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The Oshawa Times, 27 May 1961, p. 9

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TO DEDICATE GRACE LUTH ERAN CHURCH THIS SU DEDICATION SERVICES for the new Grace Lutheran Church, located off Park road south, north of Highway 401, will be held tomorrow. Former Minister Is Speaker In Afternoon [nDerby The dedication of the New This unique building has been the centre of much dis- cussion during tion and is perhaps the first church with a nave consisting its construc- A Sunday School was opened| of three distinct and equal sections, symbolics of the Trinity. The interior of the auditorium, which with fur- nishings cost approximately | | { Church by President W. O Grace Lutheran Church, located|in August and ladies aid was|Rathke on Aug. 3, 1958. off Park road south and north|o of Highway 401, will be held Sun-| day, May 28. Dedicatory serv-|o ices will be held at 11 am.,|F ter members N. Stire, : H. M. Hartwig and E.| templated during the. vacancyinom de plume of "Water Clear 3.30 pm. and 7 p.m. The speaker at the morning S service will be Rev. Fiess, of Stratford, president ofc! the Missouri Conference of the Lutheran Church. Rev. Roy E.|F Knoll, pastor of Grace Church| from 1942 to 1945, will speak at|p, Philip| Kansikas are still active in the : |property was purchased in Oc-|on Ploermel. tober 1958 for $1,750. Walter E.| {Mayer was engaged as archi-|s rganized in September of 1928. | The congregation was organized | P n July 18, 1929 at the home of| . H. Dahmer. Of the 10 char-| Fred tire, | hurch. IRST CHURCH BUILT In 1930 property, including al arsonage, was acquired at 154] the afternoon ceremony. Rev.| Albert street at a cost of $1,850.] Raymond O. Mantynen, son of The first Lutheran Church in Mrs. A. Mantynen, 207 Drew| (Oshawa was erected on this site street, Oshawa, and pastor ofifor the contract sum of $5,315 Faith Lutheran Church, Kitchen-|, nd was dedicated to the glory ROPERTY COST $1,750 Acquisition of the five-acre site, upon which the new Grace Church was built, was con- The pastorate of Mr. Gumz. tect. ) The Albert Street church and parish house were sold for $28,- 000 in June 1960 after which services were held in E. A Lovell -Public School, Centre Street. Lenten services were NDAY £ SECOND SECTION SATURDAY, MAY 27, 196 1 PAGE NINE 16 Underwriters HE ii, $125,000, is seen in the upper picture. The lower picture is an exterior view of the new church. 'Resident Draws Horse A resident of Oshawa has drawn a horse in the Irish Hos- pitals Sweepstake on the Eng- lish Derby which will be run at Epsom, England, May 31. The Oshawa resident, whose ticket was SMJ 06543, used the Water". His ticket was drawn The draw is the biggest of the Derby draws, the prize fund being $9,100,000. The draw is based on 33 horses with 27 tick- ets drawn on each horse. There will be 27 first prizes of $140,000 each; 27 prizes of $56,000 and 27 prizes of $28,000. f| Manufacturers Life; Max Sles- {Monarch Life; Get Top Sixteen members of the Osh- awa Underwriters Association were honored Friday at a lunch- eon meeting of the association held in Hotel Genosha. They received the "National Quality Award" which recog- nized life insurance sales repre- sentatives who placed consistent emphasis on quality service to heir insurance clients. Per- manence of life insurance "in force" is the basis of the award, not sales volume. Award recipients were: Jules Ethier, CLU, London Life; George McCarnan, CLU, North American Life; Peter Andrey, sor, Monarch Life; Gerald John- ston, Metropolitan Life; R. H. Vollmar, Prudential of Am- erica; Frederick C. Hutton, Canada Life; Banner Passant, Sun Life; Allen B. Johnston Canada Life; G. W. Woof, CLU,| Mutual Life; Roger Wolfe, Sun Life; T. R. McDonald, Mutual Life; A. J. Allin, North Ameri- can Life; Clarence Parker, Ralph Russell, Prudential of America and Thomas Fairbrother Jr., Can- ada Life. The National Quality Award- commonly referred to as "NQA" --is conferred by the three major life insurance asso- ciations: Life Underwriters As- sociation of Canada, Canadian Award Life Insurance Officers Associa tion, and the Life Insurance 90 per cent to the principles and code of| ethics of the Life Underwriters Association of Canada. More than 2000 Canadian life insur-| ance men and women qualified for this year's Awsrd. Presentation was made by H president of the Life Under- writers Association of Canada. He said, 'National Quality Award gives tangible recogni- tion to those underwriters who are contributing their best to our business. It is additional evidence to their clients of the high ideals and purposes of life insurance." Mr. Darch explained that persistency and permanence of business "in force" indicates that the clients have been pro- fessionally counselled on the basis of individual needs and have acknowledged confidence in their life insurance advisors. He said, "These men live as | good citizens in our community; |they conduct themselves in such a way as to bring honor and prestige to themselves, their fellow life underwriters and the institution of life insurance". Reports Show Church Growth COLUMBUS (Ohio) -- In at- tendance at the 64th General Council of the Christian and| Missionary Alliance during the past six days was Rev. Mr. Freeman, 459 Richmond street east , Oshawa, as a delegate from the Christian and Mission- ary Alliance Church. Twelve hundred and sixty-eight dele- [conducted in the residence of Drawers of 810 other horses, and Mrs. Robert Whalley. | which did not place or run, will The congregation br ok e/receive $1,584.80 each. In addi- for its new church onition there will be 5400 cash er, will address the congrega-|of God on Aug. 30, 1931. The tion at the evening service. |original cornerstone has now| The guest organist, James heen placed at the entrance of Chalmers, of Toronto, will pre-ithe new church. |ground gates attended. Reports from the president of the Christian and Missionary Al- liance, Dr. Nathan Bailey, New | YFC Plans Final Rally | The Greater Oshawa Youth |For Christ will hold its closing rally of the season Saturday, May 27, at the St. Andrew's| United Church, Simcoe street| south. This has been the regular meeting place throughout the season. be shown, entitled "Appoint-| ment". This film portrays the| life of a young man who met| Nordair Will Provide Oshawa Air Service Fhe Oshavon Snes Link Windsor And Montreal By ROBERT RICE {but connecting Kingston - with Canadian Press Staff Writer |Montreal, Oshawa, Ottawa and OTTAWA (CP)--Regional air| Windsor, was denied. carriers are to be allowed to/PERMITS OTHER RUNS compete in a limited way with! ft gave Quebecair the right the publicly-owned Trans - Can- 15 serve Chicoutimi on its run Agency Management Associa-|f tion. To qualify, life underwrit-|{ ers must achieve a minimum of |} in maintaining|{ their business "in force". They|f must be members and subscribe|f jada Air Lines on certain key|jinking Montreal, Quebec, Baie runs in Eastern Canada. Trans-lcomeau and Sept - Iles. Local port Minister Balcer announced|rafic will be permitted be- {Friday night in a major decla-\{yeen Chicoutimi, Quebec and ration on regional air policy. |Montreal, a route already Mr. Balcer also said that|served by TCA. The airline also {from now on TCA's domestic|will be allowed to add Chicous |air plans will come under the|timi and Gagnon, Que., to ane | regulatory eye of the Air Trans-| other regional route. port Board. In the past, TCA| Eastern Provincial Airways has been able to alter its routes| was given a permit to link St. and schedules without going be- John's, Nfld., and the Labrador H. Darch, CLU, regional vice-|* ch An outstanding youth film will| ARTS GRADUATE Joseph Bernard Kolodzie, son of Mr. and Mrs. Vincent Kolodzie, 355 Albert street, graduates Monday, May 29, from the University of Toron- to with a Bachelor of Physical and Health Education (BPHE). A former OCCI stu- dent, Joseph plans to return to the University in the fall to further his studies. Teachers To Play Pupils At Baseball By BARBARA GREEN As exams approach, students at Dr. F. G. Donevan Collegiate Institute are becoming a little fere too much with their more important social activities. In assembly last Wednesday our principal, Norman Sisco, an- nounced that there will be a stu- dent-teacher baseball game next Tuesday. Grade 13 is to play the teach- ers in an effort to raise enough money to have a time clock in our auditorium. This game i$ sure to be amusing and well !worth the 25 cents admission|En arge. Ron Eccles and Nick Urban were presented with the prizes they won in the Latham Foun- | dation Poster Contest. fore the board. Mr. Balcer gave his approval to a series of