v_ j^nn'iTPV Phon 9 ,or A uUULD A appointment PHOTO : .Anniversary SHOP V umited L VJïU/ Wedding and Family Portraits in our Studio, Your Home, Or on Location. 78 King St.W. Bowmanville 623-2404 Phone 416-623-3393 Orono Call 983-9547 For prompt, courteous efficient service when buying or selling and for the largest selection of ' properties In the area. 234 KING ST. EAST WORK WANTED ' Ear piercing service - $10.00. Phone 623-5747 for appointment and information. information. Hopper's Jewellers Ltd. 39 Kirrg Street West Bowmanville, Ontario WANTED College girl wants room and board from June 15 through to September 5. Call Orono Weekly Times, 983-5301. 18,25,pd. WORK WANTED Private tutoring. Grades four to ten in Math, English, Science, etc. Days or evenings, evenings, Monday to Friday only. • Call 623-7471. 18,25,pd, Asphalt Protection Service Driveway Sealing Commercial & Residential Protect your asphalt against gas & oil spills - acid only coal tar emulsion used. All work guaranteed. Free estimates. Phone 983-5270 or 983-5703 WAKEFIELD INSURANCE 983-9438 TOÊÊLYCETT FURNITURE RESTORATION REPAIRS^ STRIPPING PROFESSIONAL FINISHING Telephone: (416) 963-9475 Orono, Ontario LOB 1M0. Orono Towing MECHANICAL REPAIRS To All Cars and Trucks 24-HOUR TOWING Phone 983-5249 NOTICES If you have questions dr concerns about your municipality, please feel free to call me at either 983-5505 or 987-5039. Diane Hamre, Counc., Ward 3 T. ofN, NOTICE ' The Orono Senior Citizens will meet in the Oddfellow's flail on Thursday, June 2nd at 6 o'clock for a Pot Luck dinner. Everyone welcome. 25,pd. Steve's Furniture Shop We Have A Large Selection of Antique and Decorator Furniture for Sale, by Appointment or Chance 983-9630 Orono 1 Mile East of Hwy. 115 at Taunton RcL We also do Upholstery & Refinishing. ' U.C.W. NOTICE Orono U.C.W. General Meeting will begin with a Pot Liick supper in the Main Hall at Orono United Church on Tuesday, June 7th at 6 p.m. U.C.W. ladies from St. Paul's United Church, Bowmanville will present a program on the South Pacific. There will be a display of quilts from the Orono community. Come and bring a friend. 25,1,a.c. YARD SALE Rahm's Yard Sale Churchill Avenue May 27th, 1983 10:00 - 2:30 Record player, kitchen table and chairs, 4 pc, liv- ingroom suite, hârdware products products and woman's watch. 18,25,pd. FOR SALE Box plants, potted plants and hanging plants. The Mander's Farm. Phone 983-5179. 11,18,25,1,8,15,22,a.c. FOR SALE 1976 Pontiac, uncertified, good motor, $250 or best offer. offer. Metal fire door, 31 3/4" x 79", $60 or best offer. Call 983-5479. 25,1,8,a.c. FOR SALE Black & brown male beagle, 18 months old, registered. Phone 983-5087. 25,l,pd. TOWN HALL BOOKINGS Anyone wishing to use the Town Hall, Orono please book in advance by tiling: Fred Graham 983-5124 or Beverly Wakefield 983-9438. 18,25,l,8,15,22a-c OPEN HOUSE Relatives and friends are invited to an "Open House" in honour of R. Laverne ■ (Burns) Hoy on occasion of l> is 80th birthday on Sunday, May 29th, from 2-5 p.m. at Kendal Public School. Best Wishes only please. 18;25,pd. Natural Heritage gets new booster COMING EVENTS "MAGIC SHOW" Come and see magician Don Masterson display his magical abilities on Wednesday, Wednesday, June 1st, at Orono Public School from 6:30 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Admission $1.00 for all ages. Maximum capacity is 150 people and advance tickets are available from Donna Huiton 983-5717 or Wendy 'Roy 983-9533. Proceeds for Orono Home and School Association. 18,25,a.c. COMING EVENTS Orono Father's Day Turkey Dinner is to be held on June 19th in the Orqno Arena Community Centre. Delicious turkey dinner with all the trimmings to be served from 4:00 till 7:00 p.m. Proceeds to the Orono Arena Project and Improvement Improvement Fund. Tickets available at Mom's Kitchen or call 983-5608, 983-5840, 983-5858. 18,15,1,8,a.c. COMING EVENTS SPRING FLOWER SHOW Thursday, May 26th, Orono United Church Main Hall at 8:00 p.m. Guest Speaker: Mrs. Linda Caldwell, Home Economist -Dept, of Agriculture. Topic:! Freezing your vegetables. Flower entries to be in by 7:30 p.m. ' ■ ■ Green elephant sale table so bring ypur extra plants, bulbs, etc. 18,25,a.c. COMING EVENTS THE BEST IN ONTARIO CO-OP EDUCATION AT CLARKE HIGH SCHOOL Our School Board cuts are threatening this program. Buses are leaving Clarke High School at 6:15 p.m. Thursday, May 26th, for a Board Meeting in Cobourg. Your support is needed! 25, a.c. THANK YOU We would like to express our thanks to family and friends for flowers, gifts, cards and telephone calls while Gus was a patient in Bowmanville Hospital. Also a very special thanks to nurses of I.C.U. and 1st floor and Dr. Stevenson, Dr. Murphy and Dr. Shriver for their excellent care. Gus and Leona Wilson 25,pd. THANK YOU Thank you to everyone who helped with,the Best Art Show yet and Fred Olprist (pr the apples artel blossbms. Town Hall Work Committee , . 25,fi.c. A new actor nas arrived on the natural heritage scene in Ontario, and their presence is welcome indeed. After several years of incubation, the' provincially-sponsored Ontario Heritage Foundation has formally decided to broaden its scope of activities into protection of outstanding outstanding natural areas. ■ The OHF has been a major forcé in the preservation of historic buildings and works •of art, but it.is only recently that its members began to take an interest in natural and scenic features. Under the direction of Chairman John White, a former Ontario Cabinet Minister, and OHF Member Turk Bailey, a former Deputy Minister of Natural Resources, the OHF convened a one-day inference inference last November to examine examine how the province's natural heritage could be better better protected. Participànts at that conference conference welcomed OHF involvement, involvement, and urged speedy action. They got it, in the form of the Natural Heritage League, a new coalition that involves 15 of the province's most lactive conservation groups. Tlje purpose of this League Will be to co-ordinate efforts in buying the best of our natural areas. Each year, the ' League will be to coordinate coordinate efforts in buying the best of our natural areas. Each year, the League will jointly identify a series of priority projects, and work . co-operatively to find the money and the mechanisms to move quickly when these areas are threatened. To support the activities of this League, an employee from the provincial government government has been seconded to help for 2 years. The OHF will also establish a revolving fund, of up to a million dollars, to supply short-term "bridge" money often needed needed for flexible land acquisition. acquisition. Under this sytem, which is patterned after the practice of the National Trust in Bri- ' tian, member groups could borrow cash for up to a year at a low interest rate, and work out a suitable repayment repayment schedule at normal rates after that time. This could be an invaluable helping hand to local clubs who want to become more involved in purchasing purchasing natural areas. ' Part of the money for the revolving fund may come from the estate of Mr. & Mrs. S.C. Bennett, who lived near Georgetown. In the largest single bequest received to date, wittr a total value of over $5 million, the Bennetts left the OHF 540 acres of Escarpment lands, over 100 Group of Seven Paintings, and cash. Perhaps it is fitting that the donation» of this magnificent estate should signal the beginnings of a new push for the protection of our natural heritage. PATRICK G. DEEGAN , Denture Therapy Clinic 5 George Street, Bowmaqville, Ontario Phone 623-4473 FRUIT MARKET ATTENTION APPLE LOVERS C.A. Macintosh • C.A. Delicious C.A. Spy and Mutsu a re.on Sale .BEDDING PLANTS, VEGETABLES & FLOWERS "FRESH,ASPARAGUS FROM THE GARDEN" Specials l A Bu. Gee Gr. Mac's $3.95 Special s lbs. Cee-Gr. Mac's $1.98 Special Heritage Pure Maple Syrup On, Tap $1.99lb $4.38 kg. STOKE SEEDS AVAILABLE Fruit Market Hwy. 35 South of Orono,