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Daily Times-Gazette, 18 Jun 1953, p. 32

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82 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE, Thursday, Jume 18, 1953 - BaptistsCalled Upon To-Set Sunday Example HAMILTON (CP) -- Reiteration of its strong stand against any further extension of Sunday sports and games was made in one of four resolutions adopted by the 65th annual Baptist convention of Ontario and Quebec Wednesday. A resolution on religious freedom wards va-ious Protestant groups. | was sent back to committee for re-wording. The convention expressed its "grave concern' at the growing | iting of the distribution of religious | secularization" on Sunday, and the | literature on the streets and from | year would be near the $6,000,000, "increasing indifference on the part of many Christians to the moral and religious value of Sun- day as a day of rest and spiritual renewal." It urged all ministers and work- ers to "present the facts of the historical significance' of Sunday, and called upon all Baptist people tant groups in Quebec have been | election. He Ras held to set an example on Sunday ob- servance. All Baptists should resist efforts of interests seeking to introduce commercialized Sunday sports, the resolution read, and to oppose any move to extend 'the retrograde | places. He would like it made clear | action taken in 1950 by the Ontario |the Baptists had nothing to do | the legislature." The resolution on religious free- dom was sent back to committee | because of some disagreement on | | sections aimed at Quebec province. | The disputed sections read that | "Canadian Baptists use all their | resources to challenge religious in- | tolerance and persecution practiced | from time to time in Quebec to- '"'And be it resolved they petition |the Quebec legisiature to revise | legislation which allows the prohib- door to door." | When other delegates asked if the paragraph dealing with distrib- | ution of pamphlets was satisfactory {to members of the Grande Ligne | mission in Quebec, G. J. Jotcham of Montreal replied that he would like a change. The work of Protes- | hurt by the activities of one small | denomination, he said. Where the Baptists had 'fairly friendly' re- lations with the Quebec govern- ! ment another body had caused | trouble at Val d'Or and other | with such actions. On motion from "the floor, resolution was returned. Treat Barkeeps Kindly They Get Hea WINNIPEG (CP)--It's literally true that you can die of a broken heart. You can even die of fright, | sooner or later. | Dr. J. P. S. Cathcart 6f Ottawa said in an interview at the con- vention of the Canadian Medical Association here that nearly 100 per cent of coronary thrombosis | cases are caused by deep emo- | tional stress or states of neurotic anxiety. He said that usually such cases resulted from the loss or antici- . rt-Broken pated loss of someone dear to the patient, or to a son's or daughter's | unfortunate marriage or career. In an address to the Canadian Psychiatric Association, Dr. Cath- cart said highest mortality rate from the disease is found among American psychoanalysts and bar- tenders. "It may be that both are dealing constantly with the frailties of human nature and are witness | daily to hostility in naked form, but are forced to restrain them- selves rigidly or wisely from tak- 'ing issue." Muskie Season and Mattawa rivers and Lake Nip- issing. Opening date is June 20, as in other years. In most of Southern Ontario the muskie season is July 1 to Oct. 15. | A previous report erroneously | said that the June 20 opening date {in the north was 11 days earlier | | than usual. TORONTO (CP)--The muskel- lunge season in Northern Ontario | will close Oct. 15 this year, 15] days later than usual, the Ontario | said today. The Oct. 15 date applies to that | part of the province north and |liquor and wine was 16-per-cént ican "colonies" was built in 1716 west of and including the French DRINKING LESS OSLO (CP)--Liquor sales in Nor- | way for the first quarter of 1953 | ment of lands and forests | were 5.8 per cent lower than the election of high court officers. same period of 1952. It was esti-,| mated per capita consumption of | lower than last year. Member To Stand WARKWORTH (CP) Trade Minister Howe said Tuesday night i that another boom year for invest- ment in Canada is in progress, | giving promise of continued pros- perity. He told a Liberal nomination convention for Northumberland rid- ing in this village 20 miles south- east of Peterborough that invest- | ment @uring the first quarter of | 1953 was "17 per cent higher than | we thought it would be." He predicted investment this | 000 mark. 