2-Orono Weekly Times, Wednesday, April 13, 1983 Second Class Mail Registration Number 000,166 Published Every Wednesday at the office of Publication Main Street, Orono Key C. Forrester, Editor 1 THEY DO IT AGAIN The Orono Arena and Community Centre Board continue to operate in the black and as well continue to keep their premises in the finest of condition with the ultimate in maintenance and as well adding improvements. improvements. This board proves it is possible to operate such a facility without going to the tax payers for municipal funds to balance expenditures. The committee is to be again congratulated and is an example that could well be used throughout the Town and province. And make no mistake no effort is lost in providing providing a facility that is tops in Ontario and maintained at a top level. It is an example of pri$e which began with the local interest in its planning and construction and carries on to the operation of the facility. The question no\y to be asked, can Bowmanville, a centre that sadly needs a new arena, match what has been done in Orono? AND IT SEEMS TO BE SO EASY Every municipality from Pickering through to Cobourg have by now announced tax increases of five percent for 1983, an increase which adheres to the provincial provincial guidelines announced last fall. This five percent tax increase is in most cases a considerable reduction to those which had been announced in previous years and the reduction is being made with little adverse comment from council members or criticism of the provincial restraint program. As well most centres have had a surplus of monies left over from 1982 and the Town of Newcastle is no exception. Of course this helps to meet the provincial provincial guidelines when determining the 1983 tax rate but is also an indiction that more money has been taken than required by the municipalities. All municipalities now proudly make their announcements announcements they are within the guidelines where before the annoucements were always tied to the rate of inflation being anywhere from ten to twelve percent. A couple of years back the Town of Newcastle had the opportunity of being able, if they had desired, to keep the tax increase almost at the zero point. Counc. Hamre, at the time, was promoting such a tax increase but did not gain the support of council. It is almost as if such should not be considered. The trimming of budgets to a lesser increase appears appears to have been done with ease and there is every indication indication that such could h^ve been done in the past. Pink salmon gaining in Great Lakes Thqy may never reach the exalted Hollywood heights of the Pink Panther or the musical madness of Pink Floyd, but the day may yet dawn when pink salmon whet the appetites of Ontario residents as' one of their favorite homegrown fish plates. For the past few years, pink salmon have been appearing in the 1 - Great Lakes - Superior, Huron, some in Erie, and a small number in Lake Ontario. There are not a lot but there are enough to attract thé interest of our province's fisheries experts. Dr. Tony Kwain, principal principal scientist of the Ministry of Natural Resources' Sault Ste. Marie Fisheries Research Research Station, wrote in 1978 that "the upper Great Lakes have the first and only self-sustaining population population of fresh water pink salmon in the world." A year later, in 1979, they appeared in Lake Huron and Lake Erie. It now looks like they're here to stay. And it's all due to an accident in 1956, when ex Kendal News I'm singing Lord, I'm singing A soul song filled with praise As with a soft and gentle touch, You bring on springtime days! I'm singing, Lord I'm singing A song of thanks to you Renewing life around me, The spirit in me too! Glory Hallelujah To Him who dwells on high Who made the changing seasons, The sea, the sod, the sky! Thank You for the miracles That springtime brings to earth, For life that's everlasting And for my soul's rebirth! Alice Joyce Davidson Sunday mornings's fog on the sixth line was the worst I ever encountered in the daytime. The attendance at church Was small. The country country lanes .are at their worst with all the rain and the frost going out. Rev. A. Tizzard chose as his sermon topic "Life from the Tomb". The scripture reading was St. John 11: 14-34. Friday when Jesus was crucified was a very sgd day for the friends and followers of Jesus. The chief priests and Pharisees thought they were doing right. They believed believed Jesus had no right to interfere interfere in the temple. On Easter Sunday things were reversed. The women who loved him wànted to preserve his body so they went looking for the body. They found the stone rolled away and found not the body of our Lord Luke 24:3. In our scripture reading Martha said, "I know that Lazarus shall rise again in the resurrection at the last day." Jesus said, "l am the resur- rection and the life: He said: I am the bread of life I come that they might have life and have it more abundantly. Jesus personified personified life through the resurrection. Because he was life the grave could not hold him. We share in that life because we believe and we trust. The dying thief on the cross believed Jesus 'said, "Today thou shalt be with me." That is, you will begin that Eternal life. I am the Resurrection. On Sunday April 24th, Rev. Boyd Butt, B.Th. from St. John will be the special speaker. Kendal U.C.W. meeting was held April the sixth with seven ladies present. ..The president Mrs. Dora Youngman opened the meeting with the poem "He is rise" then we sang "Rejoice the Lord is King." Mrs. E. Foster read Matthew 26:. 36-39. Mrs. D. Youngman took as her text for the Devotional, Devotional, "And He Jesus went a little farther." Others read parts given to them. It was Mrs. M. Elliott's "A WOMAN'S PLACE?" perimental stocking was planned for the native 1 people along Hudson Bay and James Bay. Hundreds of the fingerlings escaped their Department of Lands and Forests captbrs at the time, and 21,000 more were freed from surplus holding ■■ troughs. Otherwise, the pinks' might still be swimming swimming in ocean waters off the British Columbia coast instead of the cold, fresh wâters of the Great Lakes. In 1959, to the surprise of anglers and biologists, pink salmon were caught in a couple of Minnesota streams leading int,o Lake Superior. Two years later some were caught on the Ontario side of the lake. . Because they are smallest of the Pacific salmon, usually usually not exceeding three- quarters of a kilogram in fresh water, they'll never become trophy fish. But what pinks lack in size, they make up .for in flavor, At their best during the first two weeks of spawning, these spunky salmon make mouth-watering eating -- baked,or pan-fried. Emmy-award winning actress Maureen Stapleton stars in this searching drama about a woman's middle- aged crisis of finding out who she is, her questioning of her 'place' in society and in her home. She forms a consciousness-raising group with her neighbours, much to the outrage of their husbands, and together, they reassess their values and their lives and begin to assert themselves. Also starring Raul Sorvino. Tune in Global TV for this late-night feature on the evening of Sat. April 30 at 2:00 a.m. In the Wawa area -- which has become a virtual mecca for pink salmon - more and more residents are canning fresh catches. Fish and wildlife supervisor supervisor Evan Thomas said substantial runs are com- 'mon in the district, something something that happens nowhere nowhere else in the province. "Anglers found the species rather difficult to catch by conventional means, so we introduced an experimental dip-net permit permit about four years ago. But what we really want is to encourage angling ànd» eventually phase out dip- nets here altogether," Thomas added. He said "sonie new lures from the west coast" should help anglers in his district entice fish to bite. Northeastern regional biologist John Chevalier said that hordes of pink- salmon have been showing up on rivers within his region with an increasing number in streams leading , into the north channel of Lake Huron in the Blind River and Espanola areas. . "I'd estimate 100,000 pink salmon in the Michipi- coten River alone. It's the largest in the region," he said. Because angler interest to date is slight, studies are underway in co-operation with the federal government to evaluate the freshwater pink as a,potential commercial commercial product. ■ , .» for More information: Bob Defries • Ministry of Natural Resources TORONTO (416)965-2756 meeting but since she was in hospital Mrs. Lenora Stapleton agreed to tell us ' about the trip she and Jack took by bus to Florida in February. They travelled from Lindsay to Daytona Beach. They met so many interesting interesting people and would like to go again; next time by a more inland route. She described many places of interest interest like the huge flee market, etc. The minutes were read. Offering Offering $10.00. There were two thank you notes, one from Ann Foster, and the other from Mrs. Mary Carscadden. Moved by Mrs. A. Cathcart seconded by Mrs. E. Foster that a mirror be purchased purchased so that the organist may glance in it instead of turning around when the offering offering is taken up at church. Carried. . Mrs. H. Wood read the names arid dates of some gifts placed in the church in memory of loved ones. Were these correct? Were there others? , ■ Mrs. D. Youngman thanked thanked Mrs. Wood for all her work on the Memorial book and also Mrs. Stapleton for her interesting account of their trip. The meeting dosed with the hymp "Christ the Lord is risen today" followed by a delicious' lunch prepared by Mrs.. L. Stapleton. Next meeting is May 4th at the home of Miss C. Stewart. ' Mr; and Mrs. Jack Westlake have returned from their trip to Florida. They travelled with their son and family it) a new van which they found to be most comfortable. comfortable. The weather favoured (hen) also. If potatoes are sunburned cut the sunburn off as it is rank poiion. In the thirties when there was no sale for potatoes orte of the problems of the growers was to bury them. If left in a heap a cow might eat them and be poisoned. Samuel Pepys (Peeps) in his diary wrote on anything and ,everything, his diary is a storehouse of interesting small facts which «ne never grows tired of reading about. Take food for example. Fk favourite drink was butt! ale and he was especially fÔTxt of walnuts and oysters, frequently frequently making himself sick through eating too many of them. He disliked the way his wife kept on serving up cold turkey one yveek preferring to . sit down to "a barrel of oysters, a good dish or two of marrow bones and another of neait's tongue" as he said he once did. He thought tea then a new drink (he wrote in 1660) was good for colds. I received an Easter Card from Adelaide, Australia from Mrs. A. Smuk's sister who visited here in January. She said the temperature there was 37 C. which is 100 F. Never buy white polished rice for health sake. Buy brown rice. The funeral of Mr. Fletcher Fletcher Carscadden was held in the Lang Chapel on April 13th, 1983. Pre-deceased by Nellie, John and Harper Carscadden. Bi- St. Saviours ANGLICAN CHURCH Orono, Ontario Regular Sunday Worship Service - 9:45 a.m. Rev. Allan Haldenby B.A.L Th. United Church Oran* Pastoral Cftarge Rev. Wayne WrigM, B.A., M. DIv. SUNDAY, APRIL 17, 1983 Orono United Church Church School 11:15 a.m. Mprning Worship 11:15 a.m. Bible Study Cancelled this Thursday * Kirby United Chlirch Church School 9:45 a.m. Morning Worship 9:45 a.m. Stuff's Pharmacy MAIN ST.. ORONO, ONT. -» 983-5009 e. j.: sum