Whitby Free Press, 15 Jul 1987, p. 22

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE 22, Will Ki; PRESS, WEDNESDAY, JULY15,1987 t;; RESTAURANT, Hotel, deli, DaKery, butcher, grocery, sub and pizza equipment. Refridgerators, grills, f ryers, sîlcers, sub & pizza tables, ice machines, steam tables, walk-in coolers and freezers. Deli cases, scales, cash registers, gas stoves and ovens, dishwashers for sale or lease. Arctic Refridgeration Store Fixtures. Hamilton (416)528-8528. Toronto (416)283-2600. B A HOR)E R ON YN"N A M.AK ES 1T NIoR E',VISILE x- 111 SUPERMARKET LOCATED in progressive Central Vancouver t Island Tourist community, 7500 fo sq.ft., Annual sales $2 Million, w Business, equipment, leasehold im- q provements $380,000 plus inventory. t Contact Gary Reagh (604) 687-6227. S BL - b (~PERSONALs1 WOMEN IN ABUSIVE RELATION-C SHIPS. For help cali AUBERGE F Transition House for Women and f Children. Toll Free 1-800-263-3725 or . 728-7311. Confidentiality assured. NEED HELP????? Listen to the BackE to God Houri Sunday 7:30 a.m. CHAM 820 Hamilton, 9:30 a.m. CKAN 1480 Newmarket and at 7:30 p.m. FM 108 Burîingtorl or watch FAITH 20 Global TV Monday - Friday at 5a.m. B DATES GALORE: For ail ages and unattached. Thousands of members anxious to meet you. Prestige Acquaintances call tollfree 1-800-263-9163. Hours Noon till 8pm B BAHAI' FAITH. True reliance is for the servant to pursue his profession and calling in this world, to hold fast unto the Lord, to seek naught but His grace, inasmuch as in.His Hands is the destiny of ail His servants. Call 668-7653 or 668-8665. HELP RECOGNIZE Ontario's out- standing young people: nominate someone today who qualifies for an Ontario Junior Citizen of the Year award. Contac this newspaper for details. B UNEMPLOYED? The Unemployed Help Centre can assist with: Em- ployment Counselling, Resumes, Unemployment Insurance, Workers' Compensation, O.H.I.P. and welfare information, or crisis referrals to other agencies. Caîl 579-1821. NOVENA - O Holy Saint Jude, apostie and martyr, great in virtue and rich in miracles, near Kinsman of Jesus Christ; the faithful inter- cessor of ail who invoke your special patronage in time of need, to you I have recourse from the depth of my heart and humbly beg you, to whom God has given such a great power, to come to my assistance. Help me in my present and urgent petition. In return.1 propose to make your name known and cause your name to be invoked. Three Our Fathers, three Hail Marys, three Glorias. St. Jude pray for us and ail who invoke your aid. -J.L.B. MASTER PSYCHIC READINGS - Healfh, Spiritual, unexplained Phenomena, self-attunement, past life. Will teach you to heal yourself with mind power. Everything is possible!!!! Call Leo Jean (519) 622-1022. B PPORTUNITIES DISTRIBUTOR REQUIRED in this area to promote fastest growing in- dustry in N.A. Potential income unlimited to persons willing to work. Best product in industry. Investment of $15,000 required. (416) 856-1501. B BU ar T US. OPP. Are you earning what you e worth? Earn $400-$1200 per/mthr art-time. Will train. Call 884-4729 HE WOOD SHOW August 7,8,9. A Must See" for woodworking en- husiasts. 100 exhibitors will have or sale, wide variety of wood- Norking tools and accéssories uality wooden crafts. Learn from he experts - daily, live, - free eminars. Wood art exhibition. Loggers sports competition. For brochure, Box 920, Town of Durham, Ontario NOG 1RO. B NOTICES for COMING EVENTS for local non-profit organizations are published free of charge on the Coming events page. Deadline is Friday at 5 pm for publication the following week. .ou've thought about it and thought about . Now do it! Become a BIG BROTHER TODAY. Caîl 579-2551. WHITBY BRASS BAND performed in the bandshell at Rotary Park last week, their first of four concerts his summer at the location, Residents pulled up lawn chairs for the evening performance, to be repeated July 23, Aug. 6 and 30. A 2 p.m. performance has also htil ld far the fall (Oct 4). heen scu utr e ti ue ajL. IGettouglboard: eparen NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF JAMES WALKER, DECEASED. - Alil claims against the Estate of. JAMES WALKER, late of the Town of Whitby, in the Regional Municipality of Durham, retired labourer, deceased, who died on or about the l9th day of May, 1986, must be filed with the undersigned personal representatives on or before July 24th, 1987; thereafter the under- signed will distribute the assets of the said estate having regard only to the claims then filed. Dated at Whitby, Ont ario this 25th day of June, 1987. SELENA LAWRENCE, Administratrix with Will Annexed, by her Solicitors, Coath, Livingstone, P.O. Box 327, 128 Byron St. N., Whitby, Ontario iN 5S SELL IT IN THE CLASSIFIED THE WHITBY FREE PRESS 668-6111 FROM PAGE 3 told council. She said children will not travel up to Manning to cross at the guard. She also noted that at 9:05 a.m., mtudents will have no one helping them cross the street. Fountain also used her time before council to comment on he overall planning of a new school. "There is no proper investigation of ways for students to get to schools. Where schools are being built the police should be contacted and other municipalities should also be loojod at. This wassnot done here and that was a shock to paren- ts