decisions of the Air Transport Board on regional air routes from Windsor to New- foundland. The decisions--affecting eight| regional air carriers--are the result of a series of public hear- ings held by the board in the] |last seven months at St. John's, Nfld., Quebec City and Ottawa. CONNECTS KINGSTON In a major decision, the hoard granted Nordair permission to connect Kingston with Montreal| and Toronto on all flights. It| also approved Nordair's bid for traffic rights between Toronto, London and Windsor on its pre- | sent service between the points. Both services were consoli- dated under a regular unit toll |licence with service to Oshawa lalso included. However, the board added several restrictions to the lic- ences, requiring a stop at Sar- [nia. Turn - around service be- |tween London and Toronto and | direct non-stop services between Montreal and Windsor or Lon- |don were prohibited. Quebecair's application to mining areas of Carol Lake, Wa- bush and Twin Falls, with local | traffic rights between St. John's, Gander and Stephenville. Maritime Central Airways will be allowed to serve Sept-Iles on its Moncton - Goose Bay route. But a restriction was placed on direct Sept-Iles - Newfoundland services. Transgaspesian Air Lines was granted the right to serve the Magdalen Islands as part of its regular St. Lawrence River run. Other board decisions in- volved air services into remote northern points. CHAMBER PLEASED Commenting on the granting of the air-service for Oshawa to Nordair, William O. Hart, presi- dent of the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce said, "Though this ie entirely different than we ex- pected, we are pretty happy about it because it puts Oshawa on the air map." "When we applied late last year, Nordair didn't appear to be interested," said Mr. Hart, "They were certainly aware of it when the Board of Transport informed them that Oshawa would be a stop in the air ser- | worried but not enough to inter- serve the same general area,'vice." Engineer Traces Boating Growth The members of the Ontario Section, Society of Automotive gineers, were told Friday ht, that the public has adopt- is not just in a boom, but in a growth period, he said. The speaker went on to de- scribe the working of an out nig | { ed boating as a family recrea-| board motor. tion, in a way seldom eXPErienc| rT OPMENT TRACED ed in any other activity. He followed the process of de- I Marcel L. Brier, in charge of | | The boys' athletic awards engineering at Outboard Marine were presented. Mr. Walsh gavel Corp. of Canada Ltd., said this the boys of the curling teamit, the members at the regular Aug. 28, 1960 and the corner-|Prizes of $280; 2,025 consolation as|stone of the mew church was|brizes of $112 and 50 residual Hatin laid on Nov. 20, 1960. prizes of $1,120. y, sent a half-hour recital at 7 p.m. | . s preceding the evening service. | si gd Songregatiol A cordial invitation to the pub-|3¢rVe¢ by Rev. 3 velopment of the motor, from crude methods to a well organ- ized use of science and tech York City, stated that there were more than 12,000 conver- sions in the 1150 churches in the his doom when he disobeyed the laws of the country and the laws of God. Wi . Ha lic to attend and participate in| fom August, 1928 until the services is extended by the pastor, Rev. Carl A. Kartech- ner and the members of his con- gregation. STARTED IN 1928 For some years a group of Lutherans, living in the Oshawa area, worshipped at St. John's Church in Toronto. The Ontario District of the Lutheran Church, Missouri Synod, began work in Oshawa in the spring of 1928. This pioneer mission work was done by Rev. A. Preisinger, of Hamilton, with the assistance of Rev. C. J. Killinger, of Lon- don, Ont. and others. A resident pastor, Rev. A. C. Hahn was called the same year. | 1934. Rev. C. T. Schmidt com- menced his pastorate here after a vacancy of only two weeks and labored with the congrega- tion until entering the U.S. Chaplaincy in September, 1942. Pastor R. E. Knoll arrived in October, 1942 and terminated his pastorate here in Decem- ber, 1945 to serve Grace con- gregation in Kitchener. Pastor N. C. Kritsch ministered to the congregation from January, 1946 until December, 1956. Rev. F. A. Gumz was vacancy pastor dur- ing the ensuing two years. Can- didate C. A. Kartechner, gradu-| ate of Concordia Seminary, St.| Louis, Missouri, was ordained and installed as pastor of Grace CHURCH COST $125,000 The cost of the new church, including furnishings, is approx- imately $125,000. Provision has| § been made in the design for a future extension to consist of] § separate classrooms and pos- sibly a prayer chapel. This unique buliding has been the centre of much discussion and curiosity during the build- ing stages. It is perhaps the first church with a nave con- sisting of three distinct and equal sections, symbolic of the Trinity. By God's grace the congrega- tion has more than doubled in the past decade and now em- braces 130 families. Sees Increase In Radio Gordon Garrison, president of the Lakeland Broadcasting Com-| pany, spoke to the members of the Westmount Kiwanis Club at| their meeting this week at Ade-| laide House. Mr. Garrison has been asso- ciated with the broadcasting in- dustry for a number of years, national Convention which will months by Magistrate Robert B. coming up through the various take place in Toronto from July Dneiper. stages as an announcer, sales- man, sales manager, station manager and now president of the company. PREDICTS SET INCREASE The speaker told the mem- bers of the rapid increase in radio sales over the past few years, and he predicted that Sales | President Henry Reed also thanked the speaker and con- gratulated the radio station for the service they were giving to the community. President Reed in his remarks to the members urged them to register for the Kiwanis Inter- 2 to 6. PROGRAM OUTLINED Past Governor Robert Stroud spoke on the program that will take place, giving some of the highlights that those attending] should take in. On the afternoon of July 2, those attending the convention | t record of related offences. Faints When Husband Is Sentenced A Long Branch woman fainted in Oshawa Magistrate's Court| Friday when her common -lay husband was jailed for six | Alderic Deraspe, 39, of Long Branch, was found guilty of] stealing a typewriter from| Walmsley and Magill Office| Equipment Ltd. The court was| old the accused had a long| } Deraspe had rented the type-| writer October 22, 1960, Albert| U.S. and Canada, while adult baptisms on the foreign fields amounted to 9005 who lived con- sistent Christian lives for a six- month probationary period. This represented about one-fourth of all who made inquiries to the missionaries. A budget of $3,- 060,000 was adopted for the com ing year. The per-capita giving for missions in 1960 amounted to $59.09 per member. The Alliance supports 830 ac- tive missionaries thru the con- tributions of its local churches. Four churches gave in excess of $50,000 for foreign missions last year. These churches are Jocated in Toledo, Ohio; Pitts- burgh, Pa.; Omaha, Neb., and Orlando, Florida, \and another 12 § cave in excess of $30,000 each. June Blood i CENTENNIAL SPEAKER Most Worshipful Brother Clarence M. Pitts, of Ottawa, Grand Master of the Grand Lodge of Canada in the Province of Ontario, AF and AM, who will be the speaker when Lebanon Lodge No. 139, holds its centennial din- ner at Hotel Genosha next Clinic Must Fill Need The June Red Cross Blood Donor Clinic has been sched- uled for next Thursday, June 1, it was announced today by Rob- ert H. Stroud, Oshawa Red {be special singing and a number The Greater Oshawa YFC re- ports a very successful season, in that three Bible clubs were started and are now in opera- tion. They are two high school clubs and a life line club at the Boys' Training School in Bow- manville. A number of good reports were received at a banquet re- cently. One local pastor pointed out the opportunities and need of a youth ministry of this na- ture in the community, and what YFC has meant to the church. Two high school teenagers re- ported on the activities of the club in the high school and the opportunities the club presents for higher standards on the high school campus. I The training school superin-| tendent pointed out how the| | | many of the boys' lives at the| school, and the need of more of] this type of work with teens in| our community. The film this evening is from the producers of Going Steady, Teen-Age Rock and Goal to Go. Other features in the rally will of teen testimonies of what Christ has meant in their own lives. There is no charge for com: ing to see the film and all pub lic are invited. their bars. The junior and sen- jor football bars and the ban-| tam, junior and senior basket ball bars were also presented For three years Donevan Col- legiate has competed in a Can- ada and United States math- ematics contest. This year the three students with the highest marks were Norm Davis, Bob Stelmach and Eugene Czere- waty. Bob Stelmach received a pin for achieving the best mark. Youth Is Fined For Disturbanc Ronal Paul O'Neil, 17, of RR 3, Bowmanville, was fined $50 or five days and given a six-month probationary period Friday when he pleaded guilty YFC Club had filled the gap into creating a disturbance May titled "the light two cycle en- 14. The court was told the ac nology. He showed slides of dif- ferent types of motors. "Customers will continue to insist on lighter, quieter out- monthly meeting of SAE in the Hotel Genosha. | More than 250 members of the | association attended the meeting|poards which start more easily |from all across Ontario. An and run more efficiently," he election of officers was held and|¢aiq. "Styling may follow a Mr. Brier was guest speaker. oourse established by the auto- He accompanied his talk with|motive industry in which appear- slides. | ance becomes almost as steal 2 ow " . factor as perfermance. Boat an | WORKED FOR GM | motor manufacturers are being | The speaker studied mechan-|gradually brought closer to- {ical engineering at the College gether in design co-operation. St. Nicholas de Paris, France. "A rapidly growing interest {He emigrated to Canada in|in cruises may bring about the 1930. He worked as a tool and|development of larger out- die maker in the west plant of hoards, or some new whim in |General Motors, Oshawa, in|the future may start an interest 11937. He later formed his own|in smaller ones," he said. firm in Toronto to make Inodel} aircraft engines. In 1945 he join- OFFICERS ELECTED ed the corporation in which he is| The new officers elected Fri now active. |day were: L. A. Hassell, chair- His talk was/man; S. F. Palmer, vice-chair- i i man; R. Hornell, treasurer; G. R. Jackson, secretary. The re- Friday night, gines and the outboard motor He told his audience that be- gional vice-chairmen were: L. C. Elder, Hamilton; J. M. De- cused had used insulting and ob- | tween 1951 and 1957 annual unit scene language on King street east, in Oshawa, at 6.15 am, on that date. Magistrate Robert B. Dnei- per reprimanded the youth for appearing in court in work clothes. "How do you get the gall to come into Her Majesty's Court dressed as you are? he demanded of O'Neil. The accus- ed said he had come straight Cross Society vice-pr t and Monday night. Many masonic [chairman of the clinic commit- dignitaries from the district as well as grand lodge are ex- pected to attend.' ee. The Red Cross is grateful to Right Reverend Monsignor Dwyer and the congregation of St. Gregory's that the "excellent facilities of St. Gregory's Audi- torium are once more being Warn Counsel to the court from work. lorme, Kitchener; J. R. Leach, | Niagara Peninsula; J. S. Mun- | ro, Oshawa; C. N. Reatherford, |for London and Sarnia, and G. |A. Lacy, Windsor. sales of outboard motors jump- ed more than 100 per cent, ac- cording to figures by the out- {board motor manufacturers as- | sociaton. He said the increase in horse- power was even more spectacu-| ST. PAUL STAMPS {lar; in 1951 the horsepower per| VATICAN CITY (AP) -- The unit was 8.9; in 1957 it was 16.3.| Vatican Post Office will issue a The trend toward outboard mo-|new series of postage stamps tors has increased rapidly in re- June 13 to commemorate the {cent years and it makes it rea-|19th centenary of the arrival of sonable to conclude that boating St. Paul in Rome, sales of radio sets in Canada will be treated to Show Time F. Foote, manager of the com would increase each year asin the Canadian Room of the pany, told the magistrate. Sub- made available for this impor- tant community project," Mr. people became more aware of|Royal York Hotel, while in the sequently, he said, payments radio in Canada. evening at Maple Leaf Gardens, Were not sent in and the accused "Before the last war, there|there will be an address by Hon. could not be found. were only 65 radio stations in|Brooks Hays, assistant secre-, The accused said he had Canada, and today that number tary of state for congressional {moved often and had always left About Remands Sitting for the first time in the Oshawa Magistrate's Court Friday, Magistrate Robert Bor- Stroud said ment. accidents the Red Cross is ex- in his announce- With the anticipated rise in has increased to over 200 radio stations in cities from St. John| to Victoria. The first radio sta- tion in Canada started broad- casting in 1922 and since that time radio has increased in popularity 100 per cént," stated Mr. Garrison. GROWTH CITED Mr. Garrison covered growth of CKLB in his talk. mentioning the station's first start at 100 watts to its present output of 10,000 wats and cov- ering an area from Belleville to Hamilton. Following his address, Mr.| Garrison answered many ques- tions from the members of the] Kiwanis Club concerning radio, the in particular FM broadcasting.|3500 members and former kind of thing. He said that if|{the accused betwee | . 3, s 3 . CUS > n Nov. 18, Mr. Garrison was introduced| members of the 48th Highland-(he hadn't sympathized with the|1960 and April 22, 1961, and by Kiwanian Bill Smith and|ers of Canada are expected to accused's desire to get money was owed three week's pay. thanked on behalf of the club] sy Kiwanian Peter Simpson. | relations. a forwarding address, but he Another highlight of the Ki- said he had not received the wanis International Convention|requests for 'payment of the will be an address by Hon. rental. John G. Diefenbaker, QC,| He told the magistrate he had prime minister of Canada. This borrowed money on the type- will also take place at Maple writer from a friend, Lorne Leaf Gardens, and it is expect-|\Wilson. However, Wilson told ed that the Gardens will be fill- {the court he had purchased the ed to capacity. machine from Deraspe for $40. Delegates will be attending In either case, the magistrate from all parts of Canada andisai¢ he was technically guilty the "United States, and Mr. of theft; whether he had sold it fuoud wized all Xayanis Mew or pawned it. ers to attend this the 46th An-| peraspe had said he needed us Rivanis International Con- {pe money to buy food. The enlion.. .___|magistrate said he sympathized i with the need, but pointed out SOLDIERS TO GATHER that there are institutions in TORONTO (CP)--More than|Canada to take care of that attend the 70th anniversary re-|for food, he would have jailed union ceremonies here Jgne 2-4./him for three years. tremely anxious that the 400- bottle goal for this clinic be sur- passed. Nothing worries health officials like an empty blood bank on the eve of a holiday weekend or a period when a den Dneiper, warned defence counsel that, "in a short while ino. remands will be allowed without good explanations". 'This court comes first, coun- sel comes second," the magis- a former Toronto lawyer, was recently appointed as Deputy Magistrate to sit primarily in Ontario County. Roy MacLean, of Galt Car- tage. 153 Conanat street, was found guilty and fined $25 or five days, even though he did inot appear in court. Crown At- (torney Bruce Affleck had pro- ceeded, "in absentia", on the charge that MacLean had not paid wages to one of his truck drivers, Austin Dow. Dow said he had worked for can be expected. Scores of volunteer workers throughout the city "have been working hard during the last few days trying to recruit sufficient volunteer donors to more than assure the success of the June clinic which will open its doors next Thursday at 1:30 p.m. Mr. Stroud points out that in- evitably the period from 2:30 to 4 p.m. is a very slack period in direct contrast to the evening session from 6 to 9 p.m. All who can visit the clinic in the after- sharp rise in traffic accidents '| A LARGE NUMBER of noon are urged to do so for their own convenience and also to assist the staff in their ef-| {MacLean was ordered to pay $156 to Row, sible number of donors. forts to handle the largest pos-| the Ontario Section of the So- ciety of Automotive Engineers attended the annual spring meeting of the society Friday ) in Oshawa. Prior to the den- eral meeting and banquet, the members and their guests were entertained at golf at the Oshawa Golf Club. Some ' yr Motors), Max Evans (Imper- ial Oil) and Ronald Doolittle (Hayes Steel). --Oshawa Times Photo of those who participated are | shown as they assembled on | the first tee. From left, they are, William Baker (General Motors), PA Neal (General

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