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The Westmount examiner
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  • Montreal :Examiner Publishing Company, Limited,1935-2015
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jeudi 17 mai 1973
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[" \u2019 4 SWERVING CAR HITS GIRL: This was the scene Tuesday evening on Glen road south of St.Catherine street after a car swerving to avoid hitting another car bumped into a pedestrian instead, sending her more than 23 feet through the air.Miss Susan Gaw, 20, of Montreal was hit by a car driven by A.Narbonne, 52, of Montreal, on the east sidewalk of Glen road.Mr.Narbonne claimed he had been driving east on St.Catherine street, and started to turn south onto the Glen when he swerved to miss a blue car turning south from a westerly direction along St.Catherine street.Mr.Narbonne lost control of his vehicle, went onto the curb and hit the girl.Miss Gaw was taken to Montreal General Hospital by ambulance, where she was treated for scrapes and bruises and later released.Board clues groups The Westmount School Board held a large \u2018\u2018information exchange\u2019 meeting Tuesday night in the library of Westmount High School, attempting to transfer to school committees their collected knowledge and concerns before their own scheduled demise next month.The meeting, attended by about 50 different representatives of the three Westmount school committees, home and school associations and other groups, lasted about three hours; it was preceded by a short session of the school commissioners in their own board room to handle quick business items before the larger session began.Broad representation Both incoming and outgoing presidents of the three home and school associations, as well as members of the Westmount fine arts, French and health education committees, were in Continued on page 10 Burglary nipped handily Residents of 83 Stayner street heard glass break in the kitchen door of their house just before 10 pm Friday while they were upstairs.Upon checking, they saw someone's hand reaching in through the broken glass.The head of the household cracked a soft drink bottle over the suspect's hand, then saw two persons run off into the night.It was later learned that both the front and side- entrance doorbells had rung before the attempted WEATHER break-in, and the residents had not responded to either.Inside job A woman phoned Westmount Police at 7:28 pm Friday to say someone had pushed in the door of her house at 3149 St.Antoine street, though nothing was missing from the premises.It turned out that her daughter, lacking a key, had broken into the.house earlier in the day, but was gone when her mother returned home.ox Go NEXT WEEK'S By ERIC NEAL May 168 to 26 I * is yi} HOTEL D! Our spring always opens with this bright Full Moon week.It is also the period for our main bird migration.Temperature range: some nights down to 30 degrees.days 75 degrees F.or higher.Mainly sunny and mild, although nights can be chilly with heavy dews, but afternoons will be pleasant everywhere through mid-week.Showers toward the end of the week will give us 4\u2019 of rain, also occasional flurries in the north, with thunder and soft hail.In 1963 Montreal region had a surprise 6°\u2019 of snow at this time.An ice storm is more likely this year.A0 APS AIS WESTMOUNT Examiner: Making not just your house but all of Westmount your home Vol.XLV, No.20 Westmount 215, P.Q., Thursday, May 17, 1973 10¢ Dobated by URIAG: Greene-St.Antoine-Afwater is proposed as housing site The Westmount Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee last night tarried at length with the idea of relocating the proposed Hillside public housing project in the vacant and renewable area between Greene and Atwater avenues bordering on St.Antoine street.No direct action was taken on the suggestion initiated by Victor Schreiber, 63 Prospect street, but no members of the committee ruled out the possibility that the new location might prove a feasible alternative to the presently-planned location on Hillside avenue.Mr.Schreiber brought up the question while URIAC members were discussing a recently- announced decision to hire a \u201cprofessional\u201d to study the area below the CPR tracks for improvements.Mr.Schreiber noted that the possibility of locating a public housing project Continued on page two Woman on bike tossed by auto Two Westmounters were involved in a car-and-bicycle accident on Somerville avenue at 6:05 pm Tuesday night, and one young lady was sent to hospital as a result.A.Chaput, 20, of 426 Grosvenor avenue was headed east on Somerville when he hit Miss Claire Trepanier, 23, of 10 Somerville avenue.Miss Trepanier had appeared on her bicycle from in front of a bus parked along the street; independent witnesses reported there was \u2018no chance\u201d Mr.Chaput could stop in time to avoid hitting her.Miss Trepanier was taken to Queen Elizabeth Hospital in a Westmount Public Safety vehicle, where she was treated for bruises and later released.X- rays showed she suffered no broken bones.Today's World Quebec approves new Hillside costs Quebec authorities have approved upward-revised tenders for construction of Hillside Place, a é64-unit subsidized public housing scheme designed for the scattered residents of Selby street ousted for the Trans.Canada Highway extension through Westmount.In the dark The approval is noted as the ossible last item of a chronology of the .project, dating from August 1965, Six spotlights were removed from their positions on a stairway at 4474 St.Catherine street, it was discovered last week.The lights had been located some 9 to 12 feet above the stairway landings, but were taken some time between May 3 and 10.À tenant found one of the lamps lying in a hallway of the apartment building; five are still missing.Harem lot Thieves stole a reported 48 gold wedding bands valued at $2,300 from the Lucas store in West- mount Square Saturday.The bands were taken from a locked drawer beneath the store's showcase, which showed no signs being circulated this week by the Westmount Municipal Association with the formal notice of the May 29 annual general meeting of the WMA.The notice includes this agenda item: \u201cMotion to be considered relative to city council terminating public housing project in the Hillside area.\u201d Opposition remains Quebec Housing Corporation's okay of the boosted costs-the original accepted tender of La Societe de Construction Brandon Inc.is now over a year and a half old\u2014has béen the only recent obstacle to the city proceeding, except for continuing opposition of being forced open.Continued on page two v VV VNNNY v Our Hometown Paper ;j ; What do you, a reader of The Westmount Examiner, think about what your weekly newspaper means to you, your family, your life in Westmount, your community?The Canadian Community Newspapers Association, at its annual convention in Calgary in August, in cooperation with Dominion Textiles Limited, is to present $400 and a gold medal for the best written submission to a CCNA-member newspaper by a reader on the \u201cOur Hometown Paper\u2019\u2019 theme.Staff members and regular contributors are specifically excluded from this contest; this is for the reader who best describes in his or her own words just what the weekly newspapers means to him or her.Polished literary expression is not sought.The judges $ will be interested in simple, clear, frank exposition that indicates an awareness by the reader of the role of the weekly in the community.The written opinion should be at least 250 words but not exceed 700 and be 4 a clear indication of an awareness by the reader of the role of the weekly in the community.The judges will not look for excessively high praise for the local newspaper; they will study the judgment and understanding by readers of the function of the weekly, of any size, large or small.Judging will be by an independent source and all decisions by the judges final.Entries must be postmarked before midnight Sunday, May 27, or delivered to The Examiner office before 5 pm Monday, May 28.- DVI SAL SALSA LELL 000000080 00000L0000000000000008000000800000000000000000004 Sit down now and put your views on paper.Best entry to The Examiner wins $25, and you could win the $400 and a gold medal.NANA 2 - The Westmount Quebec.Continued from page one of Hillside area residents, and resolutions of both the WMA advisory council and the city\u2019s own appointed Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee which have asked the city to stay action and to study alternatives, particularly \" dispersed rehabilitated existing dwellings.(The WMA chronology does not mention the URIAC opposition.) The city has made no announcement of the QHA approval, even though the question of costs was roundly debated informally following last week's city council meeting during the public question period.It has en learned since that the city administration then knew of the approval.Tops one million The contractor's later-1971 price for building the 64 dwellings was $922,282.Over a year later, on Feb.20 this year, this had escalated by over $100,000.Before Quebec approval could be finalized, it is understood that the Brandon firm added yet another $35,000 to meet new labor contract rates.Thus, construction alone now has clearly topped the one-million-dollar mark.City officials say that the latest price is good only to the end of June, after which yet another tender may have to be negotiated.It is believed, also, that the Quebec Housing Corporation, through which the provincial and federal shares of the costs are borne, is now anxious to know whether or not Westmount is to proceed with the scheme.Turning point could be the May 29 WMA meeting, at which the general membership will be given the opportunity to express views and, presumably, vote for or against the public housing venture.City council itself is not unanimously in favor of Hillside # CNR LLL 410) ® Call or See @ PANEX 931-7248 One Westmount Square Examiner, Thursday, May 17, 1973 TEXT OF CHRONOLOGY Following is the text of a chronology of the Hillside public housing project, being mailed this week to WMA members with the official notice of the May 29 annual general meeting of the association: Aug.- Sept.1965: Residents of Selby Street advised of expropriation of their property for route of Trans- Canada Highway.Oct.19.1965: City advised Selby Street residents of its wish to assist those displaced by highway construction.The City announced that low cost housing and renewal of existing buildings would be investigated.June 14, 1966: Westmount Council instructed City General Manager to meet with C.P.R.representatives regarding possibility of acquiring Hillside site for housing.March 1970 - July 1970: Hillside site selected by City Council and C.P.R.agreed to: sale.Nov.10, 1970: Westmount Municipal Association Executive Committee approved project in principle.July 8, 1971: City Council advised residents Hillside area of rezoning to permit construction of single bedroom units in a public housing project.Notification also given that any protest should be registered with Quebec Housing Corporation.Oct.- Dec.1971: The Ward III Central Citizens SHE in particular nor of public housing in general, and revealed at the May 7 public city council meeting was a distinct disagreement among aldermen over projected costs through the ~ 50-year amortization period.In December 1971, when the city adopted the project, estimated cost\u2014including land, fees, municipal services, landscaping and other improvements as well as construction \u2014 came to an average of $21,556 per housing unit.The two new constuction cost increases would add another $2,100 per unit, bringing them to $23,665 each.This escalation would be specially serious for the city, Committee, representing approximately 125 householders of the Hillside area, twice petitioned City Council protesting public housing on Hillside Avenue.(WW3CCC claims over 300 signatures were on its petitions.) Nov.25, 1971: Public meeting at Westmount Park School to discuss public housing and the selected location.(Corrected date; WMA gives it as Nov.12.) Dec.6, 1971 : Initial tenders for construction finalized and submitted to Quebec Housing Corp.for approval.June 8, 1972: Letter received from Quebec Housing Corp.advising of a requirement of a sound barrier between C.P.R.tracks and Public housing site.Dec.28, 1972: Quebec Housing Corp.removed requirement for sound barrier.(Jan.17, 1973: (City-appointed Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee requested city to cancel Dec.6.1971, by-law launching Hillside project and to desist from any other public housing.) This item not included in WMA text.Feb.20, 1973: Revised tender received from general contractor.March 13, 1973: Advisory Council of Westmount Municipal Association requested City to suspend further action on Hillside pending investigation of housing former Selby residents in existing buildings.May 1973: Quebec Housing Corp.approval received for revised tenders.A RR RE NARA A since the federal and provincial share of cost is 95 percent up to only $18,000 per unit.Unless that ceiling is raised, Westmount would have to foot the excess, $5,665, plus its 5 percent of $18,000, or $900, for a total of $6,565 per unit.Thus the city share of the total cost would be nearly 28 percent.This factor and the unknowns in expected revenues (rentals are keyed to incomes of tenants) and in maintenance costs in future years as dilapidation advances raise fears among opponents of the project that the city could be saddled with costs considerably in excess of existing official estimates.At last week\u2019s city council CANADA PERMANENT TRUST'S À i! Complete Real Estate Facilities are available to you by calling JOHAN DRAPER, FRI, Manager 4014 St.Catherine Street West 937-9291 Offices Across Canada Transferee Plan Mortgage Financing Residential, Commercial, Industrial Sales, Purchases, Leasing Use Our Guaranteed Sales Plan If you are interested in a real estate career we would be glad to discuss it with you.meeting an attempt was made by Michael Price, a member of the WMA housing and zoning committee, to have released the dissident calculations of Ald.W.T.Wood.The request was not met, it being claimed that they were private figures and would confuse the citizens, in the view of Ald.Douglas Robertson.No Official figures were given either.However, General Manager Norman Dawe hoped to have \u201cupdated\u201d figures ready shortly\u2014presumably in time for consideration by the WMA members on May 29.Greene .Continued from page one there would get the city involved in improving the area more rapidly than it might otherwise wish to move.Earmarked for park Much of the property not bordering on streets has been earmarked for a park, according to the city, as has the site formerly occupied by two buildings torn down after fire destroyed one of them last summer, The land, according to Mr.Schreiber, is \u2018\u2018not good even for a park\u2014it\u2019s useless.\u201d St.Antoine street resident Fred Leclaire did not rule out the possibility of a development in the area, but was able to offer several reasons which would make such a project \u2018\u2018quite difficult.\u201d\u201d He was specially opposed to-the destruction of the \u201caesthetic value\u2019 (later translated as \u201c\u2018texture\u2019\u2019) by building such a project.Mr.Schreiber, in making the proposal, had suggested that perhaps buildings bordering on St.Antoine street could come down to make way for the project.Many of the buildings he had understood, were in disrepair and some were not even occupied.Mr.Leclaire retorted that \u201cnobody can improve on the condition of those buildings\" which, he said, were built solidly.\u2018There is no building in the entire area that needs to be demolished.\u201d In making the statement, Mr.Leclaire notably avoided saying the buildings were well-kept.Arthur Dirkman, a long-time opponent of the presently- proposed site, suggested that an aeronautical school and several other buildings on Atwater avenue might be torn down to allow street frontage for such a project.Again, Mr.Leclaire countered that the buildings consisted of \u201csolid masonry,\u201d and should not be demolished.Better use seen \u201cThe land definitely could be put to better use,\u201d Mr.Schreiber reasoned.\u201cI think (a project) could be integrated very well.\u201d Mr.Schreiber also noted that the sharp drop of land in that area would amenable to building a split-entrance dwelling without having to install elevators, generally considered to be too costly for such projects.\u201cSomebody very ingenious could make a small Habitat,\u201d he suggested.Mr.Leclaire reasoned that such a location would largely be blocked from sunlight, and noted that the project would increase the density of an already thickly- populated area.At one point Al Fisher, who represents the tenants scheduled to occupy the housing project, mentioned that he had suspicions the provincial roads department od might eventually, when they ope the new ramp leading to th& M\" Trans-Canada Highway, build an access road through the burned- out site facing Green avenue and along a city lane as far as At- water avenue.Most members of URIAC did not take this suggestion very seriously; Mr.Fisher even admitted he might be \u201cstretching things a bit.\u201d \u2018Worth inverstigating\u2019 Discussion of the housing site idea continued until Mr.Leclaire was forced to admit it was \u201cworth investigating,\u201d though he was in no way favoring the proposal.He felt only that the \u201cprofessional\u201d hired by the city should \u201cstudy past proposals submitted by the citizens of the area and further consult with the present residents and owners\u201d concerning their views of the situation.He made the suggestion in the form of a motion, which was passed by the committe.Members of the committee were somewhat unsure what type of \u2018\u2018professional\u201d the city had in mind when announcing the promise to hire one, last week at City Council.Mr.Leclaire knew only that he was to \u2018establish a program\u201d for the area.| Eban here Israeli Foreign Minister Abba Eban was guest of honor at a testimonial dinner for long-time Wesmount resident Sam Reitman Monday night at Shaar Hashomayim Congregation.Over 1,200 persons including dignitaries from Canada and Israel, were in attendance.Allan Bronfman, national president of State of Israel Bonds, introduced Mr.Eban.Mr.Eban said in his speech that he does not think there will be a new war with the Arab nations, at least for the next 12 years.Sunday included Wed.to Fri.: 2:30 pm & 8:00 pm Saturday, May 26: 10:00 am, 2:30 & 8:00 pm Sunday, May 27: 1:30 pm & 4:30 pm All Seats Reserved 2 Alse $2.00 $3.00 $4.00 PATOF On Sale Now At Forum, Montreal Trust (PVM) & Sauve Freres in FORUM NOW.AIR CONDITIONED person J EE. PS eae.366.4551 VETERANS TAXI ASS\u2019N.they going?\u2018The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week.May 8 2:53 pm: 3149 St.Antoine, flood from blocked toilet; 6:40 pm: 10 Rosemount, Apt.606, overheated radio transformer; :50 pm: opposite 1031 Greene, gas tank leak; May 9 10:07 am: 319 Melville, smouldering lint in dryer; 12:38 pm: 770 Upper Belmont, overheated food in oven; 4:44 pm: 522 Victoria, strange odor: May 10 Nil: May 11 12:24 pm: 171 Edgehill, wool tuque dropped on stove: May 12 Nil: May 13 12:27 am: 359 Victoria, Apt.5, burned food; :50 pm: 4820 de Maisonneuve, overheated motor on dishwasher; 5:28 pm: Selby and Greene, false alarm; :21 pm: Selby and Greene, false alarm; :55 pm: 2 Westmount Square, person stuck in elevator; May 14 :28 pm: 669 Belmont, pot left unattended on stove; :00 pm: 204 Cote st.Antoine, malfunctioning oil-fired furnace.Hammered = .- \u2014 An electric hammer-drill valued at $600 was removed over the weekend from the basement of 200 Kensington avenue, where a construction worker had left it.Thursday, May 17, 1973- 3 All Westmount pupils invited: Jennifer Jonas, 11, wins $300 as sole essay contest entrant It would seem that in all Westmount schools, public or private, French or English, Roman Catholic or Protestant, there is only one student interested in both money and civic government.That one pupil, Jennifer Jonas, age 11, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.John J.Jonas of 311 Metcalfe avenue, who attends Westmount Park School, is going to be $300 richer Tuesday evening when, CHAIRS DINNER: R.S.Leavitt, 3016 St.Sulpice road.chairman of council of the Montreal branch of the Royal Commonwealth Society, who will introduce His Excellency Dean Eyre, New Zealand High Commissioner to Canada, who will be guest speaker at the society's annual Commonwealth Day Dinner to be held at Le Chateau Champlain next Thursday, May 24, at 6:30 pm.Winners in the society's annual essay competition will receive their prizes of cheques and books on this occasion.J AL Cig following the mid-month meeting of city council, she is presented with a cheque for that amount by Mayor Paul A.Ouimet.Second and third prizes, of $200 and $100 respectively, have gone begging, as have judges\u2019 fees which were not necessary to acclaim the sole entry in the Westmount Scholarship Trust Fund Essay Contest.The amount thus saved will stay in the fund to sweeten future awards.Anonymous donor Last year an anonymous Westmounter placed with Nelcon Trust Co., as custodian, a fund sufficient to earn upward of 600 per year, to be used to encourage deeper interest on the part of school-age boys and girls in local or municipal government.Thus the Westmount Scholarship Trust Fund was created and its operative Essay Contest born.Last October and November, every school and school authority in Westmount was contacted.Particulars of the contest appeared on notice boards.The handsome cash prizes were made know.This spring the deadline came.To the amazement of the three trustees, Mayor Ouimet, Ald.Donald MacCallum and ex- Mayor Peter N.McEntyre, president of and representing Nelcon Trust, there was but one entry.Interviews.pictures A busy bee had been Miss Jennifer Jonas.She had in- WATCH REPAIRS OHMAN\u2019S oy 5 Certitied Watchmokers ESTABLISHED 1899 terviewed most city hall department heads and other officials in the city administration.She had taken color pictures with her own camera.And she had put together what is decribed as a highly commendable study of Westmount\u2019s municipal government.Officials who have seen the finished work declare it an excellent job which just might as easily have won for its author the first prize if there had been competition.In addition to coverage of next Tuesday evening\u2019s happy presentation ceremony.The Examiner hopes to bring readers a look at Jennifer's $300 essay.Two local men vice-presidents for crippled G.Edward McLean, 665 Belmont avenue, and Egan Chambers, 251 Kensington avenue, were elected two of the four vice-presidents of the Quebec Society for Crippled Children at the society's 43rd annual meeting at its headquarters in St.Laurent Tuesday.Phil Maurice of Montreal was re-elected president.Mr.McLean also is to be general chairman of the society's 1973 \u2018\u2018Forget-Me-Not\u2019\u2019 fund campaign.In 1972, $207,054 was raised.There was a deficit for the year of $8,695 on operations which included 200,000 miles of driving.323 Grosvenor: JEWELLERS WE.3-4046 1216 Greene Ave.CITY \u20ac LOUNT fir noth No doing yoda The following building permits were issued at city hall during the past week: May 8 1360 Westmount avenue: for E.N.Reisman by Ville Emard Ornamental Iron Works, exterior alterations and new terrace at rear, $5,000; 114 Victoria: for ldeal Building by City Plumbing and Heating, to install a gas stove, $25; May 10 601 Victoria: for L.B.Campbell by Building Alterations Co., replacing platform on front veranda, $200; 756 Lexington: for J.Cumming by Franz Patella Inc.and Outremont Plumbing and Heating, renovations to kitchen and plumbing, $10,000; 355 Prince Albert: for N.Cohen by Central Plumbing and Heating, to install two new basins and one bathtub, $200; for William L.Bonn by Bertrand Durand Inc.water entrance, $150; May 642 Sydenham: for R.Harper by V.Lapenat General Contractor, to extend existing garage, $4,500, 1998 de Maisonneuve: for Campeau Corporation by G.M.Construction and Plomberie Ge-Mo, alterations to restaurant washroom and MORIN ES Royal Trust \"THE SIGN THAT SELLS\" Mr.John Aird Mrs.Jane Allan Mrs.Catherine Barton M.r.Douglas W.Baxter Mrs.Nora Bernier Mrs.Joan Colby Mrs.Margaret Evans Mr.Craig Groves \u2018Mrs.Sally Hallows Mrs.Julie Keefer Mrs.Valerie Kyle Mrs.Barbara Ferguson Mrs.Josephine Lantier Manager Mr.J.R.Quinlan, F.R.I.Buying or Selling for residential real estate MONTREAL'S LARGEST REALTOR Office Open Saturdays to serve you better i our expert staff: Contact with confidence, in confidence 933-9184 Mrs.Claudette Limoges 481-5907 487-4791 Mme Mareille Lavery 486-7650 481-9157 Miss M.Loofbourow 937-6191 937-1594 Mrs.Muriel Maclsaac 935-8009 484-2485 Mrs.Joan McCallum 935-8154 935-8625 Mrs.Joan McGuigan 489-7150 932-6329 Mrs.Elizabeth Paul 481-9915 481-6360 Mrs.Nicole Powell 487-6069 931-6571 Mrs.Dorothy Raich 482-4793 932-5464 Mr.Mark Rost 738-3796 737-6911 Mrs.G.Strous 487-2907 488-8423 Mr.Aubrey Wassyng 937-6674 932-0567 Royal Trust 4145 Sherbrooke St.W.932-2936 plumbing, $1,300. THE WESTMOUNT Examiner Making not just your house but all of Westmount your home Published Every Thursday J.W.Sancton & Sons Ltd., 4630 St.Catherine Street West, Westmount 215, P.Q.Editorial, Accounting, Circulation, Display Advertising Departments 932-3157 Classified Advertising, 8.30 a.m.to 5 p.m.weekdays (To 8:00 p.m.Mondays and Tuesdays) 931-7511 The Examiner aims to be an independent, clean newspaper for the home, devoted to public service, Carrier and mail subscriptions $4.50 per year; $2.50 half year: 2 years $8.75; 3 years, $12.75.Ten cents a copy.Member of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association, Quebec Community Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4 - Thursday, May 17, 1973 Hon.C.M.Drury says.We Say There's something better than \u2018development\u2019 ONE gets the impression that the city administration is trying just a bit too hard to get someone to build a major structure on its long-vacant lot bordered by Tupper street, Atwater avenue and Dorchester boulevard.A good deal of architectural and planning commission time has been devoted to the schemes of two private developers and, in both cases, the projects have petered out, evidently on financial grounds.Indeed, one suspects that a good deal of behind-doors city council time as well as the efforts of various members of Westmount\u2019s staff have been diverted to this unfruitful enterprise\u2014time and effort which might have gone to greater benefit of the citizens.Two considerations have preoccupied the city, both of which we believe are overrated: (1) The city owns the land, left over from the expropriations for widening Dor- chester it is valuable land and the city fathers would like to get the money back; (2) A high-rise project, running into millions, is seen as a means of broadening the valuation and tax base of Westmount; the theory is that a big apartment, office or commercial complex would bring in more property revenue, easing the pressure on existing proprietors in the city.Both these priorities are out-dated.