'Next year, when the | fruits of that investment are | pumped into the economy, will be | another good ygar." | Dr. Fred Robertson of Cobourg, | sitting member for Northumber- | land, was nominated as Liberal | candidate in the Aug. 10 general the seat since | 1949. ' Coronation Decorations Keep London Jammed By ROBERT JELLISON LONDON (Reuters)--The Coro- nation has faded into history, but judging from the midnight traffic jams in the heart of festooned London, you get the idea it's still just around the corner. Like a swarm of good-humored locusts, an army of Britons pours nightly into the heart of the city for a lingering look at the miles of lavish decorations, colored lights and window displays. It's all scheduled to come down next week. Between midnight and 1 am. sightseers pile back to the sub- urbs and countryside, leaving to the street-cleaners tons of orange peel, dixie cups .and candy wrappers. The masterminds who staged the elaborate Coronation itself and had the power to shut central Lon- don completely off to traffic June 2 fi helpl in the face Land Agent Is Jailed TORONTO (CP)--James Cuttell, 45, former land evaluator with the Ontario department of highways, was sentenced today to three years for thefts involving some $45,000 in provincial funds and fraudulent sales of government-owned land. Most outstanding charge against Cuttell, father of five children, was theft of $31,962 from the high- ways department as a result of 35 transactions between 1948 and 1952. Two other men, John Kerseley, 52 and Zigmund Norton, 51, are awaiting trial in connection with the case. 900 I0OF's At Meeting VANCOUVER (CP) -- For the | first time in the 74-year history of the Canadian 'Order of Foresters, | women have \been admitted as delegates to a national convention. | The convention opened here Tues- | day with moré than 900 delegates | in attendance. The fraternal or- ganization has a membership of 44,000. Administration and constitutional issues were. dealt with at private business sessions Wednesday. The meeting ends today with The first lighthouse in the Amer- on an island in Boston harbor. OAAAAA ~~ BY ARROW y cloth with fused collar. Sin- 2 gle or double cuff style DART SHIRTS White mode from the finest broad- cloth with fused collars, DO YOUR FATHER'S DAY SHOPPING AT Ralph Jewell's Men's Wear We Have Many Fine Presents Dad Will Appreciate -- Come in and Look Around ug Dad will un m our 4.955 Il $1.00 AAAAAS on nylon socks. Boxed. SOCKS, appreciate a pair or more very fine assortment of and 1.50 pr. CABANARO BY ARROW Made from finc rayon SPORT SHIRTS Gabardine, wash- nm able with # Dod to the best Sport Shirt stitching on coller and pocket flaps. Treat $6.95 saddle "un checks or shirts, Sport Shirt SPORT SHIRTS From a large range in plain shades, pin Treot Dad to a fine BALFOUR good roomy $4.95 plaid patterns, on Father's Day a terials , 0 lorge assortment 1 stripes and patterns. Boxed 1.00 - ; ? Boxed for Father's Doy. Finest ma- 1.50 - 2.00 gl ni of styles, We hove Hn and see AAA, 16 KING ST. AAAAAAAAAA Ralph Jewell's Men's Wear DIAL 3-8422 "T" SHIRTS "T" shirts to choose from, come in 1.49 to 3.95 MEN'S a large selection of men's for yourself. Priced from P4 of narrow streets clogged to a near-standstill with - vehicles and pedestrians. Traffic authorities say the chartered buses alone would constitute a major problem. The rush was counted on for the week following C-day, but the offi- cials then expected to see the city return to normal. Now the persist- ent invasions have given rise to alarm. In desperation, the govern- ment announced a ban on chart- ered buses in'the west end for Wednesday, Thursday and Friday. But the solution was admittedly not a happy one. "This is a problem of irrecon- cilables," Home fecretary Sir David Maxwell Fyfe told the House of Commons. '"No one wishes to prevent people from coming to !London to see the Coronation sights, but there is a limit to the traffic the streets can carry, an that limit has been passed." The solution, some critics say, is simply to leave the decorations up all summer, in hopes of thin- ning the visitors out. But others are certain that plan would simply mean an extension of the jams. PREMATURE AGING Prolonged nutritional deficien- cies may cause premature aging. Middle-aged people who neglect a balanced diet which will supply adequate proteins, vitamins and minerals for body maintenance, may show the advancing