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The Oshawa Times, 4 Jul 1960, p. 5

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WHITBY and DISTRICT Whitby Bureau Office: 111 Dundas St. West Manaver: Lloyd Robertson Tel. MO. 8-3703 NAMED BEST DECORATED BUSINESS IN TOWN Despite urging by the Whitby | The Chamber offered a prize | tion Zoing to Branch 12 id We Who judged He display, report- : n i dian Legion and also to | e at very few businesses Chamber of Commerce, busi- | to the best decorated business | Cana 2 : : i and Souter and' Sports- | had taken the trouble to deco- ness establishments and homes establishment and this was Won | ans Corner, who joined | rate for Canada's 93rd birth in Whitby celebrated Dominion | by the Public Utilities Com- 'ces in their decorations. | day, Day without too much fanfare. | mission with honorable men- ! Chamber director Jouce Burns, | %| To The Editor: READER'S VIEWS Why So Many Sects In Christian Church land called "love" and "unity." The thought of all the discord, | hate, confusion and suspicion which exists in the world today | gives one a great deal to think about. Major politicians and the-| ologicans all cry the basic need for one uniform religion, and each claim that today's problems may never be solved by man,| believe thing He said, His many promises ones who is eminently above all|the Holy Scriptures. others--God Himself. | In my opinion, In reading and studying one|Christianity does not teach, the Holy Scriptures trace a vivid|these promises and prophecies. nicture or course in the evolution prophet or predecessor, namely the "Unity|us, and ignore the rest. of n", and the "Oneness of God", at the same time He, w spoke added words which were others who feel |of course, then, can be traced, | tion of study groups. step by step through each and all| of God's Messengers. It must be born in mind, how- ever, when reading and studying the Scriptures, that the beautiful and flowery way of speech is ever 'symbolic if even to "Past" | sequenily '"'togetherness'" and "Future." In other words, "unity" can never be realized. they spoke much in parable. | For example, Jesus brought God's Message for th day, nearly two thousand years|Christ, or Christians ago. This message was which of course includes "love" lief that with all the within th God and the Father and the|gets larger and larger, |people of the earth as His chil-|encompass dren. Christ taught one religion. | ions, each with a somewhat dif-|today. ferent teaching, yet each profes- --Oshawa Times Photo | WHITBY | 4 [ - - any Compete In Rose vaio The weekly euchre club met at the home of Edna Sawyer in Whitby. A most beautiful display of Van Horne, Mrs. Crawford and Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. Ruby Peel, Brooklin, 1st; Mrs. Howard roses, peonies and delphinium Mrs. Patterson. Hawes. Bartley, Oshawa, 2nd; Rose Bar- made the Annual Rose Show and| (Class 5 -- Rose, H.T. Copper Class 13 -- Old fashioned roses, rington, Brooklin, low. the Whitby Garden Club. | Patterson and Mrs. Van Horne. Mrs. E. C. Price and Mrs. R.'lunch. The next euchre will be Held in the rotunda of the Class 6 Rose, H.P. and Hawes. held at the home of Mrs. How- Whitby Community Arena, it color, Mrs. Crawford, Mrs. Pat.| Class 14 -- Roses, H.T., three ard Bartley, William street, Osh- of people who were interested in Class 7 -- Rose, Peace only, Patterson, Mrs. Van Horne, Mrs. hostess. these oclorful flowers. Mrs. O. C,| Mrs. E. C. Price, Mrs. Crawford Crawford. Weeks, of the Oshawa Horticul- and Mrs. Patterson. Class 15 -- Modern arrangement P . P er arrangements gnd was assisted sprays, any color, Mrs. Ruby dominate, other foliage permitted, rivate lane by some membef's of her Jinior| Hawes, Mrs. E. Bond and Mrs. Mrs. Van Horne, Mrs. Patterson Section of the Society. | Van Horne. and Mrs. Wilkinson, C h I ds was done by J. Schloen of Elles-|ers, five sprays, any color, Mrs, |child in hospital, any flowers: Ids an mere Nurseries, and the following| Goldburn, Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. Crawford, Mrs. Bond and were the winners of the 28 classes Mrs. Van Horne. Miss Alma Rowe. Mrs. A. Crawford and Mrs. R. Patterson and Mrs. Bond Bond, Mrs, Elliot and Mrs. Rowe.| grij0T LAKE, Ont. (CP) -- Van Horne. Class 11 -- Bride table arrange-| Class 18 -- Miniature arrange- Tragedy was narrowly averted Class 2 -- Rose, H.T. Pink, ment, any flowers with accessor- ment, any flowers, not more than when a four-passenger piper tri- bu. and Mrs. J. Patterson and Mrs. J. N. Wilkinson. Mrs. Patterson and Mrs. Wilkin- Uranium Mines 15 miles from Class 3 -- Rose, HT. Yellow,| Class 12 Bowl of Floribun- son. here late Saturday night. Mrs. S. Burns, Mrs. A. Crawford. das, not more than 12" in height, Class 19 -- ™eonies, two Miners stood anxiously by as | Class 20 Peonies, three wife Thelma, 32. and their two blooms, pink: Mrs. Burns, Mrs. | children, Blair, 9, and Susan, 7, Wilkinson and Mrs. Gouldburn. were other occupants of the Class 22 -- Basket of peonies, Marie, Mich., on the first ieg of any color, 12 blooms: Mrs. Burns 2 holiday flight to Vancouver, and Mrs. Gouldburn. when they lost radio contact. Gresham. on a 300-foot roadway on mine Class 24 ~ Relphinium, blue or| Property. Security police man "4 blue mutation: Mrs. Patterson Mark Tinkis directed the miners r purple mutation: Mr. Gresha wingtips, propeiler and engine pid UID on. T. Lresham, ,, unts when the plane skidded Delphinium, three into a ditch of the joad's soft Sl B GC Tr i Cl | { EUCHRE CLUB MEETS The winners were Mrs. Cora Tea a most successful affair for| oy Bi-Color, Mrs. Crawford, Mrs. five blooms, Mrs. E. R. Elliott,/ The hostess served a dainty was attended by a large number terson and Mrs. Van Horne. blooms, all different colors, Mrs. awa, with Mrs, Cora Peel as tural Society, demonstrated flow-| Class 8 -- Floribundas, three for buffet or mantle, roses to pre-| Judging of the various classes| Class 9 -- Ramblers or Climb-| Class 16 -- Arrangement for a . / entered: Class 10 -- Corsage, Roses to| Class 17 Arrangement in ear ne : Class 1 -- Rose, HT. White, predominate, Mrs. Burns, Mrs.| cup and saucer, any flowers: Mrs. Mrs. Van Horne, Mrs. M. Gold- ies, Mrs. Van Horne, Mrs. Burns 3" either way: Mrs. Bond, pacer crash-landed at the Panel Class 4 -- Rose, H.T. Red, Mrs.|seven sprays, Mrs. Van Horne, blooms, white or near white: Mrs. Pilot Milton Fraser, 33, of King- in - -------------- | Patterson and Mr. T. Gresham. ston circled overhead. Fraser's Class 21 P onies, three plane, blooms, red: Mrs. Burns. They were flying to Sault Ste. Class 23 -- Delphinium, white or After circling the area for an pink: Mrs. Van Horne and Mr. T. hour, Fraser was forced to land 4 land Mr. T. Gresham to light the road with their cars. "| Class 25 -- Delphinium, purple Minor damage was done to any color: Mr. Gresham, shoulder. kinson and Miss Mary| a member of the Kingston Fly- 7 Club for the past year. He Novice, rgses ing a . : '| returned to Sudbury Sunday to| e blooms, any tolor: Mrs. R.| pian" another plane for the s and Mrs. E. R. Elliot. : a Class 28 Vase of mixed flow. flight to Vancouver, ers: Mrs. Hawes. | | There was a lucky draw for two WESTERN FORT | [potted roses, 'donated by Mr.| Lower Fort Garry 19 miles| |Schloen, and these were won by north of Winnipeg was built in! | Miss Laura Pellow and Miss Vina 1831 to replace the original Fort| Whitelaw, Garry. . Dark Continent Entirely Changed maskinonge opening of July 1 | Dae hove, Jt took hint 0 LONDON (Reuters)--Four Af-|ritory of Somalia, as that country will be one he will always re- tipped the scales at 21 pounds {rican countries celebrated their too gained independence. The| member. Casting into the Trent | * |first independence days as the new unified state, calling itself| The big fish is 44 inches long. | River, at Percy Boom, near --Oshawa Times Photo |Political map of the Dark Con- the Somalia Republic, brought to-| ftinent underwent startling gether 2,000,000 Somalis. Now Playin changes last week | On Friday, the independent More than 20,000,000 Africans in| state of Ghana--three years old-- those seven days became masti-| became a republic and inaugur- ers of their own fate, as the white| ated its first president, Kwamb HE TOOK ANOTHER MAN'S NAME «++ LIVED ; | man laid down his "burden" over Nkrumah. Ghana, with a popula- ANOTHER Phene MO 8-368 1,500,000 il tion of 4,500,000, elected t . { 1,000, A square miles. on 0 yo A , elec 0 Te- Evening Shows at 6:55 and 8:25 | "7ne march to freedom will con. main a member of the British Last Complete Show at 8:25 | tinue during the rest of this| Commonwealth. MAN'S LIFE «.. LOVED ANOTHER ' . ' "independence year." Vast Ni-| At the end of August, four Don't Miss ! MAN'S geria and fout neighboring for- former French territories-- ---- M-G-M presents his NEW hit! WOMAN! ss 27 CAUGHT ON OPENING DAY For Ed. Campbell, of 1104 | Campbellford, he hooked this Hortop street, Oshawa, the 1960 | Whopper, which he proudly dis- pa mer French territories are sched.