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Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 20 Apr 1977, Section 2, p. 12

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12 The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville, April 20, 1977 Sec KENDAL Kendal U.C.W. met at the home of Mrs. Garland Cath- cart on Wednesday evening April 6th. Mrs. Rowena Tiz- zard opened the meeting with devotional service and prayer. Cards of thanks from recip- ients of Get Well Wishes were read. A report was given on Oshawa Presbyterial Annual Meeting. The U.C.W. Annual Service for Kendal was plan- ned. It is to be held May 1st also the Salad Supper date was set for June. Mrs. A. Low gave a talk on the T.V. movie, Jesus of Nazareth. It was in two parts on consecutive Sunday evenings. Her topic ineluded a newspaper picture and an interesting account of the movie-telling the person- nel of the characters and cost of making the movie. Lunch was provided by Mrs. J. Stapleton and Mrs. Cathcart. Several ladies of the Women's Institute gathered both Tuesday and Wednesday of last week at the home of Mrs. R. Elliott to quilt the penny sale quilt. A pot luck dinner was served by the non-quilters, thus making a social event for all. Those from Kendal who attended the U.C.W. Good Friday service in Newtonville United Church were Mrs. Eleanor Foster, Mrs. Julia Jackson, Mr. and Mrs. Gar- land Cathcart. On Thursday evening April 7th members of the Couples' Club enjoyed a Pancake and Maple Syrup Social at Mr. and Mrs. Allan Downes in the Sugar ghack. A half hour of singing and music was led by Mr. and Mrs. Keith Wood and Mr. Lloyd Ransberry., Mrs. Margaretta Stevens is visiting her daughter and family, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Hamilton of Yarmouth N.S. for a couple of weeks. Mr. and Mrs. R. Elliott visited Mr. and Mrs. Jack Bradshaw of St. Catharines and Mr. and Mrs. Summer Cheaney of Niagara Falls over the Easter weekend. Several from Kendal attended the reception for the 50th wedding anniversary of Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Wood in Orono Odd Fellows Hall on Sunday, April lOth. Best DIRK BRINKMAN Scugog St., Bowmanvi le 623-3621 MICHEUN wishes are extended from the community. Mrs. Eleanor Foster and Miss Catherine Stewart were dinner guests with Mr. and Mrs. Robt Carruthers and family on Easter Sunday, The ladies of Shiloh spon- sored a bus trip to Toronto last Friday to the new Eaton Centre. Many ladies from Kendal went with them. Mr. and Mrs. Don Hills spent an evening recently with Mr. and Mrs. Dik Zanders. After many card playing sessions, once again the girls were triumphant as they finally eked their way to victory over their despairing husbands at bridge. At the card party on Friday evening in Kendal Orange Hall the prize winners were- Lady's high Mrs. Pearl Clark, lady's low-Sue Crowells, gent's high-Aleck Moffat and gent's low-Burns Hoy. The 50-50 draw went to Mrs. Duvall Sr. There will be another card party in two weeks time. Those who have been in hospital are Mrs. Allan Foster, who is in Port Hope Hospital, Mrs. Huber who has had eye surgery and Mrs. Mary Garczynski who is in Bowmanville Hospital. Best wishes go out to them all for a speedy recovery. Mr. and MeWs. John Fonk and family of Woodstock spent the weekend with her mother Mrs. Eleanor Foster. Mr. and Mrs. R. Elliott spent last Friday in Peter- borough visiting Mrs. Irene Dunbar and Misses Clara and Margaret Seens. Mr. and Mrs. Jack Fonk and family and Mrs. Eleanor Foster visited Mr. and Mrs. if you or me family carry a' or school, rea spring and sun additional haz brown bag lui specialists at th Council, Minist ture and Fo looking sandwic can be ideal p poisoning bact Many of the fo used to make sa salads are con tially unsafe. must never beu for more than i What are pot< Steel Beit Size Any size passenger or light truck Available at 219 King St. E. tion Two Carman Irvin of Port Hope and helped celebrate their twenty-fifth Wedding Anni- versary. At church on Sunday morn- ing, Rev. A. Tizzard's sermon was entitled 'Fulfilling Re- quirements' taken from the Book of Joshua, the first of the great prophets. The choir sang a number entitled, 'They'll Know We are Christians by Love' accompanied by Terry Moffatt with her guitar. Mrs. K. Wood played the organ and Mr. Arthur Thompson greeted the friends at the door. Sunday evening the Hymn Sing was held in Kendal Church. There was a good attendance, besides the three churches on Newtonville charge, Orono, Kirby and Hampton churches were represented. Mrs. Tizzard led the singing throughout the evening. Besides, many familiar hymns, there were, Solos by Mrs. DeSmit, Mrs. M. Robinson, Mrs. Tizzard and Mark Wagar, duets by Mark Wagar and Geo. Kent who played a mandolin and mouth organ respectively. The New- tonville quartet, Mrs. Stacey, Mrs. Vinkle, Mrs. Kloster and Pat Gardiner sang, accomp- anied by Mrs. Pat Gardiner. Rev. A. Tizzard conducted the devotional period of the even- ing. Mrs. K. Wood and Mrs. L. Hallowell were organists for the evening. It was a most inspiring evening of Music. Following the Hymn Sing an official Board Meeting was held. Mrs. Marie Stukel and son from St. Catharines spent the weekend with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Foster. Mr. Neil Elliott and son David called on his parents Mr. and Mrs. R. Elliott on Saturday. mbers of your food? They are meats, fis lunch to work poultry, milk, cream, egg ad on. Warm mayonnaise and dressingsa amer days add well as processed meats, me ards to that sandwich spreads and cook4 nch, say food vegetables. Remember to e Ontario Food it's not only these foods b ry of Agricul- themselves that requi od. Innocent special care. Mixtures of tw hes and salads or more of them, such as me laces for food salad and a milk pudding ai eria to grow. also potentially unsafe. Ev ods frequently if there's a refrigerator at th andwiches and office, a hot trip on the bus o sidered poten- subway can be enough There foods cause problems. The longe unrefrigerated these foods are unrefrigerate two hours. and the higher the tempera entially unsafe ture at which they're kept, thi quicker the bacteria multipli If you have to carry lunch use only foods that don't fav the growth of bacteria. Thi ed Radial best sandwich fillings ar Sale PnC peanut butter, cheese or dri sausages such as dry salami Instead of a salad, carry ra 'May cost vegetables, or raw, cooked yot less dry fruits.Usuallysafe foo& shoud no be ixedwil than you potentially unsafe foods, f think example mayonnaise one cheese sandwich, as thi makes the sandwich poten ially unsafe. Food specialists recom mend freezing sandwiches a soon as they're made.I packed in an insulated ba while still frozen, they'll ib thawed just in time for lunch To help keep bacterial coun as low as possible whe making lunches, always wor in super-clean surroundings. Carrying lunch may seer like an obvious economy, but food poisoning is a potentia danger. Think about il 623-4481 Always keep food cold an keep it fean. That way, yo ORMONUUM wilh keep it safe. Guides Hold Bake Sale on Bank of Mon treal Steps On Saturday, one of the busiest spots in town morning. Manning the booth at that time were, was at the Bank of Montreal where the 2nd from left to right, Capt. Jean Lambert, Alexandra Bowmanville Guides were holding a Bake Sale Woodcock, Debbie Rolf, Linda Hutchinson, Linda and doing very well. As may be seen in this Cleland and Lieut. Nancy Hutchinson. picture, they were just about sold out late in the OC S gerformanCes By Coby Veenstra The Ontario Christian Music Assembiy is well into its spring repertoire. On April 2, 4, and 6 the adult choirs, orchestra and organist her- alded the coming of Good Friday and Easter with per- h, formances of Bach's moving s, and beautiful St. Luke's Pas- as sion. Performances were at given here in Bowmanville, ed Georgetown and Toronto. The o St. Luke's Passion is typical of b Bach's genius in giving voice re to grief and penitence, and o comes to a triumphant close at with the victory hymn "t Is re Finished." For audience and ën performers it was indeed a he very profound and spiritual or experience to remember to Christ's suffering and death in er hswy d On Easter Sunday the Bow- a- manville adult and children's e choirs took part in a service of y. praise to the risen Savior, at h the Rehoboth Church. o, This Saturday, April 23, the r Trinity Church is the location re for the first of two spring e concerts, the second being in y Toronto. On the concert pro- w gram are marches by the ow bands, children and choir or performances, spirituals such is as "Swing Low", gospel oh hymns and also some works o by the great masters. The a Pilgrim 's Chorus by Wagner s is a great favorite of larger it choirs as it