years more obviously than the person who follows the diet recommended by nutritionists. d | greater 'than the previous season. Mink Coat Ballet's Only Asset TORONTO (CP)--The National Ballet Guild of Canada ended its second season with more than one feather in its cap but its future rested temporarily on a mink coat. At the annual general meeting Wednesday the treasurer, Victor Barnett, reported a deficit of $1,053 although the income from produc- tions of $117,457 was 2% times President Z. R. B. Lash said the deficit would probably be covered by proceeds from the ballet sum- | mer school. But the next season would be started on little more than a mink coat donated to the guild for fund-raising. Mr. Lash and artistic director Celia Franca said, however, that tremendous progress has been made during the last year. An estimated audience of 65.000 saw the ballet on .its Vancouver- to-Halifax tour which covered some 25 cities and towns. Guest speaker Dr. Edward John- son, former manager of New York's Metropolitan Opera, said that cultural organizations today | face a public that in some respects | are 'away ahead of us." Television ' Life Span Of Century May Soon Be Common OTTAWA (CP)--Once heart dis- ease and cancer have been con- quered the average life span may jump to 100 or 125 years, Dr. W. G. Scott, advisor to th: Ontario re- gion of the national employment service, told the Canadian Dietetic Association here today. The life span has increased in this century by 20 years. In Ontario in 1948 it was 68. And this brings up the problem, Dr. Scott said, of finding for a; ing people jobs where they -- be useful and feel useful. Criticizing the prejudice of em ployers against men over 45, Dr Scott told the story of a man of 69. After a year of being turned down by employers he was given a 'chance. Within a month he was a director of the company and three months later vice-president. Gardiner Itemizes Spending CARLYLE, Sask. (CP)--Agricul- ture Minister Gardiner said Wed- nesday night the federal govern- ment has been criticized for taxing too much and spending too much-- but "'one half of the present budget radio and recordings had built up a critical audience, he said. _ He advocated music as a "'must" in education. is for national defence and one quarter is for social services." Addressing a Liberal, nominating convention Mr. Gardiner said the {world has twice tried to prevent | war by disarming and now govern- ments are finding it necessary to arm as a method of prevention. All provinces have roughly the same social services, he said. But 80 per cent of these services were | financed by the federal treasury. For example, Saskatchewan used to get $4,000,000 from the federal government when he was provine- ial treasurer, said Mr. Gardiner, and now it is getting $24,000,000. Australia's population was estim- ated at 8.538.000 at the end of 1951, an increase of 3,000,000 in 30 years. POWER STEERING -- Until you've tried it, you can't even imagine the miraculous driving ease of Oldsmobile Power Steering ! It actually takes 80% of the effort out of steering, yet leaves you the vital "feel" of the wheel -- you always know gou're in full command of the car. Thanks to "Power Steering which is optional at extra cost, you can take hair-pin curves, sharp city corners or pull into "tight" parking spaces without any effort whatsoever ! i NEW POWER RIDE -- As a fitting companion to its 165 horsepower "Rocket" engine, Oldsmobile has a new, Power-Ride Chassis -- heavier, more durable than ever. From front to rear, it's engi- neered to bring you a smoother, more comfort. able "Power Ride" -- wherever you go! Features like Centre-Control tion, angle-set rear Steering, 6-point stabiliza« springs, a higher-capacity rear axle and a more rugged X-member frame combine to provide better road balance and stabi. lity than ever before. See your Oldsmobile dealer ~take the wheel of a Super "88" or a Classic "98" NEW PEDAL-EASE POWER BRAKES -- Now pull up to a safe, sure stop with the touch of a toe! You no longer need lift your foot from the acceler- ator and lose precious seconds in emergency stops. Oldsmobile's new Pedal-Ease Power Brakes, optional at extra cost on models with Hydra-Matic Drive, have a new, low, light-pres- sure pedal next to the accelerator, making it easy for you to pivot on your heel from accelerator to brake pedal. Vacuum power cuts braking effort 40%. A GENERAL MOTORS VALUE ONTARIO MOTOR SALES LTD. '86 KING STREET EAST, OSHAWA HARRY DONALD LID. WHITBY, ONTARIO be

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