| Dahomey, the Ivory Coast, Niger uled to join the world's sovereign and Upper Volta--will become states in the fall 4 overeign, thus freeing 10,500,000 AL Last Sunday saw the first of Persons. this week's history making ACADEMY AWARD.WINNE | changes when the island of Mada- ' IN AN AMAZING DUAL A gascar, off Africa's east coast Khrushchev Once The SCAPEGOAT | became independent. Ww A B Ii The island, with a population . Based 0n the Novel by of 5,000,000 and an area of 74,000 as e lever 2 DAPHNE DU MAURIER square miles, has elected to re-| VIENNA, Austria (AP) -- Pre- uy oles worrin main within the French com- mier 'Khrushchev explained Sat- munity 3 urday why he sometime. 0 On Thursday, the 14,000,000 in-| wir 8S Gites habitants of the Belgian Congo je gions Sources When expiain- | became the first citizens of the ng Communist policy, new Congo Republic. This new | In a speech before the Austro- state stretches from the estuary Soviet Society, the Soviet leader of the mighty Congo River to the referred to Noah's Ark in giving Great ~Lakes of Central Africa | Dis views about why there must which drain the River Nile. ve lo war, y ih "I must quote now from the ™Wq ME RGED bible," he said. "I know that On Friday, just book well because when I was a five days independent from Brit-| little boy and was going fo school KL BETTE DAVIS PLUS--SECOND FEATURE JACK J PALANCE TEN SECONDS To HELL Somaliland, Italian United Nations trust ter- was also a believer." / Fraser, a salesman, has been| [ ganized a raffle for a purebred LJ lish rule, merged with the former|l used to read the book and | ognize neither the Pope nor t Vatican. In Protestantism, Methodists, Baptists, Seventh- Day Adventists and many others.|Box 39, RR Why? Is this what Christ taught Whitby, Ont. I feel that to accept and be- lieve in Jesus Christ as God's Messenger, we must accept and in everything He said. To accept and. believe in every- mist necessarily mean to accept and believe In and pro- phecies. This we must do without but settlement must come from| question. All of these are found in present day| nor finds that the written word in|does it even touch on, or refer to So, not to accept and believe in and promulgation of the "word" |the many promises and pro- and "will" of God. Through the|phecies of Christ, is, in my opin- ages there have been many pro-|ion, to deny Christ, We either be- phets. With the advent of each|lieve in Christ or we do not be- "Manifestation of lieve in Christ. We either accept God "this" word and "will" has|all of Christ, or none of Christ. been expounded. Each prophet| We do not take from Him, mere- has reiterated the words of his|'y, those of His words that suit It would be interesting to know, hether or not there are any as I do and | applicable to the times or needs| would be interested enough to fol- of the day in which he became | low this through, in perhaps, fur- {manifest This evelutionary path|ther study, in the possible forma- It is my opinion and firm be- divisions present day religious groups, where, rather pulling and working with each other, we are THE OSHAWA TIMES, Monday, July 4, 1960 § Wild Riots At Newport Jazz Festival NEWPORT, R.I. (AP) -- The colorful Newport Jazz Festival, disrupted when thousands of clamoring yoyths touched . off riots Saturday night, plans to sue the city of Newport for $4,000,000. The city council declared a state. of emergency Sunday and revoked the festival's entertain- ment licence The action can- celled performances for Sunday night and today. An estimated 12,000 youths swarmed into the city Saturday night. When they couldn't get Orillia Hospital Patient Captured ORILLIA (CP)--Police Sunday night captured a 16 - year - old] escaped patient from the Ontario Hospital, ending, they said, two weeks of fire terror here. Police have attributed three| major fires and one attempted house-burning to the boy who escaped June 17. ! | The fires were a $75,000 blaze| at Camp- Israel on Lake Couchi-| ching, Couchiching Beach refreshment | stand and an $8,000 fire in al contractors" office, 'both June 26,| men grabbed him Saturday night and an attempt to burn an Orillia outside his home, hit him on the house June 28. a June 18 fire at a The search had been pressed! since June 18, by police, firemen, vigilantes with walkie - talkies and, since June 26, by two in spectors of the 'Ontario fire | marshal's office. Man Tells Police, Beaten And Robbed BELLEVILLE (CP) -- Arthur William Lewis, 66, was found Sunday wandering on Highway 2, nine miles east of here, 13 hours after he was jumped by three men outside his home. Mr. Lewis told police three