+ + + THE city owns and thus controls this land; yet conveniently overlooked is that for several years Westmount has operated it as a highly successful parking lot.Revenues on the operation, which requires minimal manpower and other expense, provide the city with a handsome return on its investment.And do we really need that kind of tax revenue?The city\u2019s experience thus far with major projects has not been an unmixed blessing.The first such, Alexis Nihon Plaza, has posed major problems for most city departments from the outset: notably for the police who have a major preoccupation with crime from the petty to the serious in that sprawling warren.Westmount Square, for all its prestigious atmosphere, has long been a worry in the collection of those nice big taxes.All high rises pose special problems for our Fire Brigade.Traffic and other problems of congestion are multiplied.Little regard seems to have been paid to the social implications of these vertical cities within our city.Where they are mainly apartments, we seem to be providing legions of strangers with Westmount addresses without much possibility of ever making them West- mounters.This once was essentially a residential city of highly desirable character.Now over half our population is dormitoring in apartments, the fast majority itinerants who, for all their concern in the community, might be pigeon-holed most anywhere in the metropolitan area.Our city administration is planning for more of the same?+ + + WE don't want to be accused of going overboard with the ecology buffs and the open-space addicts.Indeed, we find cities of concrete and lights exciting, the more so when we know that the green fields, the mountains and the lakes beckon not far away and most of us can get to them when and if we wish.However.there is sound argument to be made for doing with the Tupper site rather less than simply more of the same which surrounds it.The patronage of the city lot indicates clearly that parking space is particularly badly needed in that locality.The nearby Forum, the existing shopping attractions of Alexis Nihon and Galeries Westmount Square, to say nothing of the unique Greene avenue shops dictate that Westmount continue to provide adequate, reasonable, off- street parking.Even after the Metro is extended westward and Atwater is no longer a terminus, this will continue to be a favorite place to leave ones car and continue downtown by subway, bus, taxi or foot.At the same time, an excellent argument can be made.for more parkland, even in park-blessed Westmount.This is one area needing more green grass and trees than any other in our community\u2014if only because of the near saturation of high construction already experienced.+ + + BOTH these needs\u2014continued parking and new park\u2014could be provided in one fell swoop by taking a tip from other cities (London's Hyde Park, to name one) by excavating the site for one or more underground levels of parking, and then recovering the hole with health-giving, Canada\u2019s minerals policy The goal of mineral policy is to obtain optimum benefit for Canada from present and future use of minerals.The recent conference of federal and provincial resource ministers came forward with the following policy objectives in support of this goal: Relate mineral developments to social needs, minimize the adverse effects of mineral development on the environment, foster a viable mineral sector, strengthen the contribution of minerals to regional- national development, ensure mineral supply for national needs, increase the return to Canadians from exportable mineral surplus, realize opportunities for further mineral processing, improve mineral conservation, harmonize multiple resource development, contribute to orderly world mineral development and marketing, ensure national self- determination in mineral development, and strengthen the knowledge base for national decision making.Under 11 ministers These policy objectives were issued under the authority of the 10 provincial resources ministers and the federal minister, Hon.Donald Macdonald, and Hon.Jean Chretien, minister of Indian and northern affairs.This comprehensive policy statement reflects the tremendous rate of expansion in the mineral resources field.Each month brings with it quantum jumps in the available Canadian mineral resources\u2014so much so that certain factors, the most familiar of which are the environment and economic nationalism, can become raging giants in the face of the forces generated by such new wealth.Co-operation and, above all, a shared common image of the Canada we want to build from this vast wealth, depend on the co-ordination of the individuals and the institutions across Canada tapping these resources.There are many promising indications that such co-operation is taking place.Such indications of this are the 35-man petroleum mission which Donald Macdonald, the minister of energy, mines and resources, led to China earlier this month.Another example is the $2.5 million, jointly-financed, federal-provincial, aero- magnetic survey of northern Quebec.And finally, the national advisory committee on northern pipeline financing which is composed of Canadian private and government finance people from all across Canada.Past frontier stage We must tap these resources with the multi-dimensional socio-economic harmony required by the state of the world today.We have gone past the frontier stage of primitive mineral resources eye-pleasing, ever-welcome, green, growing things.The city could then go on gaining even greater revenue from its parking operation, which in any event is needed and for which no substitute is being suggested in present plans.And the existing neighborhood would be given an inestimable boost\u2014making it all more valuable than ever.Two bordering hospitals would look out on something far more desirable than more high-rise masonry.The fine, old houses remaining on the south side of Dorchester no longer would have doubtful future; they would become coveted properties.Southeast Westmount generally could reassert its charm.The approach from east and south would cause people to exclaim, \u201cAh, Westmount!\u2019 The entire city would benefit.There was something the least bit pathetic Continued on page five = extraction, which has left polluted environments and economies.If anything, the federal-provincial conference gave u Sua glimpse of precautions Canadians musty, ¢ take in tapping resources in order to avoid the clash of the energy and the environmental crisis which is hitting our neighbors to the south.Next week Mr.Drury will give a closer look into Mr.Macdonald's department\u2019s co-ordination of tapping our resources in preparation for Mr.Macdonald\u2019s visit to Westmount on May 30, wherrhe is due to make a public presentation at Victoria Hall at the invitation of Mr.Drury.Tie Wor tmaunt Uxamines 7 Thirty-five Years Ago May 20, 1938 \u201cThe gala dual celebration planned by R.S.White, MP.and Mrs.White in Ottawa Saturday has been cancelled because of the illness of Mr.White.Saturday marks the golden wedding anniversary of the couple, and 1938 also marks the 50th year since Mr.White was first elected to the House of Commons.No other individual on Parliament Hill is looked upon with greater genuine admiration and affection by all parties and persons than Mr.White.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago May 21, 1948 \u201cAlterations to the main Westmount office of the Bank of Montreal on Greene Avenue have already caused many favorable comments.Not yet completed, these changes include a complete redecoration of the office and the installation of fluorescent lighting.The manager of the branch, William M.Jackson, is pleased with the changes and says they will permit more efficient banking service to the customer.\u201d Fifteen Years Ago May 16, 1958 \u201cPreliminary plans for an extension to the public library and renovation of the existing facilities have been presented to the library board and to the council for study and approval.They call for an addition on the south side of the present building which will double the book capacity of the library.Provision has been made for book space for the next 20 years.It is expected that work will start early in 1959.\" Five Years Ago May 16, 1968 \u2018Good luck to Man and His World! The doubting Thomases in us all have an inner confidence that Jean Drapeau is about to pull off another success.And despite ourselves, with the feeling that nothing can match Expo '67 at the same place in the same generation, the betting is good that most of us will be out on those fascinating islands opposite our exciting city at least a few times this summer.\u201d We Say.Continued from page four when Ald.Aspler told council last week that there were \u2018\u2018other groups\u201d interested in developing this site.One of those groups just may be the existing citizens of Westmount who are weary of \u2018\u2018development\u2019\u2019 on an altar of so-called progress, at which and fewer of us are prepared to worship.~~ WMA president @ \u2018issues reminder Sir: 1 would appreciate it if you could include this letter in your May 17 edition of The Examiner advising all Westmount residents that if they wish to participate and vote at the WMA annual meeting May 19, 1973, they should contact Mrs.Jean Jamieson, telephone 937-9984, concerning membership in the association.Membership deadline for new members is at least 24 hours immediately preceeding the general meeting.Formal notice has been forwarded to all members and The Examiner will have a reminder notice in next week\u2019s notice.M.E.Nixon, President.712 Roslyn avenue, WESTMOUNT 217.Hillside area body urges WMA attendance Sir: May we use the good offices of your - columns to urge all concerned West- mounters, (and all are concerned, whether aware of it or not) to attend the Westmount Municipal Association general meeting, Tuesday, May 29, at Victoria Hall.It is, of course, most highly desirable they attend as members of WMA.New bylaws say application for membership must be received 24 hours ahead of meeting to confer a vote\u2014no joining at the door, as in the past.But, for die-hard non-joiners, come anyway, and you'll be welcome.The lingering, thorny civic question is whether public housing for Westmount finally has arrived at the point-of-no- return.Full approval has now been received from Quebec for the architects\u2019 plans, tenders revised, received and approved, etc., and the shovels poised, ready to roll.The passe principle of project public housing all over North America (Montreal included) has been a repeating disaster.The United States, who have had every type of it for over 35 years, according to all investigating agencies, including the Federal Housing Authority, can find absolutely nothing good to say about any of the many forms.An in-depth study by Fortune Magazine conducted in February 1972 confirms this implicity.Some projects, just a few short years after construction, have had to be demolished, in one case with as much as $26 million of an original $30 million mortgages yet unpaid! Costs are indefinite, and will skyrocket.Here in Westmount, MUC would shortly take over, giving them a giant direct foothold in our community affairs.It would, indeed, be the beginning of a much sadder ending.Approaches in 1966 Facts now disclosed indicate that approaches were authorized by the city in early 1966 to the CPR to acquire the Hillside lot.The area's people, though, were kept in the dark.They were not told Hillside was even under consideration until late October 1970.This means an almost 5-year time-lag.While surreptitious preparations were carried out, the area\u2019s taxpayers, homeowners and residents were confronted with a \u2018fait accompli\u2019.We think this should be contrasted with the example of St.George's Curling Club on The Boulevard which had two referenda to protect the people when converting the club to the St.George's private school\u2014a relatively innocuous occupancy as compared with a 106-unit public housing project.The subsequent unmitigated gall of the schemers then showed face, when Hillside\u2019s neighbors were told that their subsequent petitions and protests to city council (signed ultimately by 300 citizens) were \u2018\u2018too late\u201d! Imagine\u2014five years under wraps in preparation, with no disclosure to the natives then, once mooted, because their protest was not tabled in the first couple of weeks, it was declaimed as \u2018\u2018too late\u201d! Is this really the type of civic behavior we ought to expect in Westmount?Since that time, a city committee\u2014The Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee\u2014(URIAC) a short time ago the fount of all widsom, set up by Westmount to investigate, adjudicate, and advise on all projects affecting the area and consisting of representatives weli-chosen from the various sectors, have ruled - (1) to cancel the Hillside project entirely; and, (2) to accord priority to the rights of taxpayers and homeowners over those of departed tenants from another area.(Incidentally, this does not appear in the WMA's background information release preceding the general meeting - a fact that we have strongly protested, as these are important civic facts.) Considered a sham Why?Since URIAC does not now represent solely the schemers, (whose brain-child it originally was) and lately occasionally foils their plans, this civic committee, commissioned by the city, is in some quarters considered a \u2018sham\u2019.Some ought not to pretend that they do not know better! Most recently, the advisory council (executive) of Westmount Municipal Association, at a a duly-constitued, amply- quorumed monthly regular meeting A vote at the annual general 215, P.Q.Westmount Municipal Association NOTICE Qualified persons not now members of the West- mount Municipal Association and who may wish to meeting Tuesday evening, May 29, are advised to contact the secretary-treasurer, Mrs.W.A.Jamieson, at 937- 7984, not less than 24 hours prior to the meeting.Likewise, it would be appreciated if questions to be answered at the meeting which might require prior investigation were submitted to the secretary before Friday, May 25, at P.O.Box 157, Westmount PY VV IV VV VP VV VP VV VV PV VV VV VY VY VV VV VP VYewY TRIE » his gal is in Her back yard sunning She doesn\u2019t know Her pipes are running.JOHN WATSON LIMITED .Hartley Barber, President PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Service & Quotations on request 368 VICTORIA AVE.487-1760 à A A A de A A A A à A A Me 0 se A de in A The Westmount (March 1973), voted overwhelmingly to completely halt the Hillside public housing project and explore instead \u201call alternatives thereto,\u201d including the soon-to- be-law of the federal government (who bankrolls all housing) plans as disclosed by Hon.Ron Basford, minister of urban affairs.Notwithstanding this action of WMA, Hillside negotiations proceeded apace, culminating in Quebec approval just this month.All considered we find this disregard for WMA's executive extraordinary indeed.Rationales run to things like *\u2018only half the advisory council were present,\u201d but this is par for the course and, if WMA's enactment that night was not responsible, then neither was any other, emanating from any other executive meeting! Interesting to note that other recommendations made by the same committee, the same night, quite important to the city, too, were both listened to and acted upon! The United States, in 1970, instituted a pilot project in Kansas City, Mo., for rental subsidy instead of block-style \u2018\u2018ghetto\u201d\u2019 housing.This concept preserves absolute anonymity in misfortune for the people involved, and permits them to make their own housing arrangements with owners.It is financed entirely by the federal entity, and costs the municipality nothing.Children in \u201cghetto\u201d housing are stamped, like it or not, \u2018\u2018Public Housing\u201d by their peers, which then follows long beyond school portals.Welfare mothers know this and have urged that this ghetto not be built.Studies for Canada The rental subsidy plan is soon to become standard practice throughout U.S.Mr.Basford\u2019s office state that they have been watching the U.S.pilot plan and have it under study for application in Canada.It is highly successful in every way and could shortly become the commonplace formula in this country, too.The Hillside site is completely unsuitable, for a thousand obvious reasons, and occupants (mothers particularly) will long curse the Westmount council and administrators who put them there! They will be equally unheralded by the area\u2019s residents, who will see their neighborhood hopelessly overcrowded and destroyed, and their small, hard-won property values Examiner, Thursday, May 17, 1973 .5 annihilated.Public housing will certainly never be welcome on Hillside avenue! But we have said, and we say again, and many openly admit, it would be far less welcome on Summit Circle, The Boulevard, The Avenue, Cote road, (or even the Somerville bakery lot\u2014or around Stayner Park!).Many people smugly tried to hide behind land values, etc., but this is simple unadulterated hypocrisy.There's ample city-owned ground in all those areas.But let us not bicker.Instead, fellow Westmounters and WMAers, do not allow one or two councillors and their followers to condemn your city to a permanent, costly solution for a very defined and temporary problem! \u2019 Police.MUC matters When police matters and MUC came into focus, a special WMA general meeting was called and Victoria Hall, bursting at the seams, heard your thunderous outcry.Here is an even-closer danger of infiltration by MUC, with a stronghold (perhaps a stranglehold) on the community.Why else is Quebec, this past year or more, so strongly urging Westmount to public housing?Why, indeed.At any rate, having disregarded URIAC and the advisory council of the Westmount Municipal Association, public housing and its principles and headaches are now on tap for a yes, or resounding no! on the Tuesday, 29th, agenda.A strong \u2018no\u2019 vote can curb Quebec and MUC even now.But you, fellow-citizens, must be there.There are no proxy votes.You must register it, in person (by secret ballot, of course!) The Selbyite problems can be solved far, far better (for them, as well) in several other ways.Come one, come all.Come out and stand up for Westmount, on Tuesday, May 29, at 8 pm, at Victoria Hall! Westmount Ward 3 Central Citizens\u2019 Committee W.Don McLean A.G.Dirkman P.Duggan 4508 St.Catherine street west, WESTMOUNT 215.CaMp OyAREAU Established 1922 We also offer orienteering, crafts, archery, tennis, canoe tripping.One counsellor children.Tents or cabins.Owner \u2014 Director: Mrs.J.R.Allen Hustrated brochure on request.Accredited member Ont.& Que.Camping Associations 1922 For Giris 6-15 Specializing in swimming, sailing, canoeing.to every four Box 249, Lennoxville 819\u2014562-9641 (collect) IB, ST D> BY._ a.camp & À À À À À À À 0 A 0 md hasscscaasssssaassascaanaan For boys 7 to 15 years, 4, 6 or 8 week periods.Large permanent senior staff.Resident doctor, registered nurse Situated on a 400 acre site 120 miles north-west of Montreal.Half mile sandy beach \u2014 a perfect ; waterfront.A full, varied program, suited to each { of seven different age groups.nominingue (pronounced: Nom-i=nang).The program offers a wide choice and includes daily instruction in sailing, tennis, swimming, canoeing, waterskiing, archery, riflery, crafts, orienteering, etc.Wilderness canoe tripping is a major activity.For illustrated brochure and information contact: Pater Van Wagner, Director 482 Strathmore Bivd., Dorval, Que.Phone 631-1501 (Evenings: 697-3620) Accredited Member Quebec Camping Association and assistant. 6 The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 17, 1973 Faniuns #$ ue?CALL NOW Free Appraisai In Conf 1DENCE Bares Fereuson 932-2936 22-9423 Members of the Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee last night approved a formal request to have one member of Westmount city council present at every one of their monthly meetings in the future.Sensing that they were not being taken as seriously as they should, committee members took the move in order to allow for more communication with the city about problems they were discussing in relation to improvement of the government- designated urban renewal area.URIAC is a statutory com- ~mittee, set up to allow for citizen participation in the designated southern area, though members feel they are being ignored by city officials.Arthur Dirkman told his colleagues at the meeting that certain high officials of the Westmount Municipal Association had told him they regarded URIAC as \u2018a sham.\u201d Michael Price pointed to WMA Vice-President Les Darragh.a former URIAC member himself, as one person who did not con- Meighen return is accepted Judge Fernand Legault of Superior Court, Montreal, who also is chief revision officer for Federal elections in the region, yesterday granted an order to À.Keith Ham, official agent for Michael Meighen, Progressive Conservative candidate in Westmount in last October\u2019s URIAC asks alderman to attend sider URIAC \u2018\u2018significant.\u201d \u201cI've done my damnedest,\u201d Fred Leclaire told the committee, \u2018to make sure the citizens are participating.If these things were ever put straight to me, I'd make a public issue out of them.\u201d He admitted he had never heard the charges himself.Mr.Price described situation as \u2018\u2018deplorable.\u201d The motion to have city council members attend the meetings, made by Mr.Leclaire, was designed to force city councillors to give their opinions about the KIWANIS CLUB OF ROYAL MOUNT 1973 FUN-A-FAI Featuring the Famous JOHNNY HOLMES ORCHESTRA And the Stupendous, Ridiculous ROYAL MOUNT CHORUS LINE With Montreal\u2019s Leading Businessmen Master of Ceremonies: Len Rowcliffe, CJAD 1st Prize AIR FARE RETURN FOR TWO TO ACAPULCO COURTESY OF B & B Travel Bureau Howell Forwarding Quebec Ltd.Frank Norman & Co.Lid.2nd & 3rd Prizes MASSEY FERGUSON POWER MOWERS Many other Prizes Laughs - Fun - Dancing Friday, June 8th HOTEL BONAVENTURE.8:30 P.M.$5.00 Per Person For Tickets 731-9664 733-7111 731-7654 OR ANY CLUB MEMBER OR AT THE DOOR Help us to help others Kiwanis Community Projects URIAC directly to the com- & mittee, as well as to promote\u2019 further discussion between members and city decision- makers.general election, to permit late filing of returns detailing election contributions and expenses for Mr.Meighen\u2019s campaign.The Canada Election Act Neither Assistant City requires such returns to be filed Manager John Melver nor his with the returning officer and alternate.Public Services published locally within three months of the polling.Mr.Ham appeared with Mr.Meighen before Judge Legault and filed a submission which gave inadvertence as the reason for the omission.Also present was Mrs.Margaret Sise.the Westmount returning officer in last fall's, election.Final totals of receipts and payments for the Tory candidate were shown as $59,946.63.YEAR ROUND Sun, Sea & Tranquility CAPE COD Are you planning for early retirement?Looking for a second home \u201caway from it all\u2019?Perhaps looking for a small businesssto supplement your retirement income and keep Director Frank Davis, the city\u2019s representatives on URIAC, were at last night's meeting.Anthony\u2019 VARIETY STORE Post Office - Greeting y Etc.Open 8 am to 9 pm (Sundays: 11 am to 6 pm) 4500 St.Catherine St.W.(Cor.Abbott) you involved?Perhaps looking for a retirement home and business opportunity combined?Cape Cod, with its mild year round temperature and tranquil way of life, offers a variety of property and possibilities, including condominiums, new homes in retirement villages and in new communities.New and old properties on seaside or water-view lots, apartments, investment properties.Cape Cod \u2018Mama & Papa\u2019\u2019 businesses (run that little motel you have always dreamed of).Mortgage money is no problem and can be as low as 7 percent.Through our International Division we can now offer information concerning properties available, location characteristics, transportation, real estate practice and general development on the Cape.Please call our Mr.Norman if we can help you with your plans.FRANK A.NORMAN eco.1255 LAIRD BOULEVARD - Town of Mount Royal 731-6817 Member of Montreal Real Estate Board >.+2 01400 COLIN emir «+ 6.4 6 UGC 0 PERRET) PVN «+400 09 4 97° + 5 4 046 0 0 à Possible 250 families demanding housing Long-time public housing opponent Arthur Dirkman noted last night that more than 250 families eventually could demand city-subsidized housing in Westmount, if trends continue.Speaking at a meeting of the Urban Renewat Implementation Advisory Committee, Mr.Dirk- man brought committee members to the realization that all of the families evicted by the Quebec roads department to make way for the Trans-Canada Highway could ask the city fors relocation within Westmount.There were 239 families on Selby street, Greene avenue and Brooke avenue whose dwellings were expropriated by the province, Mr.Dirkman noted.Originally, 55 of these families were scheduled to return to Westmount to be accommodated by the city in public housing.The number soon grew to 65, then later jumped to over 70.At the meeting last night, Westmount Tenant\u2019s Association representative Al Fisher announced that some families had registered their intent to move back to Westmount by signing the proper forms at City Hall, without talking to Mr.Fisher.He also stated that some nine families had withdrawn their names from his list of families wishing to move back to West- mount.Originally 102 City officials, it was learned, originally had planned that 102 families would be accomodated in the initial stage of public housing construction.Mention was also made of 24 A fascinating home off Cote des Neiges for sale by - original owner.Built 10 years ago.Spacious living and dining rooms with beautiful view of the mountain.Four bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, double garage.Small garden and patio.Asking $52,500.M.L.S.For further details call Mrs.D.H.Lewis, 731-6817 or 430-4071.families who had been evicted by Hydro-Quebec when it built a power sub-station on Selby street in 1965.Others had been forced out of buildings by the Quebec Roads department: those buildings were later demolished.Members of URIAC generally conceded :that any of these families had the right to request relocation in Westmount, since they were forced out by a public utility.Michael Price, taking the idea one step further, said he was more concerned about the 10- year resident of Westmount who moved out a year before the eviction order was given.He suggested these people should be allowed to move back, though other members agreed there was no law to cover them.Already, Mr.Fisher said, he had tried to help one former resident receive compensation from the government in such a situation, but had been refused.Quebec to sell buildings The two buildings owned by the Quebec roads department on Greene avenue will be sold by public tender within the next two weeks, Fred Leclaire told members of the Urban Renewal Implementation Advisory Committee last night.Mr.Leclaire said he had been told by roads department offical Andre Riopel that the buildings would have to be sold through tenders, but that his department was not looking merely for the highest bidder on the property.The decision, Mr.Leclaire said, would be *\u2018on the total program, not just the amount of money.\u201d Mr.Leclaire said he would welcome members of URIAC to help draw up a presentation for his \u2018\u2018non-profit corporation\u201d ALARMS Burglar Fire Holdup Free Demonstration Sun :illance Alarms 733-0131 FOR SAI Town House Central Montreal Fine Westmount Boulevard, close to private schools.In mint condition, it ofters ample accommodation for comfortable family living, Ground floor den, 6 bedrooms, 4 bathrooms, garden.Exclusive listing.Please call Mrs.Pauline Bates, 731-6817 or 932-2224.Brick Cottage Prime Location home, ideally Frank A.Norman & Co.Ltd.Laird Canora Building, 1255 Laird Boulevard, Montreal 304.M The: Westmount Examiner, which intends to make a cooperative purchase of the buildings.Michael Price said that if not the only con- money is sideration in the sale of the Thursday, May 17, 1973 - 7 buildings, *\u2018the composition of the group is all-important.\u2019 He was a bit skeptical of the corporation's chances of acquiring the buildings outright, as were other members of the committee.Give your savings a real lift Move them into a high interest savings plan at Canada Permanent Trust.The percentages are in your favour.V2 CHEQUING ACCOUNT Handiest way to keep track of your personal budget.Pay bills by cheque and you have a record.No charge on any reasonable number of cheques.To NON-CHEQUING ACCOUNT This savings account pays a high interest rate because we want you tp keep your savings building up with us.Although cheques are not available, you can withdraw funds at any time.V2 SAVINGS CERTIFICATES Cashable at any time.Interest payable only when held for more than 2 months.Issued only for a 5 year period.Interest rate increases according to length of time held.Highest rate quoted above.% TERM DEPOSITS Canada Permanent's Term Deposits offer our highest interest rate with complete security and convenience.Terms and rates vary from 1 to 5 years.Highest rate quoted above.A superb investment.*All rates subject to change without notice Canada Permanent Trust 1326 Greene Ave., Westmount - 931-7554 D.B.Lane, Manager \u2018Member - Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation.Homes in Westmount New Exclusive Detached Cottage JA This lovely home features living room with open tireplace, gracious dining room with adjacent lovely sunroom.Ground floor library.Four large bedrooms with 2 new bathrooms.Good size upstairs den with open fireplace and door to large sundeck.Lovely finished basement with open fireplace, maid\u2019s room and full bathroom.Lots of storage.Must sell.Well priced at $79,500.Call Mrs.F.Lesage Woodfine, 731.6817 or 739- 6863.located on the 731-6817 ember Montreal Real Estate Boaro / Real Estate Brokers.WOULD YOU LIKE A CONFIDENTIAL APPRAISAL OF YOUR HOME?Without obligation, we will inspect your property and assess current market volue Coll usot 731-6817, 8 - The Westmount ATTEND Examiner, Thursday, May 17, 1973 x CHURCH SERVICES AT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE ANGLICAN ANGLICAN UNITED ST.MATTHIAS CHURCH OF WESTMOUNT Cote St.Antoine Road THE ADVENT PARK CHURCH at Church Hill Corner of Wood and (UNITED) Maisonneuve, Westmount The Rev\u2019d Eric Dungan, M.A, CENTENNIAL YEAR Archdeacon J.N.Doidge The Rev\u2018d.F.H.K.Greer EASTER IV 8:00 A.M.Holy Eucharist 10:30 A.M.Sung Eucharist EASTER IV 8:00 A.M.Holy Eucharist 9:30 A.M.Mattins: Sermon - The Rector (Church School and Nursery) 11:00 A.M.Holy Eucharist: Sermon - The Rector 11:00 A.M.Church School and Nursery HOLY EUCHARIST DURING THE WEEK Wednesday M.Wednesday 10:00 A.M.Holy Communion M Friday Stephen A.Crisp, A.R.C.O.Organist and Choirmaster Deputy Organist: Alan Stewart ST.STEPHEN'\u2019S EVANGELICAL DORCHESTER and ATWATER LUTHERAN Lt.Col.The Rev'd, George B.Fee CHURCH OF THE MAY 20th REDEEMER 10:30 A.M.Holy Communion 285 Clarke Ave., Westmount Rev.Helmut Saabas Mrs.Harold Pedersen Organist Ewstace Tait, A.R.C.C.O.Organist and Choir Direct.WELCOME TOALL 11.00 a.m.The Service and Nurser UNITED ST.ANDREW'S WESTMOUNT 101 COTE ST.ANTOINE ROAD.MAY 20th 11:00 A.M.\u201cON GETTING EVEN\" Children\u2019s Program Coffee Time Rev.E.A.Kirker, B.A., B.D.Gordon White L.Mus.B.Mus.All are Welcome Crib Corner BAPTIST WESTMOUNT BAPTIST CHURCH Sherbrooke St.West at Roslyn Ave.Nearest Downtown Baptist Church MINISTER: REV.J.FRANK PATCH, B.A,, B.D.Director of Music: Rowland R.Amos, B.Mus.MAY 20th 9:45 A.M.Church Sunday School for all ages 11:00 A.M.\"FREE BORN\u2019 7:30 P.M.\u201cBEYOND OUR FONDEST DREAMS\" Midweek Service: Wednesday, 8:00 P.M.Visitors Always Welcome CHRISTIAN SCIENCE FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, WESTMOUNT 390 Lansdowne Avenue at Sherbrooke Street Lesson Sermon Subject this Sunday \u201cMORTALS AND IMMORTALS\" Golden Text: Nehemiah 9:5.Stand up and bless the Lord your God for ever and ever.11:00 ALM.Church 11:00 A.M.Sunday School Every Wednesday 8:15 P.M.Testimony Meeting PUBLIC READING ROOM In the Church Edifice: Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday 1 to 4 p.m.Wednesday 6:30 to 8:00 p.m.ALL ARE WELCOME Radio Program \u2018'The Truth that Heals\u201d CFMB 1410 on the dial, Sunday 4:15 pm.« or.I TT RAR A TR CERTES SEL vus Lansdowne Ave.and Maisonneuve Bivd.Rev.J.E.Nix, B.A., B.D., S.T.M.Minister Mr.Christopher Jackson, Organist MAY 20th 11:00 A.M.Morning Worship \u2018\u2019God\u2019's Purpose for Us & Our Children\u2019\u2019 The sacrament of baptism will be celebrated Coffee Hour All are Welcome DOMINION DOUGLAS Westmount Boulevard and Lansdowne Rev.R.Douglas Smith, B.A_, Rev.John T.P.Nichols, M.A., 10:45 A.M.Music before Service 8.D.B.D.Ruth Taylor, Mezzo Soprano 11:00 A.M.Morning Worship Sermon: \u201cWhat's happening?\u2018 Rev.John T.P.Nichois Coffee Hour at close of Worship Church School in all Departments Crib Corner for Infants Mr.Ted McLearon Director of Music SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 450 Kensington Rabbi Wilfred Shuchat Assistant Rabbi Herbert Mand! Cantor Nathan Mendelson Assistant Cantor Herman Muller SABBATH SERVICES Sabbath Eve, 6:45 p.m.in the Chapel Sabbath Morning, 8:45 a.m.in the Main Synagogue.Sabbath Twilight, 8:15 p.m.in the Chapel DAILY SERVICES Sunday, May 20, 8:45 a.m., 8:25 p.m.Monday - Friday, 7:30 a.m.Monday - Thursday.8:25 p.m.TEMPLE EMANU- EL 4100 Sherbrooke St.W., Westmount, Montreal Rabbi Bernard Bloomstone Harry J.Stern, Rabbi Emeritus Cantor Herman K.Gottlieb SABBATH EVE SERVICE Friday Evening, May 18th at 8:15 p.m.RABBI BLOOMSTONE will speak on \u2018You Protest Too Much.\u201d An Oneg Shabbat and Kiddush Reception follows the worship in the Community House, under the auspices of the Temple Sisterhood.Saturday, May 19th at 11:30 a.m.Junior Congregation Service.Daily Services in the Chapel Monday thru Thursday afternoons at 5:45 p.m.TEMPLE RELIGIOUS SCHOOLS Saturday, May 19th at 9:30 a.m.regular classes for High School, Junior School and Confirmation class.Daily Hebrew School - Monday thru Thursday afternoons commencing at 4:00 p.m.SCHOOL FOR ADULTS Saturday, May 19th at 10:00 a.m.Mrs.Joy Meyer continues with the series on \u2018\u2019The Institute of Jewish Family Lite.\u2019 Breakfast precedes the class at 9:45 a.m.Wednesday, May 23rd at 8:00 p.m.the mid-week class of the School for Adults meets with Rabbi Bioomstone.Nichols speaks at Dominion Next Sunday in Dominion- Douglas United Church, Rev.John Nichols will preach on \u201cWhat's Happening.\u201d Last Sunday 60 young people in red blazers of the St.Catharines Collegiate Orchestra filled the front of the church and provided music of a very high quality.Dominion-Douglas young people entertained the visitors at a luncheon following the service.The Sacrament of Baptism was administered to Christopher Adam, son of Mr.and Mrs.J.Douglas Barrington, and to Andra Lousie, daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Robert Maxwell.Getting Even sermon topic for Kirker In the sermon entitled \u2018\u2018On Getting Even\u201d at St.Andrew's United Church Sunday morning, Rev.E.A.Kirker will examine the spirit of revenge which characterizes many human relationships, the family, the state and international relations today.Special reference will be made to the current debate on capital punishment in Parliament.Church classes have ended for the season at the local church.Older chi\u201d\u201d-en are encourage to attend \u201cvices with their families L\u2026 a special program for younger children will take place each Sunday under the direction of Mrs.Jean Ford.Extensive alterations in the church\u2019s education program are being planned for the next season, including the selection of trained teachers for the Church School, now underway, and a school for adults being arranged for the autumn months.A professional director of Christian education will be appointed shortly.Last Sunday the young people received into church membership following 10 weeks of instruction were presented with Bibles and certificates by Session Clerk R.M.Canavan, and were greeted by members of the congregation at a post-service reception.Members of the church- sponsored Scout troop recently spent a weekend camping at the Beattie farm near Lachute.A number of Scouts and Cubs are now preparing for summer camp.Temple program arranged Sabbath Eve service at Temple Emanu-El takes place tomorrow at 8:15 pm.Rabbi Bernard Bloomstone will speak on \u2018You Protest Too Much.\u201d An Oneg Shabbat and Kiddush reception follows the worship under the auspices of the Temple Sisterhood.Saturday at 11:30 am, the Junior Congregation service takes place at 10 am, the School for Adults meets.Breakfast precedes the class at 9:30 am.Wednesday at 8 pm, the midweek class of the School for Adults continues under the leadership of Rabbi Bloomstone.Saturday, May 26, at 9:45 am, the Temple Brotherhood holds a closing breakfast meeting and election of officers and board members for the new season.The guest speaker will be Bernard - Bloomfield, national president, Canadian Association for Labor Israel and national president of the Jewish National Fund.Wednesday, May 30, at 9:45 am, a breakfast meeting of the Book Lovers\u2019 Forum committee takes place at the home of the general chairman, Mrs.Harry Joshua Stern, 3238 The Boulevard.e Boundaries adjusted Final definition of federal constituency boundaries in Quebec published in Ottawa this week indicates the Westmount constituency has undergone some adjustments but no major change.The riding extends from Bleury street to Melrose avenue in Montreal and approximately from the CPR tracks in southern Westmount to the Queen Mary road area in Montreal.There has been an addition to the southern reaches in downtown Montreal.Ever see or hear raves about Our FTD CALENDAR?A personal visit and a cash order will guarantee your 1973 Calendar.æs, CHARGEX = GERALD McKENNA Flowers 6006 Sherbrooke St.West Tel: 487-1300 MAY 18th Visit the OPEN HOUSE DAY CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM 1416 Crescent Street Sponsored by First Church of Christ, Scientist, Montreal.Friday and Saturday open 10am to 9 pm All are Welcome and 19th The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, \u2018May 17, 1973 - 9 Old people's residence © high-rise mooted for The congregation and vestry of St.Stephen\u2019s Anglican Church, 4006 Dorchester boulevard west, have been deliberating for two years now a changeover of the church, possibly for the establishment of an old people\u2019s residence or for sale of the property to a community group.The high cost of maintenance of the building, coupled with a \u201cstatic\u2019\u2019 congregation whose support has not increased over the years, has made life difficult for the church, now shadowed by development in southeastern Westmount.Canon H.St.C.Hilchey, rector of the Church of St.James the Apostle in Montreal is priest responsible for St.Stephen's in the absence of a resident minister for the ailing church.Matter wide open \u201cThe matter is very wide open Librarians asking aid Resolutions dealt with by the Quebec Library Association conference at Pointe Claire last Friday and Saturday asked Quebec to reinstate this year\u2019s 19- percent reduction in grants to public libraries; reimburse losses incurred by libraries resulting from the province's book-buying policy, and fully disclose the economic consequences of that policy.Attending the conference from the Westmount Public Library were Chief Librarian Norah Bryant, QLA\u2019s English secretary; Miss Rosemary Lydon, assistant librarian and a QLA council member, and Miss Irene Aubrey, children\u2019s - department librarian who is the association\u2019s youth section chairman, St.Stephen right now,\u201d Canon Hilchey told The Examiner this week.\u201cWe would prefer to find an alternative use for the building, but we might sell if we can find a proper buyer.We'll take the initiative if we decide to sell.\u201d The idea of making an old people's home, though not by any means firmed up at this stage, is under \u2018\u2018earnest consideration\u201d by the congregation.Canon Hilchey noted that already people had asked if they could \u201csign up\u201d for occupancy in such a home, but said this action on their part was premature.He also said that he had been approached by two different churches, a commercial developer \u2018and other speculators who wished to buy the church, though they had been refused each time.The church is not listed with any realtor, and is not looking to sell \u2018on the open market.\u201d The idea of the old people's Mrs.F.Langan voting chief Westmount has a new federal a .returning officer.Bae) abi; .Mrs.Fred Langan, 570 Lan- 3 (IV sdowne avenue, has been ap- ni pointed to preside in this con- v Ai stituency over future Ottawa parliamentary elections.She succeeds Mrs.Margaret Sise, 54 Aberdeen avenue, who has retired from the post.Mrs.Sise has had local charge of the i of last two federal general elec- a con \u2018 tions.A 84 such a home has been clouded by NS A A i a Tl TE eh provin \u2018ial deliberations over Bill Bia wy me Cal, al am w ol 65, however, which might affect the nature of senior citizen residences.Any speculation concerning the eventual out come of present deliberations is to be discouraged, according to Canon Hilchey.7 er ee Lk st.Stephen\u2019 s Church home would include the continuation of St.Stephen\u2019s as a chapel\u2014\u2018\u2018St.Stephen\u2019s Chapel\"\u2019\u2014on the main floor while residences were built around it.The possibility of establishing Education Directress; West End Cooperative Nursery established 1947 wishes to announce openings available for fall term Morning (3 to4 year olds) or afternoon (4 to 5 year olds) classes Sylvia Smith, 4171 Madison Ave., N.D.G.Registrar: 482-7835 St.George\u2019s School Established 1930 Co-educational Day School - Pre-School, Elementary and High School + We are happy to announce that, because of our increased facilities, we will be admitting a new 7th Grade for the 1973-74 academic year.For information call the School office at: 937-9289, 3100 The Boulevard, Montreal 218, Quebec.Montreal 218.years.Small classes, French.935-5966.The Priory School Inc.| 3120 The Boulevard, Junior Day School for boys and girls from 4 to 12 needs.Varied curriculum with strong emphasis on Applications are now being accepted for September 1973.For further information call The Principal: awareness of individual environment.REASONABLE FEES.Write: BEREAN CHRISTIAN SCHOOLS, BROCKVILLE Coed \u2014 Grades 7-12 \u2014 Non-denominational PROVIDES: Quality education, small classes individual attention, extra help, excellent facilities, athietics, wholesome ENROLL NOW.Semester begins Sept.10.Registrar Berean Christian Schools P.O.Brockville, Ontario KéV 5V8 Phone 613-345-5521 PARENTS Are you satisfied with the quality of education and the amount of personal attention your child receives in school?Box 610 PARENTS! DON\u2019T MISS THIS CHANCE TO HELP YOUR CHILD GET THE HIGHEST POSSIBLE MARKS IN JUNE MATRICS.RESERVE A PLACE NOW Operation Review \"73.WHAT IS IT?CLASSES?HOW LONG?A complete review of course Maximum One course, one day.requirements for June exams.20 students.(9AM - 4PM) TEACHERS?WHEN?Recognized high school | COURSES?every Saturday specialists.Algebra, Geometry, Functions, French, Now to June 20 English (Grade 10 or 11), Chemistry NAL Physics, Biology, History 42, History 51, History 52, Geography 42, Geography 52, (Physical), Geography 51, Spanish, Russian, German, Italian.EXPENSIVE?TOREGISTER: Call.Leave your name, subject & telephone $12.50 per course.no.We'll confirm date & subject.DOES IT HELP?Students comments: \u2018Fantastic\u2019 Excellent\u2019 \u2018| now know exactly what | need for the exam\u2019 \u2018\u2019l\u2019m taking another one\u2019.We are reviewing your subject this week RESERVE YOUR PLACE TODAY WESTBURY COLLEGE (est.1959) 4956 Decarie Blvd.486-6395 486-7010 RECOGNIZED BY DEPT.OF EDUCATION QUEBEC. 10 The Westmount Examiner, Qi Thursday, May 17, 1973 Board turning Fairbairn offered thanks Westmount School Board chairman Mrs.Joan Roth- man offered the official and heartfelt thanks of the school board to Superintendent R.T.B.Fairbairn for his \u2018invaluable work on behalf of Westmount schools.Mrs.Rothman noted specially the \u201chours sitting around the table with us\u201d at board meetings, keeping commissioners informed of activities in the three schools and at the greater Montreal level.Mr.Fairbairn has been superintendent of West- mount Protestant schools for three years, and for the last tvo has dealt exclusively with Roslyn, Westmount Park and Westmount High schools.Westmount will lose its exclusive administrative district in June, along with the demise of the West- mount School Board.The Westmount School Board voted Tuesday night to turn over its assets to the three schools under its jurisdiction when it is dissolved in June.The turnover will mean liquidation of bonds it now holds for endowments, prizes and trust funds, though bequests for scholarships and prizes will remain intact.ai HIDE areas ne School committees INFORMATION S The bequests held for prizes and awards to high school students will be turned over to Principal Noel Hamilton and his successors to administer \u201c\u2018in accordance with the terms of the bequests.\u201d Prize money which comes from bonds held by the school board will also go to the high school for continuation of Fr il these awards.Remaining money coming from liquidation of bonds is to be divided evenly between West- mount Park and Roslyn schools.Commissioner Brian Emo noted that this will come to \u201csomewhere between $500 and $750 each\u201d for the principals to administer in consultation with es 16.4 yr Py D TEL T 1 HARING: Westmount School Board Chairman Mrs.Joan Rothman explains to representatives of local school committees some of the problems and considerations the commissioners have dealt with in the past, and which the committees will shoulder beginning in June.grope to determine structures The Westmount School Board and school committees still are not sure how the new structure for schools on Montreal island will affect them, but they tried Tuesday night to formulate ideas on the subject and plans for the school committees, once they are no longer under the shadow of a single local school board.Chairman Mrs.Joan Rothman told a session gathered at Westmount High School that the only mandate they had at present was part of Bill 71, to restructure educational government in the area.Section 619 of the bill states: \u2018When a school board sets administrative regions or districts, a regional parents committee and a central committee consisting of representatives of regional committees will be established.\u201d Thus, regional parents\u2019 committees will be established.\u201d Thus, regional parents\u2019 committees will be set up, she believed, along the lines of administrative districts.No districts Superintendent R.T.B.Fairbairn noted that administrative districts have not yet been established, either in terms of the number of districts or their boundaries.Beause of financial changes with the reorganized system, Mr.Fair- bairn said he believed there would not be as many administrative districts, (it is generally understood that Westmount will not be an individual district, as in the past) nor that they would parallel present ward boundaries, a proposal endorsed by the Westmount School Board.High school committee representative Richard Salisbury observed that the school board probably would propose administrative boundaries and allow local groups one week to respond, \u2018if the past is anything to go by.\u201d He said local committees and boards should act now to plan out a structure for government within the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal.Commissioner Brian Emo pointed out that in his opinion each parents\u2019 committee should receive the reports of a single supervisor, as local school boards do at present.He also suggested some sort of electoral-ward similarity was important, since in this way elected com- QAPSB passes constitution Commissioner Brian Emo told his colleagues on the Westmount School Board Monday night that the Quebec Association of Protestant School Boards had passed its revised constitution April 28 \u201cin about three minutes.\u201d The constitution had met opposition from local board members, who disapproved of its preamble and voting requirements.Mr.Emo said the QAPSB had \"softened the terms we were objecting to,\u201d though he continued to have reservations about the finalized version.His greatest surprise, he said.was the speed with which the finalconsititution, which had been revised from a previous QAPSB meeting, was moved, seconded and passed \u201ceven over the voices of those who wanted to discuss it.\u201d missioners at the PSBGM level would be able \u2018to get useful input or useful feedback\u2019\u2019 during their deliberations at the area-wide evel.Mrs.Gaby Ostro, chairman of the PSBGM parents, committee, told those in attendance there was \u2018\u201cno reason why small groups of school committees cannot get together.\u201d \u201cThere are many different possibilites,\u2019\u201d Mrs.Ostro went on, \u201cbeside our legal mandate.\u201d Work with professionals Former commissioner Iain Gow.pointing to the proposed one-year term for entire school committees, said the committees would \u201cHave to work with professional people\u201d who have more years\u2019 experience in running schools.This would include both school superintendents and principals.\u201cPeople have to do their homework,\u201d Mr.Gow said afterward, \u201cto see what's been happening in the past.They shouldn't have to start from zero.\u2019 He implied that many new members of a school committee executive might spend several months learning how to do their jobs, and suggested there be \u201csome continuity\u2019 from year to year on the committees.The entire question was left without resolve at the meeting, mainly since lower structures cannot be determined until after the new island council and local school committees make decisions concerning their future plans.Remedial reading arranged Westmount High School will have a limited remedial reading program next fall, Mrs.Barbara Moore announced Tuesday night, for 10 students with reading disabilities not exceeding 1% grade levels of competency.Mrs.Moore, who is chairman of the Westmount High School committee, said she had received the news from Miss Mary Matthews, reading counsellor of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal.The program will be handled by local volunteers, who will be trained and supervised by Miss Matthews.Volunteers are needed to work two days a week, and are asked to call Mrs.Moore at 488-7196.The program will be run by the PSBGM.which will pick up the tab for special equipment and tests needed for the students.Mrs.Moore said the board recognizes there are many more students who could make use of such instruction, but that this was all the PSBGM could afford at this time.\u201cWe just fell into the pot at the right time,\u201d Mrs.Moore said, expressing gratitude that even 10 students locally could be helped.The PSBGM announced last week the establishment of a special education program at John Grant High School in Lachine, to offer facilities for vocational and special training to those unable to handle normal academic studies.The program will be open to students in special and practical classes at Protestant high schools, as well as selected students from senior special education classes in elementary schools.moneys over to schools their respective teachers\u2019 councils and school committees.Board Chairman Mrs.Joan Rothman informally suggested that the money might best be used for the proposed audiovisual centres at the two elementary schools, though this was not incorporated in the motion approved by the members.\u201cWe would not like this money to be frittered away,\u201d Mrs.Roth- man missioners agreed.A third part of the motion transferred the large painting by Douglas Lawley, hanging in the board room at Westmount High School, to the high school.Commissioners were not sure how many of the several Lawley paintings hanging in the high school were the property of the school board, but changed the motion to \u2018\u2018painting or paintings\u2019\u2019 to take care of the uncertainties.The late Mr.Lawley was formerly vice-principal and a revered teacher of Westmount High School, and donated many of his now-valuable works.Fine arts body will carry on The Westmount Fine Arts Committee will continue in operation next year, working with the three school committees despite the absence of the Westmount School Board.Mrs.Frances Jocobs, 640 Upper Belmont avenue, who is chairman of the committee, announced this at a session of the Westmount School Board Tuesday night at which members of the local school committees and home and school associations were present.\u201cThe need for enrichment continues to grow,\u201d Mrs.Jocobs said in discussing the continued success of fine arts programs at Westmount schools.The committee, originally .formed \u201cto enrich music, art and drama programs,\u2019 has sponsored poetry readings, concerts and exhibitions with money provided by the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal and local fund- raising events.Commissioner Mrs.Muriel Kaplan, who represents the Westmount board at the PSBGM, said further funding by the greater board was \u2018\u2018under debate at the moment.\u201d Mrs.Jacobs pointed out that the committee still has \u201ca little\u201d money left from last year\u2019s grant because of the teacher's strike which shortened the school year.Board .Continued from page one attendance.Mrs.Gaby Ostro.chairman of the 99-member parents\u2019 committee under the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal, and Mrs.Betty O'Connell, 55 Somerville avenue, who is executive vice- president of the provincial home and school federation, were both there.The Westmount Municipal Association sent a member of its education and library committee.All three of Westmount\u2019s Protestant school principals were at the meeting.Dr.Stanley French, former chairman and now commissioner of the Westmount School Board, was out of town and Commissioner Jennifer Gooch also was absent.The other five board members were present.said.The other com- i + fs O PY on The Westmount Examiner, Student health forms are sternly condemned A provincial health questionnaire which has been making the rounds in most Quebec schools and has received strong comment from many Immersion in French study asked The Westmount School Board has urged the Protestant School board of Greater Montreal to make a study of the 30 percent French immersion program now under way at Westmount Park School, to be compared with the total-immersion courses at Roslyn School.This was one of three recommendations put forward Tuesday night by Commissioner James Robb, who also suggested an \u2018urgent study\u2019 to determine how Roslyn graduates of the total-immersion program adapt to classes at Westmount High School, two years hence.The Roslyn total-immersion system is the first of its type in the Montreal area, meaning the first class of such students, due to graduate next year.will be exposed to an untested program when they try to adapt to the high school curriculum.~ Urges qualifications Mr.Robb also suggested that teachers of second-language courses in specialized disciplines should themselves be specialists, if possible, in the course they are offering, and not just people trained to teach a second language.A general discussion arose later in the evening over the value of French immersion programs, which most people considered significant.Commissioner Mrs.Muriel Kaplan, who represents the board to the PSBGM, said the Roslyn experiment had been \u2018\u2018highly successful\u201d to date, but that more would be known once the first class has graduated next .year.Mrs.Kaplan noted that the PSBGM was having difficulty allowing French-immersion programs in any school that wanted it, mostly because of the transportation and space problems involved.; Former school board member Ian Gow asked Commissioner Kaplan if the 30 percent French program offered at Westmount Park School was recognized by the PSBGM as an alternative to total-immersion programs.Mrs.Kaplan said that it was, but the motion approved that night will offer it even more attention.Remedial English?High school committee representative Richard Salisbury, who has children both in the high school and at Roslyn School, pointed out that total- immersion students entering Westmount High Schoo! may, in fact, need remedial English courses\u2014something few parents had previously considered aloud.Chairman Mrs.Joan Rothman .agreed, and said the problem should be dealt with by the school committees involved and by the PSBGM.Mrs.Rothman also suggested, noting \u2018\u2018the other side of the coin,\u201d that eventual Roslyn graduates \u2018may pass grade 11 French at the grade 8 or grade 9 level,\u201d thus causing problems in terms of program and yearly course requirements.parents who view it as an invasion of privacy, has been trounced by the Westmount School Board for use in local Protestant schools.Commissioners Tuesday night decided that the questionnaire, form UC-5, should not be used for Westmount children, but that the abriged form UC-5a was acceptable for the time being.The form, which certain doctors estimate would take two hours of tests to complete, asks questions such as the length of time the mother was pregnant and what type of labor she had; Committee on health to die, too The Westmount health education committee is planning its own demise along with the Westmount School Board, it was announced Tuesday night by committee chairman Mrs.Nan Wiseman.\u201cWe have outlived ourselves,\u201d Mrs.Wiseman said of the five- year-old committee.\u2018\u2018The problems we have dealt with can be more efficiently tackled by the school committees.\u201d Mrs.Wiseman offered a brief history of the committee and recommendations for future action during the session called by the Westmount School Board to pass on its information, knowledge and problems to the three school committees that will take its place.Part of curriculum Health, Mrs.Wiseman said, was \u201cnot a totally accapted area of education\u201d when the committee was first formed, though committee members had felt this should be an important part of any curriculum.In 1971 the original ad hoc group set up to discuss health programs in the schools became a permanent health education committee, devoted to pursuing the establishment of formalized health and \u2018human awareness\u201d programs in the three Westmount schools.The result of the committee's efforts has been to make the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal recognize the need for human awareness programs, though action to establish these programs is still pending.Despite their decision to discontinue activities, Mrs.Wiseman said the school committees should continue to make education \u2018more socially aware and meaningful,\u2019 allowing health and human awareness to relinquish their \u2018\u2018back seat role\u201d in the Protestant school system.To do this, she suggested the committees urge the principals of the various schools to adopt human awareness programs, and to make them an \u2018\u2018important part\u201d of the curriculum.Mrs.Wiseman also encouraged use by the schools of community institutions \u2018\u2018as resources, to supplement classroom discussions\u2019\u2019 in social and health- related fields.She also suggested the schools make use of material and expertise in the field now available from the provincial department of education, which she said has been largely ignored by Protestant school officials.Still to be around The members of the health education committee, Mrs.Wiseman noted, still will be whether the parents own or rent their living quarters and what type of \u2018\u2018sanitary conditions\" those quarters include; what type of relationship the parents have with the child; \u2018signs of agressivity'\u2019 in the child: and several psychological and physiological questions which would have little bearing on the health and growth of most children.(One doctor questioned later did not know offhand the meaning of some of the terms used in the form.) Additional questions included on the form were normal information a school nurse or doctor would have to know; these are included, however, on the abridged form.Chairman Mrs.Joan Rothman said that Mme Francoeur Hendriks.provincial director- general for elementary and secondary education, and Dr.Cyril Pomerlowe of the Quebec department of social affairs, both had said school boards were allowed to determine, in consultation with school nurses and designated hospitals, the forms they wished to use.She urged the Thursday, May 17, 1973 - 1 Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal to consult with the Montreal General Hospital on a more appropriate form for their e.The health files are kept at the schools the child is attending, it was later learned, then sent to a \u201ccentral filing bureau\u2019 in Montreal where the records are kept for at least another 10 years.It is not clear what happens to the forms after that time.In May 1919, a small biplane took off from Vancouver to make the first delivery of U.S.mail.The light aircraft ran into difficulties along the west coast and landed in the main street of Port Angeles, Wash.Island Council is preparing \u2018total budget\u2019 The Montreal Island Council now is in the process of preparing a \u2018\u201c\u2018total budget\u201d for all Catholic and Protestant schools in the area, and will make the budget public on May 28, Westmount School Commissioner James Robb said Tuesday night.Mr.Robb, who is a member of the island-wide body, told a session of the Westmount School Board that the council has not yet considered capital budgets for the 1973-74 school year, budgets through which Roslyn and Westmount Park schools are hoping to receive money for audio-visual centres.He said they have been working during the past two weeks to approve proposed operating budgets of the various school boards under their jurisdiction.School taxes will go down this around Westmount and more than willing to \u2018\u2018interact with school committees,\u201d which she |, said should *\u2018feed in and feed out\u201d with a health education committee for the parents\u2019 commitee of PSBGM schools.Mrs.Gaby Ostro.chairman of the PSBGM parents\u2019 committee and who was in attendance Tuesday night, suggested that health committees could be formed at regional or even local levels as well as at the top.She seemed to support Mrs.Wiseman's suggestions, and encouraged formation of such groups at every level.year, Commissioner Robb added, because the province has increased its allotment from the general education fund.He approved of the move, noting that property tax revenues \u2018\u2018do not give a fair or equitable distribution of funds to the various schools.\u201d It is up to the island council to co-ordinate facilities throughout greater Montreal.specially those for handicapped children and inner-city and immigrant children.The council also sets tax rates and approves the budgets of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal and the Montreal Catholic School Commission.While explaining his duties as a member of the council, Commissioner Robb said he foresaw the \u2018'\u2018probable\u2019 retention of confessional school systems, at least for the next five years.After that time, he suggested, \u2018we may be able to move toward unified boards.\u201d | oy BRANDT PLUMBING Company Limited (Ron Toohey, Proprietor) \u2018Serving the West End for Over 17 Years\u2019 24-HOUR SERVICE 161-4551 summer.For information & brochures, call Our suggestions for this HOLIDAYS AT SEA From 8 to 22 days of a perfect air-sea combination.- Caribbean cruises from New York: 8 days $269 up - Caribbean Cruises air-sea from Montreal: 10-14 days $350 up - Hawaii air-sea from Montreal: 17-20 days $818 up - - Alaska air-sea from Montreal: 12-15 days $882 up - London 8 Mediterranean from Montreal: 23 days $923 up - A P&0O, Air Canada, BOAC & CPAir program from Simpson\u2019s Tours CANADA WEST & CALIFORNIA ESCORTED 9-15days A great value from Suntours and Air Canada - Canada West - 9 days from Montreal $539 up - B.C.Totem Circle - 9 days from Montreal $625 up - Western Canada Wonderland - 15 days from Montreal $619 up - Canadian Rockies & Pacific - 15 days from Montreal $755 up - Grand Pacific Circle - 15 days from Montreal $809 up PLACE BONAVENTURE - MART \u201cF\", P.0.482, MONTREAL 114.QUE, CANADA e A.T.Janosy, Pres.27 years of travel experience at your service ps HSE \u201cfs \u2018oy, ty \u201craces yeav?TRAVEL Inc.TEL: (514) 861-5686 GREGORY'S .ORIENTAL RUG #® | Rugs and Carpets ! | Cleaned i Repaired | V/all to Wall Dyed | j Eroadioom Cleaning 4151 St.Catherine St.W.Phone 932-4277 We Buy Used Oriental Rugs Lady bowlers hold meeting The 39th semi-annual meeting of the Westmount Bowling Club Inc., ladies\u2019 branch, was held at St.Mathias parish Hall, last Wednesday.The president, Mrs.M.W.Reid, was in the chair and welcomed the members.The opening tea will take place on Wednesday, June 6th.Serum albumin made from blood collected by the Canadian Red Cross is used in the treatment of extensive burns and in the initial treatment of shock.Avenue Tailor NOW LOCATED AT [4110 St.Catherine St.W.opposite Westmount Square 933-5908 Examiner Festival The first annual Festival of Flowers held yesterday and today at St.Andrew\u2019s United Church has turned out to be a resounding success, destined to become a spring high light for gardners and would-be gardners from throughout the Montreal area.The show, organized by the Diggers and Weeders Club of Montreal in conjunction with the Guild of St.Andrews, featured seven different categories of competition in flower-arranging,~ as well as exhibits, including art work, offered by the Westmount Conservatory, McGill Botanical Society, and other groups to create a colorful and pleasant- smelling display of creativity throughout the church.The women of St.Andrew\u2019s originally were approached by the Diggers and Weeders Club to help sponsor the show, the first of Introducing .Ankra Beauty Salon with staff - Joseph, Alberto, Brigitte, Formerly Emile\u2019s Yvette, Lyla, Anna Please excuse the inconvenience of our redecorating 1347 Greene Ave.931-2505 SHOW US - YOUR FEET.Introducing our pedicure department WE'RE THE ONLY SHOE STORE IN CANADA WITHA PEDICURE DEPARTMENT It's equipped with some very up-do-date, \u2018and - comfortable equipment.A # Our experienced pedicurist will treat your feet for anything from a soothing soaking to corn removal.Also getting ingrown nails growing out again.Phone 842-5377 for an appointment Tuesday to Saturday from 9:00 to 5:00 p.ms020000000000000000 000000004000004000\u20ac SPECIAL D 3 This coupon 0 p you @ 7-00 iP, 08 reduction Bata Req.$5.00 LEE.10 3 ered.BAT A SHOES Bata VP, 200002000000000 LS 1021 St.Catherine St.West 12 - Thursday, May 17, 1973 its type \u2018\u2018in many years,\u201d according to chairman Mrs.R.H.Stevenson, 453 Mt.Stephen avenue, \u201cThe two organizations decided it would be fun to try, so here we are,\u201d she said, over- Genuine Choice Western BEEF UALITY IS ECONOMY HAINES OF WESTMOUNT Now owned and operated by Mr.Heinz, well-known family butcher.\"\u2019Noted for Quality\" Purveyor of High Class Quality Meats, resh Killed Poultry, Groceries Fruits and Vegetables, Schneider\u2019s and Nichol\u2019s Bacon, Ham and Sausages Mr.Heinz also features German and other European cuts, Cold cuts a specialty.LICENSED GROCER TRY OUR CHOICE Canadian Lamb 4466 st.Catherine West Near Metcalfe Ave.WE.7-9455-6 WEEKEND SPECIAL $39.per person (Friday Dinner to Monday Lunch) Special Children\u2019s Rates Phone 866-2219 1-800-567-6741 WIA 8 \"SUNSET ; holidays canada limited 4141 Sherbrooke West.Montreal 215, 931-5833 \u2018 PATIO SCENE: Mrs.R.H.Stevenson, 439 Mt.Stephen avenue, who is chairman of the Festival of Flowers held yesterday and today at St.Andrew's United Church, looks over patio table entries made for one of seven competitions at the show.Background flora were provided by the Westmount Conservatory.flowing with enthusiasm at the response the idea had created.Mrs.Stevenson and her co- chairman, Mrs.W.D.Robb, 32 Forden avenue, sent invitations *\u2018to all the women's organizations we could think of,\u201d and the net result was an estimated 100 arrangements from as far away as Pointe Claire.Competitive entries were judged by floral specialists connected with the Diggers and Weeders Club; 12 Westmounters, including three in the children\u2019s category, walked off with 13 of the 28 prizes and honorable mentions awarded.Award Winners Westmounters winning awards included the following: Mass arrangements: Mrs.J.E.: Birks, 60 St.Sulpice road, first prize; Mrs.J.M.McAvity, 3 Forden avenue, second prize; Line arrangements: Mrs.D.Baillie, 4300 Western avenue, first prize; Mrs.J.Baker, 380 Roslyn avenue, second prize; Miniature arrangements: Mrs.R.Boake, 382 Roslyn avenue, tied for first prize; Mrs.Baillie, tied for third prize; Free style arrangements: Mrs.H.Stevenson, 451 Mountain - avenue, second prize; Children\u2019s arrangements: Miss Cynthia Eberts, 76 Sunnyside avenue, second prize; Miss Heather Hobart, 384 Grosvenor avenue, third prize; Miss Anne Nicoll, 620 Grosvenor avenue, honorable mention; On-the-spot arrangements: Mrs.Boake, second prize; Patio table arrangements: Mrs.M.G.Angus, 699 Aberdeen avenue, and Mrs.G.H.Eberts, 76 Sunnyside avenue, combined table, first prize: Mrs.D.Frosst, 24 Devon road, second prize.riedrich wedding bands Ptit original design ie ALEXIS NIHON d PLAZA tel.937-1888 WHERE JEWELLERY IS ART | Special $3.98 a Pair Also ot: 4077 St.Catherine East SALE From India WATER BUFFALO LEATHER KOLAHPURI CHAPPALS For Men and Women From Sizes 5 and Up INDIA CRAFTS CO.4002 St.Catherine Street W.(Across from Atwater Metro) {Corner Pie 1X) Council of Elders Maria Huldshinski organizes attack on permissive society Artist, playwright, sculptress and now political lobbyist Maria Huldshinski, 81, of 344 Grosvenor avenue, has organized a \u2018\u2018Council of Elders\u2019 as one of her newest projects, designed to offer the wisdom and knowledge of some of the \u2018\u2018more experienced\u201d members of the community to ® séciety and government.-~ \"The \u2018Council of Elders held its first policy meeting Monday night at Mrs.Huldshinski\u2019s house to determine how it should \u201cattack permissive society,\u201d and what were some of the more pressing issues of the present Canadian way of life.The meeting was generally spent learning Mrs.Huldshinski\u2019s views on a number of subjects; the 45 members in attendance , then wrote down their own opinions and impressions about \u2014 subjects that interested them.A \u201cjury\u201d will be set up from among the membership to go over the suggestions and determine subjects for discussion at future meetings, to be held on the second Monday of each month.Mrs.Huldshinski hopes, through the council, \u2018\u201c\u2018to be able to fuse the young people with the old people again\u2019 by getting retired citizens actively involved in_ social affairs.\u2018Day-care\u2019 for youth She wants, she says.\u201cto mobilize.older people to take their part again, to bring their own empirical experience to full use by helping the upbringing and the education of the young.\u201d She even suggests organizing a daycare centre in which retired seniors could teach and supervise the youth.Mrs.Huldshinski organized the group from among her friends, professional contacts and others who have expressed an interest in maintaining an active role through the Council.At Monday's meeting, members as young as 38 showed up to participate in the group activities; two 17-and 18- year-old youths have expressed an interest in coming to later meetings._ The general tenor of Mrs.Huldshinski\u2019s remarks Monday night was decidedly con- servative\u2014strongly opposed to women's liberations, coeducational schooling, and premarital sex relationships, all of which she sees as elements of a \u201cpermissive society.\u201d These and other of her views are meant only to stimulate the membership, which will decide on \u2018\u2018criticisms and ensuing demands\u201d it wishes to forward to the proper authorities.Play produced here \u2018As a sometime playwright, Mrs.Huldshinski received city- \u201cwide publicity for her play, \u201cAnotale,\u201d shown last year at the Revue theatre.She has also presented several art shows around Montreal\u2014including the 8 CRUISES?@ @ Call or See @ PANEX 931-7244 One Westmount Square 2 Mrs.Maria Huldshinski Westmount Library\u2014 of works she had created while travelling in five continents during her eventful career.She is also well- known for her speaking engagements, television appearances, and public outspokenness about the \u2018\u2018soft\u2019\u201d society.A native of Vienna, Mrs.Huldshinski travelled for 16 years in Africa, working at one point as a house director in a Sudanese harem, but mostly painting and scul pting her way through Egypt, Uganda, Tanganyika and the Sudan.She claims also to have travelled across North America some 14 times \u201cWhere I lived, I worked,\u201d she said.Mrs.Huldshinski is wife of the late Dr.Kurt Huldshinski, who discovered the ultra-violet ray treatment for rickets.They moved to Africa during the war, since he was a Jew by race, though not by religion.After her husband's death, she followed her daughter to Canada in 1948.Nothing else to do \u201cOld people are old,\u201d Mrs.Huldshinski says, \u2018\u2018because they have nothing else to do.\u201d At 81, Mrs.Huldshinski keeps herself busy with shows and speaking engagements; now the Council of Elders, of which she is president, is expected to occupy her time.\u201cIf it doesn't work out, it doesn\u2019t work out,\u201d she surmised.\u201cBut someone said we would just have to see what society would be like in 10 years.Why should we?Let\u2019s make it what it could be.\u201d Anyone interested, no matter of what age, is welcome to attend the next meeting.Camera obscura A student at St.George's School left his Canon automatic camera outside a classroom between 1 and 2 pm Monday, and found it missing when he came to retrieve it.He was able to supply police with the body and lens serial numbers of the $176 instrument.= dart = The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, welcome neighbour! Welcome to the neighbourhood! Not far from your new residence you will find a branch of the City & District Savings Bank.Drop in to discuss your projects, whether it be for an Auto-Loan, a Holiday- Loan, a Mortgage Loan or simply to open a new Savings Account.We're there to help you in 1001 ways.when you need us, we are there.Monday to Friday from 10 a.m.to 6 p.m.CITY & DISTRICT +\" PEN \u2014 SAVINGS BANK == \u2014; 4848 Sherbrooke west 5479 Westminster 6290 Decarie Blvd.PRES : Dry CI i ry Cleaning $ Repairs & Alterations | 2 hrs.Dry Cleaning, No St.Catherine Extra Charge Free Pickup & Delivery Suits Sponged & Pressed Shirts Beautifully Laundered in Polyethylene Bags \u2014 Metcalfe 4460 St.Catherine St.W.Free Mildew-Odor-Moth-Perspiration Westmount ) Proofing on Everything We Clean\u2014An 935-2000 CLEANERS Extra Bonus! FOR YOUR 933-5434 BETTER CLOTHES\u201d Western Valet Service | CHILDREN'S HOUSE 4020 Grand Boulevard N.D.G.Previously Hoffmann Montessorri School Age 2, to 5 Years FRENCH & ENGLISH CLASSES MORNINGS or AFTERNOONS Registration Open for September Until June 30th Call Now:- 737-5561 \u2014 735-0054 Slate roof repairs our specialty JUL BO CONSTRUCTION LTD.697-2142 For further information please consult your Westmount Householders\u2019 Directory, 1973 edition, page 115.professional cards HUGH SAVAGE and COMPANY Chartered Accountants 1310 Greene Avenue North of de Maisonneuve Sixth Floor 937-9227 > an wm ve Eee cn To *>3 May 17, 1973 - 13 14 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 17, 1973 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING { 031-7511 - 10 Words \u20181.00 For best service, phone your ads early - final deadline noon Thursday ADTAKERS ON DUTY MONDAY AND TUESDAY TILL 10:0C P.M.(Wednesday, Thursday, Friday till 5 pm) Accounts may be paid at the Examiner office, 4630 St.Catherine street west, Westmount; ot The Monitor and St.Laurent News office, 6525 Somerled avenue, and the Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post ottice, 233 Dunbar avenue.Advertisements not paid for in advance ot publication are subject to a 25-cent billing charge but may then be paid without further charge at any branch of the Bank of Montreal or The Royal Bank of 7¢ for each additional word 59 [Ce | Canodo on the Island of Montreal.: \u2014 gar 9 PROPERTY WANTED COUNTRY PROPERTY FOR SALE HOLIDAY RESORTS She PROPRIETE DEMANDEE 3 PROPRIETE DE CAMPAGNE À VENDRE CENTRE DE VACANCES » aie A.E.LEPAGE es \u2014\u2014 PROPERTY Morin Heights Scandinavia Tour 3 weeks 306 , ; e WANTE D due Hage, hake Denmark \u2014 Norway \u2014 Sweden \u2014 Via Holland \u2014 COURTIER BROKER LOWER pinewoods and swimming.Germany \u2014 London.Ist class hotel Inclusive price Pepe rie race $1,149.Departing July 3rd Join a small friendly - WESTMOUNT boat and dock.Sale price group with world travel hostess Ruth Hudgins.PT $14,500.or to rent May 15th \u2014 Deaconess St.Lambert United Church.EIT |e ser gy BR ! Client looking for high ceñinge, 672-3149 671-6003 go0 ~~ good woodwork, crosshall dining too plan and working fireplace.COUNTRY HOUSES TO LET gro MAISON DE CAMPAGNE A LOUER wot HDUDAY RESORTS 1 1 LOTS FOR SALE gro MRS.HEATHER SMITH CENTRE DE VACANCES TERRAINS À VENDRE othe D Read 486-8566 \u2014 481-0308 Furnished TR ear Reader: i .: TRI The merger of A.E.LePage Ltd.Realtor and ROYAL TRUST CO.Vacation Switzerland ; Rawdon valu { i P H ; Beautiful lot, partly landscaped.FR! Westmount Realties Co.to A.E.LePage & BROKERS ome Ready fo build.All city ser.2 Westmount Realties Inc.means a widening of Mont Tremblant 4 Condominium bachelor apart vices.100 x 100.Corner of léth En our bases to service you better from Coast to bedrooms, 12 bathrooms.LE uses maximum a Avenue and Rowan.10 minutes | Ass Coast.The principles on which the services of the _ Sandy beach on Lac |terrace.All conveniences walking ARE 1 aes Companies have been founded over the last three M J se Overlooking Lago Maggiore in ogg i Son generations have not and will not be changed.2098\u2014819.425-5157.Locarno.Suraiiabte July lst rl \u2014_ Montreal weeks.Phone 736-9939.DOMAINE, GRACE Park near The confidence in the integrity of our Company Ti oly eld.à ot Lachute.rust ax Lake 100 x 100.Nice, big trees.Value accorded to us by you has been our most valued 6 $2,500.Price and terms to be asset.Memphra magog 10 BOYS' AND GIRLS\u2019 CAMPS negotiated.Phone evenings.744- \u2014 Thinking CAMPS POUR GARCONS ET FILLES 5743.Our present team in the Westmount Residential - .Summer cottage on the water.; Branch are: of Selling! or editable August.Call 482.9009 14 Sues oeroRnmes | - Horseback OCCASIONS D'AFFAIRES Miss F.Bibaud 482-1143 RIGHT NOW IS THE TIME! Riding Vacatio .n tor.P.R.Berman 482-3515 ONE ls equipe à bedroom | Untapped Market Miss T.Brault 482-7646 Tom Merrick Berney private estate.15 minutes North Responsible Eastern Custom.fitted bras Mrs.J.Campbell 935-6451 of Montreal.Large swimming ownship family will accept distributorships available.Mrs.D.Carnell 933-5336 735-2281 pool; mini.putt; boating; etc.Snack vit Sars hor.ROL Wholesale cost of inventory Mrs.M.Dardi 489-9573 486-4624 Available for, season.except | Weakly.July only.Limited Sar on cumaronn, 40.percent Mrs.P.Downer 935-7166 3434 or 625-2838.enroliment.Call 243-6423 pany training.Low overhead.Mrs.B.Firstbrook 482-7706 evenings.Call 620-0924, a.m.only.Mrs.J.Hutchinson 843-7590 Mr.Guy Lebrecque 488-3770 TT APARTMENTS TO LET ' Mr.D.J.MacLennan 481-1014 QT APPARTEMENTS 4 LOUER Mr.J.F.Minty 937-7115 _ Mrs.R.Moss 737-3685 Cen Mrs.J.Murray 482-7730 ( | tite Mr.Hy Osman 738-6430 ; N {em Mrs.M.B.Roche 277-1250 ! Mrs.R.Sinclair 935-9786 i Mr.T.K.Schaner 849-5458 u _ Mrs.G.Tremblay 937-6597 .eu cal Mrs.A.Vaillancourt 482-4546 ( 7?per it You will increasingly find this sticker on Bal our signs in Westmount: Que; \u2014 SOLD BY A.E.LePAGE & I WESTMOUNT REALTIES INC.ï D .i May We Be of Service to You?.: BALCONY : This Is Just 5° x 32\" | Paul Hill .Sales Manager - 935-8541 One Of The A Tl 2x | A.E.Lepage & Westmount Realties Inc.M L \u2018 i).tir.iA .an ayou - ' il \u2019 y \u201cay LIVING \"\u2018srroom :_B.8'ROOM 4 \u2018Broom © | | PROPERTY WANTED Opti ROOM 110 HT 10x 12 LE \"gn M | a PROPRIETE DEMANDE prions 116\" 18° x a .f11°-6\"x 1 Available!! TRIN j hl V.I.P.\u2019s Our ~ [2-2 2 wo I - AN Model Suites \u2014 ect cy WESTMOUNT 2eacries Select group of executives and professional F\u2014T-T] \u2014 men looking for 3 and 4 bedroom home in Are Now OPEN ar, cf \u2014 y Su Westmount or surrounding area.Immediate F Y DINETTE - KITCHEN 3 wall or Your 8x9 78 x9: 7s or fall occupancy, $300-$800 monthly.Please = => a .931.3 Call: 935-8541.Inspection sr E34 à Rental Dept.Directions : \u2014 P.Vickers L Colfer Trans-Canada Highway exit 33 north, Fairview shop- 626 JAN : : ing centre .\u2018 - \u2018 486-3725 937.8415 Pine .north on St.John\u2019s Road to Lake Road.J au th 25 of ar se pe 4- um + a2=33
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