Items of Interest Durham Region Lung Association has additional information information for hayfever sufferers. sufferers. Call 723-3151 for "Hay- fever - The Facts." Remember, Remember, Your Lungs are for Life. A Bicentennial arts and crafts show will be held at the Bowmanville Museum Saturday, August 18th, with over 20 exhibitors displaying, demonstrating and selling their work. Visitors will be able to see quilting, woodworking, woodworking, needlework, pottery, rug hooking and many other traditional crafts. The museum, located at 37 Silver Street, is open from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., and the admission is free, Punch and home baking will be available for refreshments. their home last week, please phone Cécile Bowers, 263-2086. Mr. Joseph Bosco, mgr. of Walter Frank Real Estate, Bowmanville, attended the impressive service on August 9th of the Camp X Memorial, Whitby, at which the Hon. John Aird, Lieut, Gov. brought greetings from the province, and unveiled the monument. A Bicentennial Arts and Crafts Show and Sale will be held at the Bowmanville Museum on Saturday, August 18th. Is your name on the voters list? Better check it out now. There are fewer than three weeks left until voting day. On August 15 at the McLaughlin Bandshell at 8:00 p.m., the Sammartini Trio will present a program of light classical music. The group consists of Elizabeth Lambert, aboe; Carol McGrath, piano; and Lynda Shewchuk, flute. The program will include music by Bach, Haydn, Mozart, Telemann and Sammartini. Orono Fair will be held from Thursday, September 6th to Sunday, September 9th. Among the events planned are a fiddler's contest, demolition derby, school parade, talent contest, sheep auction, amateur show, tug of war, Dairy Princess contest, Bicentennial Bicentennial Parade, and much, much more. Reserve the date. La Leche League meeting. Mothers interested in information information about breast-feeding are welcome to attend the next meeting of the Bowmanville La Leche League. It will be held 8 p.m., Thursday, August 16 on Mearns Ave. North, Bowmanville. Nursing babies are welcome. For further information information phone 623-3607. Students of Brenda Lowry received the following standings standings in Royal Conservatory piano exams. Grade One - Jesse Richter, Honours; Grade Two - Andrew Day, Honours; Penny Day, Honours ; Grade Three - Dana MacDonald, Pass, Kyla MacDonald, Honours; Grade Four - Ginette Purdy, Pass. All candidates were successful. successful. "Absurd Person Singular" is being presented until August 18th by Town Hall Theatre, Cobourg. Phone 416- 372-0710 for information. Also "Billy Bishop Goes to War" runs until August 25th at Stage Two (CDCI). The annual Durham 4H Sheep Club camping trip is scheduled for September 14th, 15th and 16th. The grand opening of Buster's Roadhouse Tavern, in Newcastle, (formerly Queen's Hotel) is all set for Thursday, August 16th at 8 p.m. The place has been renovated renovated from top to bottom, inside and out. The name "Buster" was chosen because it was the owner's nickname as a youth. The Castle Hotel in Bowmanville is also owned by "Buster." If you have any items you can spare or would like to make a donation to the Leon Carr family of Tyrone, that' lost everything in a fire at "BAHA'I FAITH 1 The troubles of this world will pass, and what we have left is what we have made of our souls. So it Is to this we must look. The Master said, "Turn your back to the darkness, darkness, and your face to Me". P.O. Box 36, Bowmanville. Blackstock Fair is scheduled scheduled for Saturday, August 24 th. The 6th annual Durham Northumberland Liberal Association Beef Barbecue goes today (Wednesday) at the Mac Ransberry farm, on Hwy. 115, three miles north of Orono, starting at 3 p.m., serving serving 5-7 p.m. Come and meet Darce Campbell, Liberal Candidate. Auditions for the Junior Division Program of The National Ballet School will be held on Saturday, September 15. The deadline date for Junior Division applications is Friday, September 7. Application Application forms are available from: Fellowship Baptist Church Courtice, Ontario Location; Courtice Secondary School SUNDAY SERVICE 10:00 a m. Family Bible Service 11:00 a m. Bible Ministry For more information phone: 579-4523 151 Years of Community Service S>t. Jotjn's Sngltcan Ctjurct) Temperance Street, Bowmanville, Ontario Sunday, August 19th, 1984 TRINITY IX 10:00 a.m. Morning Prayer Sunday School & Nursery Rector -- The Reverend Byron Yates B.A., S.T.B. Assoc. - The Honorary Asst. The Rev. A.D. Langley 1834-1984 haul's Enitcb Cljtivcf) MINISTER Rev. N. E. Schainerhorn, B.A., M.DIv. ORGANIST: Mr. D. Dewell CHURCH SECRETARY: Lola Bowen - 623-5701 Sunday, August 19th, 1984 10:00 a.m. Morning Worship We welcome the members of Trinity United Church who will be worshipping with us for the month of August. Nursery care (or pro-school children every Sunday, ADVANTAGE The Canadian Statesman. Bowmanville, August 15,1984 5 Rotarians Learn About Lotteries History The Registrar, The National Ballet School, 105 Maitland Street, Toronto, Ontario, M4Y 1E4 or by telephoning (416) 964-3780. Horse drawn carriages are available for weddings, anniversaries, birthday parties, etc. by phoning 416- 797-2216. Pontypool Cemetery Decoration Decoration Day will be observed next Sunday, August 19th at 2:30 p.m. During the Papal Visit York University and the Metropolitan Metropolitan Toronto Region Conservation Conservation Authority (MTRCA) are pleased to announce that they will provide 26,000 parking parking spaces for buses and cars on their Keele Street property. The parking cost will be $10.00 per car and $40.00 per bus. To avoid congestion the University University asks that cars and buses be pre-registered. To preregister preregister please send a cheque or money order to: Conference Conference Centre, York University, 4700 Keele Street, Downsview, Ontario, M3J 1P3, Canada, and a registration card will be sent out to you. For further information you may call (416) 667-3098. OBITUARY GRACE (GAITSKE) DYKSTRA Born at Scharnegoutum Friesland, the Netherlands, the death of Grace (Gaitske) Dykstra, aged 77, occurred suddenly on Saturday, August Uth, 1984 at Memorial Hospital, Hospital, Bowmanville. Daughter of Poppe Wynsma and Tryntje Wynsma (nee Heida) she married Hendrik Dykstra on May 21st, 1931. Mrs. Dykstra immigrated to Canada with her family on June 2nd, 1949. A resident at 68 King St. E., Bowmanville, since February 1983, she had previously resided at 202 Liberty Street N., Bowmanville. Bowmanville. She was a member of the Rehoboth Christian Reformed Church since its organization, of the Ladies Aid and various committees within her church, a mpmber of the Horticultural ' Society, the Ladies Auxiliary to Memorial Hospital, and the Senior Citizens Citizens Bowling team. She is survived by eight sons, 32 grandchildren, seven great grandchildren, a brother and two sisters in the Netherlands. The Reverend Anthony DeJager officiated at the funeral services held on Tuesday Tuesday at the Rehoboth Church. Organ music was performed by Mr. T. Strikwerda, and a solo rendered by Mrs. Jane Dykstra accompanied on the piano by her husband Tony. Pallbearers were Messrs. Claude, Tony, Tim, John, Henry, and Delton Dykstra. Interment Bowmanville Cemetery. YOUR NEIGHBOURS WILL THANK YOU Tennis Tourney Winners and Runners-Up Carol Hooper and Rhonda Mohun took top honors in the Elizabeth Arden Ladies Tennis Tournament held last Friday and Saturday at the Bowmanville Tennis Club. The pair defeated Dorothy Kelly and Carolyn Charman on Saturday to take first spot. The winners and runners-up are shown above with their prizes. Other spot prize winners were Mary Lou Roberts, Susan Cookson, and Helen Bickle. Byline... By Peter Parrott Time to put your feet up, pat yourself on the back, and hang a gold medal around your neck. You have survived survived another Olympics. Olympics. During the past two weeks, only an Olympian Olympian effort has enabled the average sportsman to follow the games and continue with the ever- day requirements of eating, sleeping, and working. Having a holiday during during the Olympics is a big advantage. The dedicated dedicated Olympic viewer could simply adapt himself to the Los^ Angeles time schedules. But others, not so fortunate, stumbled stumbled into work red-eyed after watching a spellbinding spellbinding contest on the basketball courts, in the pool, on the track, in the boxing ring, or at any of the other Olympic Olympic sites. That's one of the disadvantages disadvantages to having the games at a city as close as L.A. Communications Communications from here to there are excellent. With our close ties south of the border, we were able to absorb hours of-Olympic coverage coverage each day instead of the few minutes customarily customarily assigned to the Olympics during newscasts or daily round-ups. Seems as though people tended to ignore the Olympics when they were held in outer Mongolia, Mongolia, lower Bulgaria or some other obscure corner of the globe. But with the events on the same continent, we could hardly avoid becoming becoming armchair Olympians. Olympians. The games have been the greatest entertainment entertainment of the summer. summer. Our greatest injuries injuries were eyestrain. It almost seemed as though Victor Davis couldn't swim or Shawn O'Sullivan couldn't box without our presence in front of the TV tube. Fortunately, the Canadians.^ gave us something well worth watching. Oiir achievement achievement of 44 medals is impressive, impressive, even if you imagine imagine what our medal count would have been had the Russians and their sidekicks joined the competition. If the coverage of the next Olympics is as extensive extensive as what we experienced experienced this year, we armchair Olympians will have to go into an extensive training program. If we work out with barbells, run a mile a day, and practise going for long periods without sleep, we may be in shape for watching watching the next summer Olympics hosted by Korea. The Olympics and their athletes have given us a fascinating two weeks. But, in a way, I'm glad they're over. Maybe now life will return to normal. Stamp Will Mark 200th Anniversary of Church The 200th anniversary of the formal establishment of the Roman Catholic Church in Newfoundland will be marked with a stamp to be issued August 17. The Honorable André Ouellet, Minister responsible responsible for Canada Post Corporation, Corporation, recalled "that it was in 1784 that a separate ecclesiastical territory, immediately immediately subject to the Holy See, was constituted in Newfoundland." "The guarantee for religious religious liberty given to Roman Catholics in Newfoundland two centuries ago, makes it fitting that this historical event be remembered", said the Minister. In May 1874, following a decision by Pope Pius VI, the first English speaking Roman Catholic parish was established in what is now Canada. At the same time, Pope Pius VI appointed an Irish Franciscan priest, Father James Louis O'Donel (who later became Newfoundland's Newfoundland's first Bishop and Vicar-Apostolic) as his personal personal representative on the island. Montreal artists Jean Morin and Robert Ethier designed the stamp which features the reproduction of an old wood engraving of the Basilica of St. John's, the visible culmination of Bishop O'Donel's work. The Arms of the Archdiocese, centred below, bear the motto: "Vox clamantis in deserto" (a voice crying in the wilderness), referring to St. John the Baptist, patron patron of the church and the city. Canadian Bank Note Company of Ottawa will print 18 million 32-cent stamps in six-color lithography. lithography. Norm Morris (centre) of the Ontario Lottery Corporation addressed the Rotary Club meeting Thursday afternoon. Members Ray Simser (left) and Alf Allin spoke to Mr. Morris outside after his talk about the history of lotteries. by Laurie Townsend Lotteries can be exciting, lucrative or maybe just frustrating. Not so long ago, according to Ontario Lottery Corporation President President Norm Morris, they were illegal, too. Mr. Morris addressed the Bowmanville Rotary Club last Thursday afternoon, and pointed out that Ontario Ontario can celebrate a bi-centennial bi-centennial for local lotteries this year. The first "provincial" "provincial" lottery, unlike the Provincial Provincial lottery we know, was a 1784 affair held to distribute distribute the available land, and thought the fairest way to do it. But members of the early parliaments were not as enthused enthused about this fairness, and various laws were passed over the years to stop the "rogues and vagabonds" vagabonds" who took peoples' money for games of chance. Some of these games survived survived when they were called lotteries, because there are biblical refeiv ences to lotteries, and politicians who disliked them were often hesitant about overruling the Bible. Many churches held draws and raffles when no one else could. Games of skill were eventually eventually allowed (leading to the "skill testing questions" of many draws today) as the winner had done something to get his or her prize. Finally, Finally, even games of chance were permitted when the money was directed to charity, charity, and the benefits of the game outweighed the harm. The Ontario Lottery Corporation Corporation was formed in 1975, when the popular Wintario draws began. In the spirit of those first legal games of chance, over a billion dollars dollars of Lottery Corporation profit have been given away. Mr. Morris noted that while some may think that big government corporations corporations like the OLC pay more to salaries of many employees employees than to charity, more than a million dollars in profit per employee has been handled. Mr. Morris is a frequent guest of groups like the Rotary Rotary Club, and said after the meeting that he's pleased about the interest people have in hearing about different different aspects of lotteries. He said that his talk for Thursday was on a'Tight topic for a hot day." YMCA Planning New Fall Programs The local YWCA will start fall registration this week, with some interesting new programs and popular old ones. "Streetproofing" teaches children to understand and cope with dangerous situations. situations. This course is made up of a parents' evening and a Saturday afternoon class for children. Boys and girls can try a hand at carpentry in "Woodworking "Woodworking for Boys and Girls," or make "Children's Christmas Christmas Needlecrafts." Both are for children of ages eight to twelve. Adults have a variety of courses to choose from as well. "Positive Parenting" helps in understanding children's behavior and effective effective communication. Other ways to keep Mom sane are the "Fitness in Florida" and "Women's Winter Getaway" trips. There are different fitness programs, and microcomputer microcomputer classes for all ages. Public registration begins begins Friday, August 17 from 1 p.m. to 4 p.m., and will continue continue on Thursday and Friday Friday afternoons at that time until classes are full. There will also be registration on Thursday evenings from 7 p.m. to 9 p.m. The YWCA office is at 34A King Street West, Bowmanville. Bowmanville. 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