite"s electricity to light a flash bulb and trigger the shutter o. a camera, taking its picture. Dr. Kleerekoper is supervising a research project for the fisheries research board, which is seeking | means of eliminating the I mprey. | It has killed large numbers of] Great Lakes lake trout and white- | recommended that after the wark was authorized, Congress appropri ste $5,000,000 to get it under way. HARE OPTICAL G.T. BAKER OPTOMETRIST 8 Bond Street East HOURS: 9:00 a.m. - 6:00 p.m. Closed Wednesdays EVENINGS BY APPOINTMENT PHONE RA 3-4811 WES AARUM And HOMER JAMES RETURN FOR ONE NIGHT ONLY DYNAMIC CHOIR LEADER AND SOLOIST IN LEIGHTON FORD CRUSADES who | GUEST SPEAKER ro -- eR

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy