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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1954-01-07, Page 51♦;O!th,Fhr&t :Sunday . after•' Epiphany•. ' _ 030 wolf+!, HOLY• COMMUNION. ,10 aaw7. SUNDAY SCHOOL. q 11-4. m;-4IORNI N O _- -PRAYER. (,Junior Congregation and Nursery) 7 p.m EVENSONG. REV.. l ENNETHE., TAYLOR, "10 I.A.; D.D., Rector A. We ANDERTON, Organist and Choirmaster. QTTA,*A.—Canadian solders en° in Korea eartte MS year,,.. upas; ` three contalaerts looked back to -'the 27th "Canal; a naantry JBri- day, pnot without pride,,Qn a• Y Qt .gide 'the iu t exman ►- el t arae,nkevdemtheeninndthae pieni i ion eoI h.ea parts, among the- ylrerlei'„ .,..: pro- --fessional soldiers. 'On the "achievement"die A'f the„ e . .l D�L - SUNDAY, ,JANUARY 10, 1954 10 ane.. SUNDAY SCHOOL. 11 a;m.' THE -SACRAMENT OF "THE LORD'S SUPPER. Junior Congregation and Nursery. 7 p.m. "EVENING "WORSHIP. 'REV. H. A. DICKINSON, B.A. MINISTER Eleanor Evei.g , B.A. (Music),,A.T.C.M. Organist arid Choirleader barked-- o --their---firsts, major-:epers,. ationel' outdoor exercises OS the- ,year- .S_._Iir iovernaber, the .brigade teamed'- with.sotiher".._NATO forces 1 " e r for• widespread 0.e d �.m�ao uY,e s which:cone edea - the '.,�Canadhatt. nal formations a -training pro- gram." in ..Uernaa, iy.' New. Commander Brigadier Jean Victor Allard,. former, Vice -Quartermaster Gener- al Of the Canadzal • Y,sto ue.r, coniinatid Of. the . 25t1 Cann al a Pantry Brigade -ice -- Korea viii`' April, •succeeding• Brigadier M. P. Bogart. At -year's end hes still was. _.in. •command" 'of" ,n. fight: fig. brigade which, since the signing of the truce. in July, has been guarding e entire section -previously de- fended by, the 1st Commonwealth Division. Brigadier Allard was the sole Canadian. representative at Panmunjom when the truce was with the signing of a long-awaited •s ed•: ledger there was the reorganiz- ation of the army to .include a complete divisional formation; the construction of a new camp for Canadian solddier,s. neer • ,,,.gest in Oernany's 'Mohnesee ,T Valley;' a star=t ;e on eolxstruction; , of - . the $25,000,000 'Camp Gagetown' de- velopment n New -Brunswick which will house the. let CanadiansDivi- - sion; the'opening of a $15,000,000 Ordnance Depot at Cobswrg, Ont.; and a general pay increase .,for all ranks., , On the "sacrifice" side, there was the price in. lives and suffering. paid by Canadian soldiers in -Korea, F . a plight which ended only ren True Happiness Is of God and Comes From God ... He Alone Can Make Your' Life Complete. different nations graduated from ...eel • of 1953 )Ie _trade as corn - lance of period of 10-a.m.. • CHURCH SCHOOL. 11 a.m. MORNING WORSHIP.-... Nursery. and Junior Congregation. Rev. R. G. MacMillan Mr. W. H. Bishop, F.R.C,O:;. A:R4C M...,,s. Minister' - Director 'ofPraise . I N ly ,S.I.S, 'ietlieal Featured) Need we die? "-We all helve g1.10 - the a r t tate4ori entl�ae �benn the thou h o• sQ ne' da�t prevnt e' ing • ee • ,atvnes of deaf; i . • • 40$ virstas,t daisinte . ation 'takes �. a+vJxat.: : tempetat taMons p ysi- ?Waee probably +deem s some �1ogist, ` a ues :Loe`b, •p Q on; e 4- el that d�;al;tia. , 's�evita'liir..; ��1l�!,�ra�` the Vie. -i�;, ' �u�t; �gs . 0�'` . • tell us that we carry within �J1.8 'by lowering the ;breediing Waiver - tell per- •ature •i,y tWO-thirds; iGseh has truce. in ' late- duly. At year's end At the end of November, Canada Canadian troops were guarding a section of the cease-fire, line form- erly : defended by the entire 1st Commonwealth Division. - .Casualties .. The Korea conflict cost the -25th Canadian Infantry Brigade a total of 1,544 casualties from all causes since the -first Canadian soldiers ar- rived there late in 1950. Of this total 50. gave, their lives in the i Canadian Army end --the majority seven-month period preceding the of them are' now in 'Canada. truce. The overall figure includes 256 killed in action, 38' died of Officers Graduate wounds, 15 presunletl. deA total of 86 officers from 11 ad,.._1,102 wounded in action,' 101 injured in action and 32 returned prisoners of war. The October announcement, that various units"' and formations of the Active Force would besincorp- orated in a division • to be known as the 1st Canadian Infantry, Divi- sion brought about, a _.number,• of changes in the • overall stxupre of the Active Force. Formation of •a divisional headquarters, at Peta- wawa now allows all units to be trained at unit, brigade or division- al level. Briefly, other highlights. of `the past year, from the army's �riewt point were: Two Canadian infantry brigades serving abroad distinguished them-" selves, one in- battle;• the other with NATO forces in western Europe. While the 25th Canadian Infan- try Brigade faced a stubborn enemy 'the seeds of our decay, -.-end na- tural` death as a necessary result of. our de,.of being....• Lethal chemical ,chltngea begin to work in,. our bodies.,' -from -the day. of• birth, and possibly even in the embryo stage.;. The ultimate. causeof death ,is'.:probably po�isotniil ' from -•waste °products. - :'" Yet scientists -have shown" that life• is . inherently continuous. The paramecium: is -an..,^,animal found lintitagnan, -water. ' Its -body' consists o€ only one cell, and be had a total of , 95,254 men in Army uniform, 48,417 in the Active Force .est . feted :that if the , teMeerat, •- :• of -the Jit man body could. below Beed to 49,5► degrees" ",. humlaif.life colli ``nae extended`"1;900 • years..u„ . , ;�,.. New knowledge -..in the last five { years about-•res'ilsclita ngs ;persons whose • heartt. stops .on `t a operating table has enabled.. ;du�etors to post pone death: It has • stressed the dif Peren�ce� between "clinieal"- death and `"physl'dlogica'ly3,_death: . �::- - Many scientists are .convinced that,: even., # man cannot realise biological tnanl'ortality,: she Can stn, postpone death long' enough to get: cause it is'' so small it cannot be" far' more out of his potential life seen except under the microscoptr., 'span than he does now„ Some It .,:is significant because it never ielieve-115 years ds attainable now, dues. It lives on by the simple providing man can be protected process of dividing itself into two against -physical and emotional "in - new •cells. sults" to the body." ' One biologist who has made a special.. study of paramecia has watched them reproduce them- selves,• by sub -division, through and 46,837,�.in„ the Reserve Army. 9•,000. generations in 131 years--- the- fact. that for,. the vast majority ..Active Force soldiers serving over comparable with a quarter 'of a of people, the ' problem, is not .seas. in Europe and the, Far East:. Million years of human , life! •; •FA'•' whether they will live, _;for cen- totalled-about 12;000 at year's end. Does 'this mean that the ' in- turies, but until tomorrow. • ...... _ An unprecedented number of i dividual-celj.,is.�potentially immort- A U.S. Department of State re - highly skilled 'musicians insfhe Un- I' al? Perhaps. We do. not yet port in 1950• stated that in coun- ited• Kingdom and the Netherlands•know. • , tries such ' as •,u Egypt and India, enrolled during, the year -in- the Only a few" years • ago research . where the average expeelation of workers -- - -- ------- - tissue -which: life at birth is about 30 years, -only had beefistept alive and growing, 54 out of every 100 children reach since before the first world war. the age of 15 and„ enter the period. R was i 1912' that Dr. Alexis of maximum economic product•iv- it It is important to reduce the. death rate because it will mean an increase 'in the hu'inan resources available for production. - Given , social and economic im- provement, says the World Health - Organisation, people will etejoy a What we call natural death is ap- •fuller and a richer existence:'°They 1 ...-- parently something' that has come-- will have life and _.they will have with evolution. The kind of im- miortality which the paramecium has, was lost millions of Years ago when the animal kingdom began to Meanwhile, as=�,this research into the „nature of death that will give us understanding of the continuity of life goes on, we cannot ignore Carrol, of th,e eckefeller Institute the Canadian Army Staff College took as -piece of, heart tissue of at .Kingston, Ont., in November. chick embryo, put it •in a special In the graduating 'class, eighth apparatus—and demonstrated that, since the end of the -Second World it would never die. That is why War, were 73 Canadians, bee- Bri- it .,was finally thrown away! The tish officers,. two from the: United e d on for could have been car - States, two from Turkey and one each from Australia, 'India., Pakis- tan, Italy, France, Norway and Belgium. • ..Durin'g_,the year, the'Armyestab- lisped an emergency loan fund .known as . "The Canadian .Army Welfare Fund" to provide financial help, in emergencies -for all ranks of the Active Force. The program; financed entirely through non-pub- lic funds, provides• leans of up to $150.00 interest free and repayable • through pay. assignments over a period of 10 months. . Members of the Canadian Ariny Coronation - Contingent, drawn,. from Active and - Reserve -units in all section's "of the caun'try, lis- We've karma, half . 1 will drama .e last 7mbers air.,, Led, al - s back lead. to last Casey •e hall ►fished. imself ory. -TAKE _TIME TO Y BE HOLY COME -AND WORSHIP 10 a.m. THE SUNDAY CHOOL MEETS 11 a.m. "WHAT 15 CHRIST TO YOU?" ' -7 p.rh. "WHY TARRIEST THOU?" LIFE-GIVING SERVICES AT Goderich Baptist: Church MONTREAL STREET Minister: 'REV. IAN G. HIND,-_.B,.A,, B.D. Organist: Mrs. E. Donaldson, A.L.C.M. PHRXQ ADMIRAL • e MOTOROLA MARCONI ALL TOP NAMES IN TELEVIIW -- AT Iutchiiison Radio AND T.V. o Sales and Service ' Huron Road Phone 498R ®esesess•essssmeessoom :lassie, Bruins sroved-...•. from '. rr side fter, a study led its reate,r. fi n'a 1 e adin g, junior, :ender.: aching THE CHURCH OF -THE "LIGHT AND LIFE HOUR „HEARD •-. EACH SUNDAY . 'AT 9- A.M.-900 CF ML= INVITES YOU TO 'WORSHIP AT THE Free : Methodist Church CORNER VICTORIA.AND PARK STREETS .' . REV. MARTHA MARLATT, PASTOR.. ....10. a.m..,...SUNDAY,,,SCHOOL.,,:. 11 a.m. HOLINESS UNTO THE LORD. 7 p.m. EVANGELISTIC SERVICE. 8 p.m. Each ' lesInesday—PraYer Meeting. -Thess. 5:17—"Pray without ceasin9.`!• sports. Is',' 'the Iortuis was a° Brings enduring tenderness to the husband and the childrei 'Who mean so -much to you._ Six 4x6 and one 8x 0 portrait $,12.75 exchange itsssi glecelled existence for a more elaborate and efficient life . as a multi -celled creature. The complexity ' of man has proved to Abe his undoing. We .die becat'.Cte" one set of body cells lets the others,down. Liver `cells many fail and bring death to the whole organism even though the heart, lungs, and kidney cells are per- fectly able to function- foir•,.,inany more years. languished themselves, at_ the June •, We do not .die all over,...,all at •' coronation of Queen Eiiabeth_II. once. Days after an individual To four officers of the Royal Can- has been declared legally .dead, radian .Horse•' Artillery went ' the fragments of inner organs have tenor of riding in Her Majesty's 'been -found' fully alive. • Each or - mounted escort: in the Coronation Day parade in London. But the best news- members. oft the Army received all year did not reach .them until late in November when pay increases were announc- ed for all ranks. Army pay staffs worked - overtime to get the sub -1 stantial increases to officers and men in time to be- help in their Christmas shopping. In 1917 there were 606,523 Can-. adians employed in the manufac- turing industries; in 1929 th`e "num- ber was 666,531; iii --19.39 it was 658,114 and in 1952 it iiad reached the all-time peak of 1,273,187. - '' Smallest countyin England, out- side .the urban county of London, is Rutland, with 170 square mile$. it" more abundantly—and the --study of the humble paramecium will help to confer "immortality" on THEman. - - LESSON FROM BRITISH. SCHOOLS • gt. Marys Journal -Argus) --Thessstery or an American re- porter and his school -boy ,A son should command the attention of educationists. in North America. The newspaperman after serving at several world points was trans- feirred to London, England, where 'hid.., eoil was. sent to an English scl oi. The remarkable part of the story then starts. The 3by, who was a problem child at.all 'schools he had 'attended up until that time, be- came completely. changed and in SQUARE no time at all was studying hard and liking it. The reason? Ac- cording to the boy .himself it was "six of the best -that is si.walIQps with a birch cane" --a=dministered by, the headmaster. Other punishments 'include. three to five' hours'--deten tion ,in the .evening, or the .for - ..bidding . of sports for a,'term. • ' According t'o •'this story the "pro- gressive educationists of :this land of ours.. might take anotlieriti'o'k" or two at present day methods 'as in force• in Canada. LAID — SANDED FINISHED. R.R. 1 PORT ALBERT • • • Phone Carlow' ,2105 366-8x&tf fry" ' )N THE SMART see•are sescesMimmeesieiimiles•issss•ssseseesiss••sssssss•sss••ssss•sss BETHEL TABERNACLE (Pentecostal Assemblies of Canada) Waterloo and Elgin ' REV. HOWARD E. M,INAKER, PASTOR .10 a.m. SUNDAY SCHOOL=Start the New . Year with the s.i• FAMILY in Sunday Schoo_ 1. 11 a.m. "WITHOUT A VISION." 7.30 p.m.'.' "BLESSING'" or'JUDGMENT .from the SKIES:' Tuesday, Jan.12th-8 p.m. -Prayer Meeting and Bible 'Study. Friday, Jars 8th --1.45 p.tn.; Last Service • Week of Prayer North Street Church. THE LITTLE CHURCH WITH THE BIG WELCOME. - TO YOU, ad• to. TED i0 _a.m., SUNDAY _SCHOOL. 11 a.m. . "STAY Ong THE BEAM." 1:30 'p.m.. •BENMILLER. 3 p.m. UNION. - HOLY COMMUNION AT EACH CHURCH. Pastor—Rev. D. W. Williams, B.A.. Organisf--Mr. Bert Kempster. w1 STAYIPE AWNINGS'P�bF 'C'ANAD'A 5 Thornton„ :.Aye.I London, Onto - PHONE 3-9180 COLD-BLOODED•-CItUELTY s (London 'r e Press) YWhat.kind of fiend' takes .a collie pups, crated, in an ..orange box, out an his car; :.and then drops it in the snow in ,a near4by field? Knoll - wood Parkchildren saw a motorist perpetrate ,this infamy on Strath- meyer street and told their .par- ents. The pup. was recovered by the London Humane Society, which is hunting the unknown person. We 'hope he will be'found so that the rest of us •may know who he is who possesses so black a••,heart. Canada's first coast to -coast radio network was used in the diamond jubilee • of Con=federation in, 1927 , • Back in 1941 Canadians spent an average of $299.03 in retail stores. Ten years later the figure was $760.48. 'NAME '' ADDRESS Also Koolside Metal Awnings that o -pen and close. ST1301t' •SIZES AT SPECIAL PRICES As Ythis price is a'• s'aVi