Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Orono Weekly Times, 2 Nov 2005, p. 9

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Orono Weekly Times Church Directory I I, I I I i r 1 I I I I tMease join us at ony of our of worship ise'h CocatpCaces Imm BBISiL ■1 . I 1 I II I uWMlmè mmmm: I ... 1 - ■ 1 ! ■ 11® . I I » Orono United Church Reverend Dorinda Vollmer Orono Church Office 905-983-5502 905-697-9715 - Minister * * * November 6th -10:30 a.m. Remembrance Day Service Guest Vocal Group - "In the Mood" Service at 11 a.m. ~ Refreshments to Follow ~ Sunday School & Nursery available St. Andrew's Presbyterian Church 47 Temperance St., Bowmanville Welcomes you to Worship! Sunday, November 6th, 11 a.m. Knox College Sunday - Jeremy Bellsmith Sunday School -11 a.m. "WE WILL REMEMBER THEM" Rev. Noel Gordon • 905-623-3432 Jh MH 1 'I I I I I I i mBSSSM I Newcastle United Church 84 Mill St. S., Newcastle LIB 1H2 905-987-4515 • nuc@durham.net Rev. James Feairs, B.A., M.Div. Minister Sat Nn. 12 - 7 p.m.CHAVRlM in concert, Contemporary Christian music with this group of 20 youth. Freewill offering received. ~ Nursery Care Provided ~ Welcome guests and future friends! Anglican Churches Rev. Canon David R. Saunders, CD St. Saviour's - Orono 27 Mill.Street • 905-987-2019 9:30 a.m. - Worship, Sunday School, Youth Group Holy Communion - 1st & 3rd Sunday Morning Prayer - 2nd, 4th & 5th Sunday Coffee and Fellowship to follow St. George's - Newcastle 250 Mill St. S. • 905-987-2019 8 a.m. - Holy Communion 11:15 a.m. - Worship, Sunday School Holy Communion 1st & 3rd Sunday . Morning Prayer 2nd, 4th & 5th Sunday Coffee and Fellowship to follow mm * 1 n I ■ fgMM ESTATE AUCTION Stapleton Auction Centre, Newtonville Friday, November 4th, • 5 p.m. • Preview after 2 p.m. Selling the attractive contents of a Toronto home and a family member of Ross Metcalf: 11 pc. Scandinavian Rosewood dining room suite - Designer, 2" drop leaf ceramic inlaid table; Denmark "Dyrlund" rosewood bedroom suite - cedar lined, headboard, 2 nighstands, chevrobe, dresser, mirror; gorgeous "Beacon Hill" gold leaf design chesterfield, loveseat, chair and bench; wingback chair; nesting tables; occasional tables; marble top oval Victorian table; Moorcroft, Majolica, Cloisonne, Cranberry, Limoge, Royal Doulton, Satin Glass, Doulton Slaterware, Bohemian Ruby Art glass, Nalsea pipes; Bristol vases, Amethyst, McIntyre vase, Wedgewood, Bride's basket; silver pcs; Carnival glass; music instmments - Button accordion, violin, 2 banjos, cello, harpsicord, dolcimer, etc. etc etc. etc. Check website for complete listing. Terms: Cash, App. Cheques; Visa, M/C Auctioneers - Frank & Steve Stapleton, Newtonville 905-786-2244,1-800-263-9886 www.stapletonauctions.com • "Estate Specialists Since 1971 2ac AUCTION SALE SUGARPLUM AUCTION Clarington Beech Centre, 26 Beech Avenue, Bowmanville Wednesday, November 16 Auction 7 p.m. • Preview 6 p.m. NEW ITEMS AND BAKED GOODS Cash or Cheque Only • Call 905-697-2856 A fundraising event for the Clarington Older Adult Association . 2ac By the way by Steven G. Wiggins ^ -x Lego, Lichens and Loss Two small children; a carpeted and warm room; fireplace in one comer. I sit cross-legged with dozens of small child Lego pieces at hand. Elsewhere, a mother, a grandmother and an aunt prepare dinner. The grandfather is stricken and bed-ridden. I've not met him but sit surrounded surrounded by all that is his. His home, his furnishings, furnishings, and his grandchildren's grandchildren's chatter. We build a castle. The smallest child likes the blue ones and constructs square towers for our fort foundation. The older child concentrates on the corners. I've declared the gate as my responsibility. I'm quite proud of this village. A new home for the two toy frogs I've brought along as my gift. The children and 1 spent some time at Applefest in Bowmanville Bowmanville a couple of weeks ago. Rain kept us from fishing for other magnetic magnetic amphibians and made for wet socks. I'm fortunate to have an aunt well versed in little people. people. 1 hear the refrain, "We're not so little." My aunt put the soggy socks in the dryer and we're made comfortable in her home. The girls played with the same toy cars I did once upon a time-- warm memories where fireplaces glow eternally. eternally. Glacial erratics are isolated boulders--evidence boulders--evidence of the receding glacier that creating the moraine I live on. Not-so-little kids took delight in finding the erratics and climbing on their surface. I paused our adventure to explore the rock surfaces surfaces touching the lichens with our hands. On our tour of observation, observation, it became apparent that more rock surfaces were covered by lichens than not. There are three categories categories of lichens. Crustose lichens which grow abundantly on rocks, appear to have exuded from the rocks themselves. Foliosc lichens grow both on rocks and trees in Icaf-likc patches. Fruticose lichens found on trees, rocks and on the ground have erect filaments that resemble miniature shrubs. All lichens are a partnership, partnership, or symbiosis of fungi with algae or bac teria. Biological partnerships partnerships persist through- mutual advantage. Because Because all fungi lack chlorophyll, they need to obtain energy in another way. Lichen partnerships partnerships work because the chlorophyll in algae and certain bacteria makes possible the photosynthesis photosynthesis that enables these organisms to capture and store the energy of the sun as carbon compounds. compounds. The fungus uses those food reserves for its own growth. The algae and bacteria in turn gain protection from drying by the fungus fungus tissue enabling them to occupy sites exposed to capture this energy. Lichens are among the first living things to colonize colonize rocks from volcanic volcanic eruptions. The fungal filaments that serve as roots penetrate granular rock surfaces augmenting the fragmentation fragmentation of mineral material important for the formations of soil in which plants seeds can germinate. The young children lost their grandfather this afternoon. I'm not so alone because of him. They and I arc a form of symbiosis, as are aunts, mothers, grandparents who together build families. families. In the 1890s, Beatrix Potter was convinced that lichens were indeed dual organisms as the Swiss naturalist, Simon Schwendener proposed in the 1870s. That concept concept was ridiculed by British botanists as purely purely imaginary. Potter's detailed examination and illustrations were proposed in a scientific paper for presentation to the Linnean Society of London, but as a woman, she was not allowed to present her findings to the Society. However, her uncle, a chemist, did present her findings in 1897, but over time this manuscript manuscript was was lost.*. Beatrix Potter turned her efforts elsewhere to establish a place in every not-so-little child's library as the author of Peter Rabbit. I whispered softly in grand not-so-little kids' ears, bits about erratics and rabbits and found comfort in their grandfather's grandfather's legacies. Biological Biological partnerships that obtain energy in another way. Mr. William Herbert Allan Hinton passed away quietly at his home on October 16, 2005. DEATH NOTICE Surrounded by her family on Monday, October 31st, 2005 in Peterborough, Ontario Ruth May McMillan She was the loving wife of Jack McMillan for over 67 years. Predeceased by Jack (January 2005), her beloved parents Thomas and Bessie (Robertson) Naylor, brother Thomas Naylor and his wife Doris, and brother-in-law Kenneth McCall. Survived by her sister, Grace McCall. A wonderful mother and grandmother, Ruth leaves her daughter Judy (David) Climenhage, grandchildren John (Claire Symington) Climenhage, Christy (Todd Kuiack) Climenhage and Kate (David) Wilhelm as well as three great-grandchildren, Anwyn and Rhys Climenhage and Zoe Kuiack to mourn her passing. Visitation will be held at the Northcutt Elliott Funeral Home, 53 Division St. N., Bowmanville from 2 to 4 and 7 to 9 p.m. Friday, November 4th, 2005. Funeral service will be held in our chapel at 1 p.m. Saturday, November 5th, 2005. Interment will be held on Monday, November 7th, 2005 at 1 p.m. at Kintore Presbyterian Cemetery. Memorial donations may be made to Peterborough Regional Health Centre Foundation. www.northcuttelliott.com *77/(3 Linnean Society of London which first refused to hear Beatrix Potter's evidence in 1897, issued posthumously, posthumously, an apology one hundred years later. ■ ft* Because you love your life. |li' v ,.llf.wlm! ."..TV'll' 1 w.mt-i f V 'Hi.'ilV.whyUum'o'k.llvvmisowtivnyuii \ Ivilllh omilWon,\i'U mv«-\|MisHl immiliii' 'S' Jr (Mt.MihllvAli il .. Ms //»• liran>l* i l with;m V";'• * liHiliiti' ImU' il lo yt'ii nv'ilii.al h' 1 <w.l Mvwnii' of imiiiiiimi-; i 'lily Hu- tnv-tvil st«t vu-«*s wl Mom AHtv.mvmvUI.! iu.-l.tn» mh u, >..»r vit., I huihli li.l..rnurti«m .illVwlH'l" III 111" WUlM, . ... Mi:iIH All'll iMii'l :uiiil.il>l>' in Cull l-h()()-/il 1-.) L3 11 1,1 wwwiiviltctilvil v.l <m Medic Alert Lets You List Lift. 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