needs a powerful sound to be effective. - "God of Life" from "The s Seasons" by Haydn is a very If majestic work. Unfortunately g the translation loses some of e the effectiveness. The h. German "Eewiger, mach- at tiger, guttiger, Gott" interp- n rets exactly the forcefulness k of Haydn's music, whereas the English "God of life, God of m love, Infinite God" seems to it lose some of its impact. But l even in translation it is a very t. powerful and beautiful work. d Under the capable leadership- uof Mr. Kooy it is performed very well. Cantata 16 by Mr. Kooy, a fantasy on the vell known hymn "By the Sea of Crystal" gives opportunity for the audience participation which BURKETON A very lovely bridal shower was held at the home of Mrs. H. Weston in honor of her niece Miss Debbie Victory of Zion. A lovely lunch was served by her hostess. Those attending were from Brookin, Oshawa and Bowmanville and many friends and relatives in the village. Mr.and Mrs. E. West, Cobourg, called on Mr. J. Sinclair and family. Mrs. Rev. E. McCaig, Ottawa North, visited with Mr. and Mrs. H. Grace and famiiy during the week. Mrs. Lois Archibald is a patient in Bowmanville Hos- pital. Hurry and get well Lois. Mrs. R. Gibson opened her home to neighbours and friends and entertained them by having a Tupperware shower given by Mrs. K. McGill of Enniskillen. Every- one enjoyed a social evening and enjoyed a lovely lunch served by their hostess. Mr. A.C. Stephenson, Bow- manville, cahled on Burketon neighbours and friends in the village., Those in Bowmanville Hos- pital recently were Mr. H. Grace and Mrs. J. Smith. We wish them both the best of health. Many from this area attend- ed the annual Shorthorn Breeders Banquet at Black- stock on Wednesday evening. Bible School meets Friday evening. All children wel- come. has become almost an O.C. M.A. trademark. Lastly, on this spring's repertoire is a performance in St. Catharines on May 7 accompanied by Mr. Andre M.A. And after seven per- Knevel, an organist who has formances within two months, made many tours of Canada. perhaps its members can take A very busy, but a very heart from the old saying rewarding spring for O.C. "'practise makes perfect." In the great gefuffle over Eldorado's pollution of Lake Ontario, we thought you'd like some facts to go by. The first ad in this series dealt with nitrate pollution. This one deals with radium. The third and fourth will cover arsenic and uranium. In all of these ads, we want to state very bluntly that our Port Granby waste-management operations cause some pollution of Lake Ontario. But how much? Is the environment endangered? What about public health? After all, many lakeshore communities draw their drinking water from Lake Ontario. To understand the radium pollution of the lake, it helps to know a little about the element itself. Radium is a natural element (not man-made). It is intensely radioactive, and that's what made it souseful, for so many years, in treating cancer. Eldorado's Port Hope refinery once produced radium, mostly in the 1930s and 1940s. Then we sidelined fadium by developing the world's first Cobalt-60 therapy unit. Since then we have produced uranium, not radium. But we produce the uranium not from the original ore, but from concentrates from which about 99 per cent of the radium has been removed at the mines, as part of their ore-milhing process. Sa now we have very little radiumtostart with. But there is some - though just a trace - in the refinery residues that now are buried at the Port Granby site. What has caused the fuss? Well, once the residues are buried, surface water and ground water can seep into them, and carry some of the radium into the lake. How much? Radium is measured by the amount of radioactivity it generates. The measure is the "Curie". One gram of radium (about a 28th of an ounce) generates 1 Curie. Nowhere in E mdorado's operatiens do we measure in Curies. We measure in milliCuries (a Curie divided by Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wood, Pickering visited with Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wood recently. Mrs. Wood's niece Miss Shirley Macklin of Owen Sound, spent the weekend recently with her aunt and uncle. Lois and Derek Kay, Lori, Melanie and Tracey of Dollard Des Ormeux, Quebec, spent Easter weekend with her sister Marilynn and Russ Dow, Karen, John and Alex. Robt. and John Hendry and sister Annabelle Rickard attended the funeral services for their cousin Edith (Hendry) Marshall of Toronto last week. Congratulations to Mrs. Nellie Barrie, Marnwood, who is celebrating her eighty-ninth birthday at Gordon and Dor- een's this week. The Shaw's Ladies Group met at Thelma Lane's home last Wednesday and started another quilt which will be sold. Special guest was Mrs. Bill Cox of Mexico who attended with Bill's mother Mrs. Lola Cox. Rev. and Mrs. Emerson Knowles of Barrie visited with Mr. and Mrs. Austin Wood for a couple of days last week. They had a grand visit since Mrs. Knowles and Mrs. Wood had been girlhood school chums. A number of the "boys" of Shaw's attended the Stag for Barry Bragg out at Ashton's in Enniskillen. We hear they had a real good time. Bridal Luncheon and Shower A very pleasant bridal luncheon and shower was held at Killeen's last Saturday in honour of Miss Nettie Ed- monds of Toronto who is soon to be the bride of Tom Aiken, now of Toronto but formerly of Pontypool. Honoured guests at the 1,000) or picoCuries (a Curie divided by 1,000,000,000,000), About 6 milliCuries of radium washes off the Port Granby site each year. Naturally, it gets enprmously diluted when it reaches the lake. We've checked the lake water in the vicinity of Port Granby and found that it contains about 1 picoCurie per litre - sometimes less, and never more than 2. The permissible level in the Ontario drinking-water criteria is 3. We've also checked the lake bottom. The sediments in the vicinity of the Port Granby site are no higher in radium than soil anywhere else. Is it possible, though, that little fishes in the lake take up radium and then get eaten by bigger fishes, which in turn,get eatenby people? Possibly. We're looking into that. But even if the radium does get into the underwater food chain, it is very unlikely it reaches people. Why? Because radium goes into bone (not tissue) and very few people (if any) eat fish bones. Conclusion: radium entering Lake Ontario from the Port Granby site is not ahazard to anyone. We don't think it ever will.be a prablem, either. But to make sure, we have begun the installation of a system that will trap the run-off water and treat it to remove radium. The system, if you're interested, will be described in more detail by our professional staff in Port Granby project information centres in Bowmanville and Port Hope. Why not drop in? Hours are noon to 6 p.m., Monday through Saturday. ELDORADO ELDORADO NUCLEAR LIMITED bride's table included the bride's mother Mrs. Laurina Edmonds, and several aunts, cousins and close friends of the bride and groom. Other guests present included cousins and nieces of the groom. Isabelle Challice, Marg Kil- leen and Barbara Munneke, the groom's sisters, served the guests. After the luncheon and the signing of the brides book, a gift from the groom to be-the guests adjourned to the recre- ation room for a miscellan- eous shower of linens, crystal and tupperware gifts. Bev Lingard, Port Hope, cousin of the bride and Barbara Mun- neke, Orono, assisted the bride in the opening of the gifts. The guests received many interesting kitchen items as prizes for close birthdays, anniversaries and for coming the greatest distance. Isabelle Challice then presented the bride to be with a special Honeymoon Gift Pack espec- ially chosen by herself ac- companied with suitable verses to describe its useful- ness. Guests were present from Bolton, Bowmanville, Ganan- oque, Garden Hill, Hampton, Kendal, Orono, Oshawa, Peterborough, Port Hope, Pontypool and Toronto. The bride thanked ail, most sincerely, for the lovely party and the wonderful gifts and invited everyone to visit her and Tom in Toronto. Walk it to me! o me.,pa SHAW'S Care and Caution Urgeg For Brown Baggers 2s 2. Radium:How to solve a non-wproblem Uo g0 9jou0 00 cJft(ýD uçàe ouch Akab t iJouk90 Viscose Yarn in 10 shades 77yd.to95yd.balls, $2 .15 to$2.65 Jute in 10 Colours 3 ply, 70 yd., $ 139 5 ply, 70 yd.,.$2.39 Craft yard in many colours 2 oz. - 70 yd. 87c Elephant cord available at approximately loc per yd. Lamp Shade Frames- Umbrella, Scalloped, and Tiffany in stock. Other shapes and sizes available on order. Leather Tiffany Shade Kits, $24.95, Wide selection of Macrame and Leather instruction books. THE ROWAN T-REE 133 Church St. 623-9122 Bowmanville Authorized Tandy Leather Sales Centre z

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