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Oshawa Times (1958-), 19 Mar 1964, p. 13

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SRI EEE mega en -- een a ~ THIS IS AN exterior view of Holy Trinity Anglican Church, Court and Barrie streets, which will close its doors on March 31. The Church Of Holy Trinity To Be Disestablished By REV. LEONARD WARE Easter Sunday 1964 will mark/ the final service of a well known Oshawa Anglican Church. Holy Trinity Church on the corner of Court street and Barrie avenue will close its doors on March 31, 1964 for the last time after 36 years of contributions to Angli- cans, and the community. Many Oshawa residents attending other churches today can trace their past affiliations to Holy Trinity Church. The first services were held in Holy Trinity Church, Oshawa church, which has been in existence since 1928, has con- tributed much to the religious life of the community. Two of its members have entered pointed incumbent by the Lord Bishop of Toronto, In December, 1949 saw the burning of the mortgage under the incumbency of Mr Mc- Lellan. Mr. McLellan was also instrumental in initiating the restoration of the pipe organ which is also a relic of the old St. George's Church dating back to 1867. Many prominent musi- cians such as Dr. Healy Willan were consulted during its restor- ation. This organ, along with bid choir of Holy Trinity under e direction of Mrs. G. K. the priesthood and one of. its members has served on a mission field in Northern On- tario. The final services will be held Sunday, March 29. and Interdependence in the} Body of Christ' places the chal- lenge upon each and every per- son in the parish of Holy Trinity. BISHOP'S DECREE A Bishop's Commission was appointed to examine the future of Holy Trinity in the light of the facts presented and it was) decreed by the Bishop (The| Right Reverend F. H. Wilkin-| son, MA, DD, Bishop of Toronto) as follows: "I have today written to the| Rector and Churchwardens of! Drynan contributed considerably to the high calibre of liturgical music in Oshawa. After a period of 12 years Mr. on Easter Day, April 8, 1928. Of this important day the first rec- tor -- the Rev. Spencer Church- ill Jarrett -- wrote as follows: "Shall we ever forget the mem-/Mclelian was transferred to orabl occasion -- the first serv-| Aurora and is at present rector "! of All Hallows, Toronto. Holy Trinity Parish conveying to them the decision of the exec- utive Committee of the Diocese in which I concur, that'the par- ish should be disestablished as of March 31, 1964, "This has not been an easy of tar-paper to it the biting winds and it year -- the sides FIRST OFFICIAL RECTOR mission board in the year 1955 and making it a self-supporting Rev. Eric Albert Irwin joined literally covered by ris -- tools, scaffolding, etc., the middle kept clear in order that about 100 worship- Pews were installed in the church in 1930, prior to that date chairs had been used -- they were not satisfactory due to the fact that the chairs had to be taken up from the basement for church worship and carried down again for parochial pur- poses during the week -- mem- bers of the congregation and friends of Holy Trinity Church made the purchasing of the pews possible costing $1,500. The pipe organ, which was installed in the church the same) year, was presented by St. George's Church, through the kindness of F. W. Cowan and in- volved making alterations to the) building -- a tower being built! eosting the church $1,000. It add- ed to the simple beauty of the chance] and was much appre- ciated. It might be of interest to know that the beautiful window in the sanctuary itself -- the| pulpit and font were relics of the old St. George's Church. parish. It was during this time that the balance of the organ restoration cost incurred was paid by individuals in the par- y and friends at a total cost period of five years at Holy Trinity retired due to ill health and was given a parish at Cold- water, Ontario, until his death in June 1961. $12,000. Mr. Irwin after a Rev. Gordon Baker, the pres- ent editor of the 'Canadian Churchman", the Anglican na- tional newspaper, was appointed! priest-in-charge from September} 1958 to January 1960. Rev, Herbert. G. D. Richey was priest-in-charge from Feb- ruary 1960. Mr. Richey resigned in September 1961 to take a post as honorary assistant at All Hallows, Toronto. Because of the close associa- tion between St. George's and Holy Trinity it was decided at this time by the Rev. Canon C. D. Cross as the Rural Dean of Oshawa to Co-op the services of both churches under the direc- tion of the Rector of St. George's, his curate assistant the Rev. Donald Wilson, with parish visitations and services of Matins and Evensong con- ducted by Captain Ronald J. Pullar of the. Anglican Church In this summary, I wish to make mention that the men of the congregation have helped to} reduce the cost of additions and} improvements to the church) doing the manual labor namely} --the church tower and renova-| tion of the basement. The pres-| ent mortgage of $4,500 faces the! congregation--should any friend reading this brief outline of his- tory be prompted to clear the church of this indebtedness or part of it we should be extreme- ly grateful. We are indebted in a special manner to the Women's Aux- iliary who from its inception of 1928 have assumed the interest on the mortgage and also to the Women's Guild which has been in existence for the past three years -- assuming the rates and taxes in church and rectory. | PADRE OF REGIMENT Many residents will remember Holy Trinity's first incumbent in his triple role as _priest-in- charge, Padre of the Ontario Regiment and juvenile court judge. Major Jarrett after a period of 11 years resigned as priest-in-charge to enlist for the second time as a padre in the Canadian Army in 1939. The Rev. S. C, Jarrett (af- fectionately referred to as "Cap- tain Jarrett") retired from the active ministry of the Anglican} Army of Canada. The present incumbent, the! Rev. Leonard Melville Wate, | Was appointed deacon-in-charge| in June 1962 and priest-in-charge May 1963 of Holy Trinity and St, Peter's (Cedardale), | TWO IN PRIESTHOOD The history of Holy Trinity through its active Server's Guild has contributed from its ranks two members to the Anglican priesthood. They are the Rev. Lionel Rowe and the Rev. Harry Amey. Its history also records one woman in the mis- sion field, Miss Verna Holmes, who has served in Moosonee, on the shores of James Bay. In its inception Holy Trinity Church was formed to minister to the needs of the immediate community within its parish bounds, this consisted mainly of Canadians of English ancestry. The area 'surrounding the church has gradually diminished in numbers with regards to ad- herents of the Anglican Com- munion. This transition from an Anglo-Saxon community to largely an ethnic community is one of the contributing factors of its disestablishment. | The other important reason} for its disestablishment em-| anates from the recent "Angli- can Congress" in 1963 at which time the Canadian Church was! been aware of the faithful work and witness of your parish for the parish in February 1953 and|s5 many years. However, the then became the first official|changing situation in Oshawa rector due to his efforts in tak-|with the problems that have ing Holy Trinity Parish off the|peen facing you has made this the right choice. Nevertheless I know the sorrow this will bring to the faithful members who have sacrificed to maintain the worship of God in munity. decision to make, for I have your com- "Our chief concern is to make certain, that we shall be faithful in providing an opportunity for all our people to worship God as we have been taught in our Anglican Church. I knw that you will continue as loyal and devoted disciples of Our Lord and will ally yourselves with one of the neighboring parishes. "By transferring the furnish- ings, organ and memorials to St. Peter's Church we hope we will thus retain some of the spirit of Holy Trimty in this new parish. : "T am appointing the Rev. L. M. Ware as Incumbent of St. Peter's Church which will also help make you feel at home in this parish. : "T would like to thank you for the sincere way in which you| have faced this problem, and pray that you will continue to give the church your full co- CELEBRATING BIRTHDAYS Congratulations and best wishes to the following resi- dem of Oshawa and district who is celebrating his birth- day today: John Cayer, 194 Church street. Phone 723-3474. Education Levy Is Up One Mill She Oshawa Times SECOND SECTION OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MARCH 19, 1964 PAGE THIRTEEN. After a lengthy meeting Wed- nesday night, ich ended in the early hours of the morning, the Oshawa Board of Educa- tion unanimously approved its 1964 budget to be presented to city council for approval. Trustee Stanley Lovell, chair- man of the finance committee, stated that the budget will mean a one mill increase of which one-half mill is for capi- tal expenditure of the addition tc Oshawa Central Collegiate Institute. This expenditure has been approved by council and the board. The figures of the 1964 school board budget will be released) Friday or Saturday, said J, Ross Backus, business adminis- trator. In a finance committee meet- ing prior to last night's board meeting, the 90-page budget report was studied as to dele- tions which could be made to hold the mounting cost of edu- cation without harmful effects on education or the educational policy of Oshawa. It was stated that to hold costs in a city that is going through a tremendous student explosion, resulting from an in- creased birth rate and new |famulies moving to the area as a result of our industrial ex- pansion, is becoming an im- possible task. A note of humor was inter- jected into the board meeting at 11.20 p.m. when Dr. Brian Doherty, separate school rep- resentative, received a_ tele- phone call. Dr. Doherty return-| ed to the board meeting to) gather his papers and com-/ mented as he made a hurried) CLASS DONATES CLOTHING TO WELFARE DEPARTMENT The clothing made by the students of the power sewing class at R. S. McLaughlin Col- legiate and Vocational Insti- tute were presented to the Oshawa Welfare Deparment today. Mrs. Edgar Tremble the instructor for the class shows some of the clothing to students of the regular sew- ing class. Lef to right are Mrs. Tremble, Linda Wharry, Patsy Dier, Linda Bratt and Diane Watt. Sixteen girls took the course this year sponsored by the federal government to retrain the unemployed. --Oshawa Times Photo exit: 'Well, I think I'm off to deliver a baby .. . a new stu-| dent five years hence." Cites Objections To Harbor Act OTTAWA (Special) -- The ob- jections of the City of Oshawa to an act to provide for the es- tablishment of harbor commis- sions in Canada was voiced in the Senate Wednesday by Al- lister Grosart. Senator Grosart spoke during debate on second reading of the bill which was sent to. the Sen- ate's Committee on Transpor- tation for more detailed study. A similar bill was debated in the last session and at that time Oshawa sent representatives to appear before the committee. LACK OF COMMUNICATION Senator Grosart was critical of what he described as the bureaucratic mind and depart- mental blind spots in not nofi- fying Oshawa that the bill was being introduced again. He said that civil servants had a duty to notify the munici- pal authorities of such mat- ters and Oshawa did not re- ceive any information until the bill had been printed and intro- duced. should at least tell Oshawa it was not able to meet the city's objections to the bill and ask the city to send representation to Ottawa to explain the rea- sons. "Unless this is done the city feels it is banging its head against a blank wall,"' Senator Grosart charged. "This type ol bureaucratic mind makes the people feel that the government does not care." He said Oshawa had two ob- jections to the bill. One is it feels the city should have access to the books of the new harbor commission when it is formed, as it now has under the pres- ent act. He said that some of the city's property and assets are admin- istered by the commission and He felt that ,;the department] without such access the city feels it is being ignored. SHOULD STUDY SUGGESTIONS "T am not taking the position Oshawa should be excluded from the bill as it does not class itself with Toronto, Hamilton an@ some of the other harbors which are being exempted," Senator Grosart explained. "But I do feel consideration should be given to Oshawa's suggestion for changes in the bill and. the city should be given an explana- tion of why they may be wrong in these suggestions." He said the second objection Oshawa had was that the pres-| ent commission can be taken over under the new act with- out any bylaw of the munici- pality. A bylaw of the present com- mission will be required but he pointed out that in the Oshawa Commission, two of the three members were government ap- pointees. : He said that while a notice about the bill had been sent to the commission, no prior notice had been received by the mu- nicipality which made the orig- inal representations. It was finally agreed by Sen- |ate Government Leader John J. Connolly that the various sug- gestions made would be taken up with the Department of Transport before the matter) comes up before the committee| in the next week or two. | APPEARING ON TV Marie Courtois, 18, an em- ployee of the Bell Telephone Company in Oshawa, will ap- vision program 'Music Hop" teday between 5.30 and 6 p.m. Under the stage name of Kip "Andre, Marie will sing 'The der fire Tuesday at the meeting around and preying on people, and as a result the UIC is try- ing to get the money back. jtives, should try to straighten the situation out. not deal with any other aspect delegate of Local 222, "and pro- of the UIC should tel! our members what are what they are." pear on the Channel 6 tele-|the labor minister should be in- ivited to send an inspector to Oshawa from Ottawa. "Have the guy sent down here and we will put the problems in his Waiting Game." lap,"" he stated. UIC Policy Find Bay Ridges Baby Criticized Suffocated Accidentally By Labor The "Gestapo" actions of in- spectors of the Unemployment Insurance Commission came un- of the Oshawa and District Labor Council. Abe Taylor, president of Local 222, UAW, said "thre is a de- plorable situation in the UIC. The inspectors are roading they lead them into making false statements and then cut off their payments. "T know of one pensioner who voluntarily retired and collect- ed -$1,700 in UIC payments while trying to get another job. He was panicked by an investi- gator into signing a statement Mr. Taylor saiq that the ad- visory committee of the UIC, on which the ODLC has representa- Joseph Grills, advisory com- mittee member, said that his committee was involved with employment availability and did of UIC work. "We should write to Allan J. MacEachen, the federal labor minister," said Bill Rutherford, test against the Gestapo tactics investigators here and across the country. We to do, they should throw these pigs right off the verandah, pigs Secretary Keith Ross said that operation." PARENTS AUXILIARY DONATES TAPE RECORDER The Parents' Auxiliary of Church in December 1963 and is|asked to take a soul searching! the Oshawa Society for the now a resident of Toronto In October 1940 the Rev look at its responsibilities to its "Mission". The document en- Deaf and Hard donated a tape recorder to of Hearing for pre-school deaf children in Oshawa and district. Funds for the recorder were raised from the proceeds of a Val- Elmer Hugh McLellan 'was ap-ititled 'Mutual Responsibility|. Miss N. MacDonald, teacher ' entine Dance held recently by ' ' } the auxiliary. In the picture Mrs, Donald Smith, secretary of: the auxiliary, second from right, and Miss MacDonald, right, demonstrate the tape '|lowing too closely; Randolph recorder to some of the tots attending the class. They are, from left, Kenny Chan, 5; Shawney Berry, 5; Patti Lyons, 4 and Steven Smith, 4. lruled Wednesday night that a A five-man coroner's jury seven - month - old Pickering Township baby accidentally suf- focated to death in a "faulty" crib. The jury, in an inquest into the death Feb. 21 of Andrew Kalina, 5 Krosno boulevard, Bay |Ridges, also made two recom- mendations: "That children of irresponsible years not be left alone in a building for any length of time; "That parents be reminded by the unfortunate and untimely death of 'this child that the physical condition of children's cribs; beds and playpens must be maintained in a safe condi- tion at all times." LEFT UNATTENDED The parents of the dead in- fant, Mr. and Mrs. Rolf Kalina, sat ashen-faced as Crown Attor- ney Bruce Affleck pointed to the crib -- assembled in the court- room -- and said: " "We have to look the evidence squarely in the face: there was tress doesn't fit the crib and a screw in the side of it was miss- ing." After instructing the jury to bring in a "sound" verdict since "I am most unsatisfied with verdicts that have been brought in lately,' Coroner Dr. jury on an "excellent one", DIED OF SUFFOCATION take "at the most, six minutes". the home Feb. 21 infant in her arms. Dr. Weisbaum added. left unattended?" Affleck. parental neglect here in leaving the child unattended. The mat- 25 Traffic Cases Heard By Court In a marathon six and a half- hour session Wednesday, Magis- trate H, W. Jermyn disposed: of the following 25 Highway Traffic Act cases: Robert W. Henesy, 152 LaSalle avenue, $20, fail to yield right of way; Allan R. Porter, 109 Gib bstreet, $200 or 30 days in jail plus six months licence sus- ension, careless driving; Do- menico Pepe, 91 Purham street, $20, fail to yield right of way; Ronald G, Brown, 537 Crerar avenue, $200, careless driving; Gordon A. Burley, 290 Mary street, $20, failing to come to full stop; Robert G. Thackeray, Peterborough, $20, disobey traf- fic signals. David E. Butler, 146 Patricia street, $20, failing to stop at stop sign; Joseph McGee, 261 Cadillac. avenue south, $20, fol- lowing too closely; Gertrude Muller, 340 Marland avenue, $20, following too closely; Peter Delyea, 655 Somerville avenue, $20, following too closely. Eugene Higgens, 210 Wilson road south, $10, driving left of centre of highway; Richard Is- sel, 822 Sylvia street, $10, no left signal. James A. McKinlay, 364 Sim- coe street south, $20, failing to yield right of way; Edward W. Shemilt, 120 Beatrice street, $20, following too closely; Clayton Wilson, 69 Queen street, $20, fol- MacFarland, 237 Park road north, $20, failing to yield right of way to pedestrian; and Ag- nes Clement, 192 Stevensons road north, $20, failing to yield right of way. Charges were dismissed against the following: Demetro Berkuta, 863 Ritson 'road south, careless driving: Lawrence Burke, 141 Park road _ south, careless driving; Frank J. Young, 89 Haslam street, Scar- borough, careless driving; Gail Tamblyn, 276 Saguenay street, failing to yield; Darryl Leach, 776 Grierson street, failing to yield right of way; Henricus Moulensteen, Pickering, failing to yield right of way; Thomas D. Graham, 358 Rossland road west, failing to yield right of and Mrs. Mrs. Cutcheon, 42; Mr, and Mrs. J. Wilson, 42; Mr. and Mrs, Mc- Cann, 41; Mrs. G, Beaton and do,"' replied Dr. Weisbaum. ON SHOPPING TRIP Mrs. Elsa Kalina admitted F, A. Cuddy congratulated the Oshawa General Hospital path- ologist Dr. Roland Clarke said the baby -- "'large, healthy and child for "half-hour 'stretches while I visited people across the street". She said that Feb, 21 after feeding the baby, she and her husband, and children, Hans, 5, and Jacqueline, 2, all went shopping for baby food. The family was away for per- haps 20 minutes, said Mrs. Kalina, then after preparing a meal for the children and mak- ing coffee for her husband and a visitor, she went upstairs and found her child dead. well cared-for" -- died of suffo- cation. He said suffocation would Dr. S. D. Weisbaum, the fam- ily physician, said he called at and found Mrs. Kalina cradling the dead "She told me the family went out for a while and upon return- ing home she found the child dead, wedged between the mat- tress and the side of the bed," "Should a child of that age be asked Mr. "You can't sit and watch a child all day . . . but to leave a child unattended for 45 minutes is not an acceptable thing to that she sometimes left the! Mrs. Kalina said a blanket around the small' -- was on the floor. The baby was trapped be- tween the bars of the crib and the mattress; its face was press- ed into the mattress, she said. Mrs. Kalina said a screw, missing from inside the crib, pees lowed the baby's body to slip. Rolf Kalina testified that his wife had told him about the missing screw "four or five days" before the tragedy. "I. wanted to fix it but I had no screwdriver," he added. The distraught father said the family was away from the house "about 45 minutes'. "And this was the first time we hadn't taken the baby shop- ping with us," Mr. Kalina added. On Monday, Mar. 16, the orchestras and band of Dr. F. J. Donevan Collegiate Insti- tute won top honors at the Peterborough Kiwanis Music Festival. The band won a first prize with a mark of 84, while the junior orchestra placed first in its class with a mark of 83. The senior orchestra placed first in the Collegiate Orches- tra class with a mark of 8, and also placed second in the open class with a mark of 82. This was only six points behind the winning orchestra, the Peterborough Chamber Orches- tra, a semi-professional group. Leslie Regan, the adjudicator, had many points of construc- tive criticism to offer the com- peting organizations as well as much praise, He complimented the band on its shapely phras- ing and good balance, but at the same time urged the mem- bers to improve the variety of tone quality. He also compli- mented the band on the good control which was maintained throughout the lengthy composi- tion, SENIOR ORCHESTRA PRAISED Similarly Mr. Regan compli- Whitby Duplicate Bridge Club Scores The winners and high scores of the games played this week by the members of the Whitby Duplicate Bridge Club were: North and South -- Mrs, Bow- man and Mrs. Irwin, 5144; Mrs. Hunter and Mrs. MacGillivray, 51; Mrs. Spratt and Mrs, D. Wil- son, 50; Mr. and Mrs. Gardorie, 44. East and West -- Mrs, Watts MacDougall, 4714; Pirie and Mrs. Mc- --Oshawa Times Photo way. Three Events Won By Donevan CI mented the senior orchestra on the dynamics and the unani- mity of bowing but also hé instructed some sections of the orchestra to be even more care- ful about intonation. He compli- mented this orchestra on the fine intonation of the stringed instruments, and praised them for the controlled climaxes which occurred throughout the test pieces. : Mr. Regan also compliment- ed the junior orchestra on the unanimity of bowing but men- tioned that it is better to use too much tone than not enough. The public will be able to hear these organizations at the Dr. F. J. Donevan Collegiate "Spring Festival of Music," on April 24. During the same day of the festival, Mary Low, Oshawa, was awarded first place with 83 points in the sight reading class for 12 years and under. SATURDAY EVENTS During the Saturday contests of the festival Lynn Barclay, Oshawa, was given 83 points and a third place in the girl's solo, 16 years and under class. In the girls' solo, 17 years and under Lynn was awarded a second place with 84 points. The two-part invention class, Bach, 16 years and under had an Oshawa girl, Carol Weir, in second place with 84 points. First and second place in the violin solo, 18 years and under class, went to Oshawa teenag- ers. Mimi Wiatrzyk had 86 points and Elizabeth Elaine Dyer had 81. Mimi Wiatrzyk was also given 86 points and first place in the violin solo 16 years and under. The same girl took second place with 84 points in the violin solo 14 years. and under. James Tom- linson, Oshawa, took 'third place in. this class with 83 points. Violin solo, 12 years and under was won by James Tomlinson with 86 points and Barbara Kim- merly, Oshawa, took third place Mrs. Beaton, 34%. in the class with 82 points. \

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