head and forced him into a ear driven by a fourth man, into the already-packed festival grounds, many turned on police, using bottles and beér cans for weapons. Local officers aided by fire- men, state troopers and 50 ma- rines from the Newport naval base finally restored order early Sunday. Streets of this onetime strong- hold of society were left in a lit- ter of smashed glass, trampled cans, tear gas cannisters and other debris. Festival President Louis L. Lorillard put the blame for the outhreaks directly on the city. In a statement after Sunday's board meeting, he said city officials had frequent warnings there might be trouble but had ne glected to act. He said the fes- tival suffered financial loss and divided within ourselves, and con- How can people believe in all Christ | these different religions and yet| at | still profess to be followers of] when He Unity, | Himself taught only one religion? This dividedness on a small, I and understanding. He spoke of [shall say, local basis, as it grows, soon to governments, then . nations. This, I foul, is the real : So, is it not strange, then, why [basis of much of the late dis- there are so many different relig-|cord and suspicion in the van Billy Graham Talks After all, God did not create sing to Christianity, or Followers |Canada, the United States, the of Christ? Christ, did not teach|European countries, and all the Catholicism. He did not te a c¢ h|various nations, He created peo- Protestantism. Yet, in Catholic-|ple. It could well be said, and ism we find Roman Catholics, often has, that the earth is God's Greek Catholics, Catholics who|flower garden, and we the peo- adhere strictly to the Pope and|ple are His flowers, His many the Vatican; Catholics who rec-|colored flowers. Nothing to man "asa small time gardener, would we look less interesting than a gar- find Anglicans, Presbyterians,|den of nothing but white flowers. DAVID HERN, * |congress did DOG RAFFLE The navy in Halifax has or- , mircraft carrier Bonaventure, | was donated by Elizabeth Anne fox terrier and hopes to raise | Blairs 12, Disstweth, shown with $1,500 for World Refugee Year. | ticket at a special rn The dog, named Blairhaven | rade, Bonaventure after the Canadian | New 50-Star Flag Flies On U.S. Posts WASHINGTON (AP) The new 50-star flag flew for the first | 4q. time today on flagstaffs Across 19-state flag for Alaska, the United States as Hawaii's] The new flag has five rows of star joined those of her 49 sister|six stars and four rows of five states. stars, --(CP Photo) It was the second year in a row that a new American flag rose for the first time on U.S. Independence Day. Last July 4 brought the inauguration of the Id The BANK of NOVA SCOTIA TAKE A REAL VACATION damages from the cancellations. | The festival itself, he added, was| blameless. More than 100 persons were | |treated for bruises and cuts in the wake of the clashes. More ANNOUNCING NEW AIR CONDITIONING INSTAL LATION -- AT THE -- SPRUCE VILLA HOTEL IN DINING AND BEVERAGE ROOMS Catering to Wedding Receptions and Ban- quets in our beautiful cool Banquet Room than a dozen youths were ar- raigned on assault and revelling charges. Some 170 others rounded up in the melee were released with orders to get out of town. Old-Time Religion RID de JANEIRO, Brazil (AP) --Billy Graham preached the old- time religion Sunday to a huge soccer stadium full of Brazilians. But he got what appeared to be a disappointing response when he asked them to '"'come to Christ." A Graham spokesman esti- mated 130,000 persons packed Maracana Stadium to hear the American evangelist. His hour- long sermon rounded out the 10th of the World Baptist Alliance, attended by 12,500 dele- gates from 68 countries. At the end of the sermon Gra- | repent their sins and "come to {that firemen wear yellow instead ham asked all those wanting to Christ" to wave their handker- chiefs. Only a fraction did. FIREMEN'S BOOTS LONDON (CP) -- A proposal of black boots has been put be- fore the fire advisory council. Firemen say that they cannot see 'ows Hor) uy sonFeaq od JPY STRAIGHT RUN World's longest straight rail- way line in South Australia runs 300 miles without a curve, ~ PHONE 55-3555", SHIRT LAUNDERERS MOTH AND BURN HOLES REWOVEN WHITBY RA 5-3555 There's no Substitute for Experience! | to all makes 1 i Independent Sales & Service (Whitby) Ltd. unmistakable flavour unmistaka borrow economically through. TORN wre -- v \ i AND D RY ON SIDEWALK SLABS FROM Brooklin Concrete Products L | \ OLIVER 9-3311

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