in the area, " she said. She also suggested the Durham Board of Education and the Town co-ordinate their policies. "If the board is not prepapred to bus students they should make an application to the Town for crossing guards before a school is built. "Time and money is being spent on this issue that will repeat itself. "The Town also needs to be fir- mer with the board," she said. "I'll go along with you there, baby," replied councillor Joe Drumm who said the parents are before council because of the board's decision not to bus the students. "The board will have to change Students FROM PAGE 5 the end of the summer term, and are expected to do "gut hard work, no lolly gogging," according to Jeanette Babington, economic development officer. "They're ex- pected to fall into whatever the job entails - from taking out the gar- bage, to vacuuming." Both Butler and Manders are fully bilingual, an important requirement as many of the tourists are francophones. its attitude or all hell is going to break loose, "said Drumm . He agreed with the recommen- dations but he said they did not go far enough and made further recommendations. He asked council for a guard at Garrard and Rossland; for a fence along the Pringle Creek walkway which students use to walk to school; and for lights at the Bradley St./Anderson intersection. Drumm said the fencing would prevent a student from falling in Downtown plan approved tee. "There is no rationale for that." he added. "The rationale is simple," replied Drumm. "Ash is a collector road. Let's put the people there." "I think Drumm is making some cock-eyed sense," said Bugelli as an argument for his claim. "We have taken a shotgun ap- proach and we have missed on some issues." But councillor Ross Batten noted that surrounding that block. the study has recommended heights of three and four storeys. "It doesn't make any sense to lop five storeys in the middle of them," he said. Drumm's amendment was defeated 4-3 with Mayor Bob Atter- sley, councillors Brunelle, Batten and Gerry Emm opposing it. Councillor Tom Edwards then asked if one-way streets, which were turned down by the study, were still a possibility for the down- town. He was informed they were still an option and the Town could designate streets such as Mary St. and Colborne as one-ways through an amendment to the official plan. Earlier in the evening, council heard a deputation from Lorna Ta roblem has also been in- petgtd by the public works departaent which stated "we have reviewed this concern and can con- ceive of the possibility of someone being pushed into the creek but we cannot recommend that a fence be erected to prevent against this possible occurrence." Council decided to refer Drumm's recommendations to the operations committee for furtheri study. England opposing a decision by the administrative committee to remove the two commercial ap- plications for Brock St. S. from the plan study area. The committee had recommen- ded, and council approved later that evening, that applications by Sam Princiotto for 500 Brock St. S. and Lorne Cheah for 506 Brock St. *S., be looked at separately in a study on the Brock St. S. corridor. England ' noted the two ap- plications .were a major stumbling block to the study and said by removing it, council was simply "shunting it aside and stalling it. "When I heard-this second study would not be completed to 1988 I couldn't believe it. I would like a vote on this as soon as is humanly possible. Further study is redun- dant. Don't drag this on," sbo' told council. "It is important to know what is the best use for those properties fronting Brock St. S.," said Mayor Bob Attersley. "It is important to get the secon- dary plan passed. then take a look at the south end. I don't want that property butchered," he said. In the end, mayor Attersley, councillors Emm, Batten and Brunelle approved the study while, councillors Drumm, Bugelli and' Edwards voted against it. Two weeks left to enter Marigold contest Only two weeks are left to em..er the Whitby Chamber of Commerce sixth annual Marigold Contest. I Entry forms are available at Weall and Cullen Nurseries, Oshawa Garden Service (Dundas West and Thickson Road locations), Sun Garden Fruit Market, DeVille Produce, Vallee's Fruit Market, Whitby Dominion Hardware and the Chamber of Commerce office in the Centennial Building. Deadline for entries lis July 31. Fill out the form at one of the above locations and put it in the accom- panying orange box. Judging will take place on Aug. 17 and in tour categories; residen-, tial, commercial, industrial and in- stitutional. The marigold contest is open to businesses and residences in Whit- by only. One winner will be chosen in each category, based on four judging standards: design and layout, general health and condition, quality of maintenance and plant display. Prizes for the winners in each category will be keeper trophies and a free dinner for two at the awards night Sept. 4 in the new Garden Gate Restaurant at Cullen Gardens. The winner's names will also be engraved on a plaque displayed in the tourist information centre. For further information, call the Whitby Chamber of Commerce at 668-4506. méà creeK. 1 FROMN PAGE 1 buàmaimcohailiip.8 lel- Lliq 14]LJR%,qp9- u' .

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy