Voir les informations

Détails du document

Informations détaillées

Conditions générales d'utilisation :
Protégé par droit d'auteur – Utilisation non commerciale autorisée

Consulter cette déclaration

Titre :
The Westmount examiner
Éditeur :
  • Montreal :Examiner Publishing Company, Limited,1935-2015
Contenu spécifique :
jeudi 1 septembre 1977
Genre spécifique :
  • Journaux
Fréquence :
chaque semaine
Notice détaillée :
Titre porté avant ou après :
    Prédécesseur :
  • Examiner-courier
Lien :

Calendrier

Sélectionnez une date pour naviguer d'un numéro à l'autre.

Fichier (1)

Références

The Westmount examiner, 1977-09-01, Collections de BAnQ.

RIS ou Zotero

Enregistrer
[" ps Tan EE °°, Weredale House to be sold but too late for Rotary By ANDY DODGE Weredale Boys\u2019 Home will be out of business by next summer and Weredale House is now up for sale, The Examiner learned this week from the Rotary Club of Westmount, which at one time had seriously considered buying the building for use as a senior citizens\u2019 residence.Some 35 young boys are still living in the building, though by the end of the fall they will be reduced to about 20, according to Dr.H.Wayne Hanna, the newly appointed director of the Youth Horizon Program into which Weredale recently merged.The building will still be used for the next year as a day treatment centre for troubled youth living at their own homes or nearby HOW SENIORS\u2019 RESIDENCE IS SITED: The Rotary Club of Westmount has prepared a \u2018massing model\" to show how its proposed senior citizens\u2019 residence on Lansdowne avenue, south of Sherbrooke street, will relate fo Victoria Hall and other major and minor structures in the area.This view, looking southwest, shows the Abbey apartments and the older conventional houses flanking them in the foreground.At extreme right is the existing apartment building at Lansdowne and Sherbrooke and, directly across Sherbrooke, a six-storey apartment block already slated there.Victoria Hall is on the left and, set back from it (lighter color), the seniors\u2019 residence buliding.The designers point out the new construction will create a \u2018\u2018town square\u2019 effect centred by the floral clock.The completed model, rendered in actual color with trees, etc.missing when this photo was taken, will be on view at Rotary\u2019s information meeting Thursday evening, Sept.8, in Victoria Hall.A referendum on the project takes place Sept.13.group homes but Youth Horizons is hoping to find another facility for day treatment by next summer, a move which will leave the large buildi Mayor gives endorsement in letter A public meeting to explain the p Rotary Club-s senior citizens\u2019 project has been scheduled for next Thursday evening, Sept.8, at 8 pm, in Victoria Hall, and city officials will be on hand to explain their endorsement of and interest in the project.is information was contained in a letter from Mayor Donald MacCallum to the 157 eligible voters who on Sept.13 will be able to approve or vote down a zoning change allowing such a project, planned to be built at Lansdowne avenue near Sherbrooke street and attached to Victoria Hall.Text of the mayor's letter, including the city\u2019s reasons for supporting the choice of sites, is reprinted on page five.Council The statutory September meeting of Westmount city council will be held Tuesday at 8 pm in the city hall.The meeting a day is later than usual due to the Labor Day holiday Monday.Occasional squalls, Mainly oN dw north.acte SR SEPTEMBER 3to 10 Fair and still very warm for this 22nd week after Easter.local F and clearing with % ¢ mild, westerly winds as end of summer co arrive.Risk of night frosts in : low-lying districts.Ir sunny ; 2 holiday weekend and through § the middle of the week with §& very local morning fog or * drizzle, suitry afternoons and # widely scattered evening % thundershowers.5 well advanced.The Prairies 3 often have snow amongst the \u201d sheaves at this time.i A Temperature range during ; = the week, 5 degree nights and \u201c% 25 to 30days.Rain 20 to 25mm -_ and a trace of snow in the Ÿ vacant.Authorization for the sale of the building came last Thursday from the Boys\u2019 Home of Montreal, Inc., owners of the buil , to Crown Trust Company which to be the sales agent.That day was the same one on which The Examiner published a digest of the various building sites Rotary Club had considered for a senior .citizens\u2019 residence, including Weredale House, which was deemed at the time not available.\u2018 Crown Trust contacted the Rotary Club, pointing out that the status of e building had Continued on page seven Charge laid for 99 cents Under the law, theft is theft no matter how small it might be.But some people raise their eyebrows when they find that a person caught stealing a 99-cent box of biscuits from a store in Alexis Nihon Plaza was arrested and charged with theft, rather than just told to put the item back.It seems the 25-year-old man so arrested last Thursday had been a constant nuisance to store officials, loitering around the store consistently before finally being nabbed.Police claim he also has an extensive criminal record.One other shoplifter was caught and charged on Saturday with $15.02 worth of goods in his possession.thunder pical § itions = GiA 1A5 NT for this Ÿ Harvesting BIBL DE LEGIS QUE SERV ¢ HOTEL DU GOVERNME .QUEBEC FQ Vol.XLIX, No.35 Westmount, P.Q., H3Z 2Y8, Thursday, September 1, 1977 Down 130 from last year: Making net just your house but all of Westmount your home 20C Roslyn, Park Schools lose 10% o By RICK KERRIGAN political climate and the falling birthrate appear to the major reasons approximate y 130 fewer students than last year will attending the two Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal elementary schools in Westmount this year.The loss means there will be some 10 percent fewer children in the classrooms of the city\u2019s Protestant elementary public schools when classes resume next week, though final figures await resolution of a tangled web of problems caused by the provincial government's new restrictions on English language education.Roslyn School already is facing The students BACK TO SCHOOL It's back to school time and The Examiner takes a look at the coming education year ina four-page, pull-out section starting on page nine.Before the return to school, however, there's a long weekend to enjoy and on Monday most stores and businesses, The Examiner and Weekly Adservice in cluded, will be closed .a drop in enrolment of about 80 students and, according to Principal Barbara McKnight, some prospective students may not be permitted to register.These doubtful cases are awaiting rulings.Principal McKnight adds, however, that the enrolment should be able to maintain the same number of teachers if enrolment holds at the present figure of 691.Ms.McKnight says it is dif- Continued on page 11 Quick $600 A woman returned to her Clarke avenue house south of Sherbrooke street at 10:30 pm last Thursday and found the back door open, checked inside and found that $600 worth of watches and jewelry had been stolen sometime during the previous three hours.Police gave no indication how the thieves might have entered the home.Gen CHARGEX LL.) Ads in THE e Cal 931-7511 Examiner.Now.to make placing Classified WESTMOUNT Examiner e Give your credit card number or, as always, we will bill you or you may pay cash at the offices of The Monitor, St.Laurent News, North Shore News, Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post or The Westmount | master charge : U easier still e Give your ad 2 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, 1977 September 1, City of Westmount NOTICE TO CORPORATIONS, COMMERCIAL PARTNERSHIPS OR ASSOCIATIONS CONCERNING VOTING ON BY-LAW 840 TUESDAY, 13th SEPTEMBER, 1977 Public notice is hereby given that corporations, commercial partnerships or associations, provided that they have paid their municipal taxes or dues payable on the preceding 31st December, shall be entitled to a vote on By-law 840.They shall vote through a representative authorized for that purpose by a resolution of the board of directors, a copy whereof shall be filed at the Office of the Clerk of the municipality by no later than 4:30 p.m., Friday the 9th September, 1977.At the time of voting, such representative must be of full age, a Canadian citizen, and an employee, director, or member of the corporation, commercial partnership or association on whose behalf he votes.EN THREE YEARS ENDING FRIDAY: Métro construction workers August, 1977.Given under my hand, at Westmount, P.Q., this 30th day of R.B.Seaman City Clerk collection on Monday, Sept.5.made on Wednesday, Sept.7.GARBAGE COLLECTION Householders are notified that there will be no garbage Collections normally scheduled for Monday, Sept.5, will be made on Tuesday, Sept.6, and Tuesday\u2019s collections will be E.À.McCavour, Eng.City Engineer.VICTORIA HALL Owned and operated by the \u201d City of Westmount \u2014 Located in the heart of West- mount \u2014 next to beautiful Westmount Park.Available at reasonable rates.Decorated and Furnished with Charming Good Taste.Reserve Now \u2014 BH Facilities for 350 - 100 - or 80 oO E R ROOM or SALON CLUB.Day 935-8531 Night 935-2066 A great place for a dance 4626 SHERBROOKE ST.WEST OOM, WARD ka Next Scheduled City Council Mocting Tuesday, Sept.6,8 p.m., City Hall $903 haul Some $903 in clothing and luggage was stolen from a car rked on Rosemount avenue for If an hour on Wednesday, Aug.10, a woman told police last Wednesday, one w after the crime reportedly occurred.She left the car at 2:30 pm on the day in question, came back at 3 o'clock and drove off.An hour later, according to her story, she CITY HALL 4333 Sherbrooke Street West WESTMOUNT, P.Q.H3Z1E2 Monday-Friday, 8:30 am to 4:30 pm Fire (Business Calis) 19 Stantion St.Police (Business Calls) 21 Stanton St.Municipal Court, 21 Stanton St.Saturdays.Sundays and holidays Victoria Hall, 4626 Sherbrooke St.Municipal Yard, 14 Bethune St.Light Department, Glen Rd.hy ry eu I 935-8531 935-9696 934-0711 935-3528 LE discovered that a garment bag, an overnight bag, a suitcase and two boxes of clothing had been taken.Two lifts A person was arrested for having $29.97 in unpaid-for goods on Saturday, outside a store in Alexis Nihon Plaza.Another shoplifter was nabbed on Monday, this one with $12.99 worth of stolen items.say now that work on St.Catherine street west of Lansdowne avenue should be finished tomorrow, so the street might be reopened on the weekend, even before the self-imposed Labor Day deadline and defying the delays caused last week by bad weather.Yesterday, crews seemed to be working double-time pouring the cement base on the street, preparing for the asphalt surfacing.The well-travelled stretch of roadway has been closed down since July 15, 1974.City officials have said they will immediately change de Maisonneuve back to one-way westbound between Lansdowne and Claremont avenues, and MUCTC officials have declared bus routes will immediately switch back to their normal patterns as well.Grosvenor residents want blockage to stay If there's a silver lining to every cloud, isn't there some way of blowing away the cloud while keeping that silver lining intact?That's what residents of lower Grosvenor avenue were asking city council to do last Wednesday evening, presenting a petition requesting that their street be kept as a cul-de-sac even after the long-tolerated métro construction ends within the next few weeks.Jacques Lahaussois, 306 Grosvenor, told council that since the Métro construction started there three years ago, many families with pets and young children have moved in and \u201cmany people have become used to the very quiet street,\u201d even with heavy construction equipment working close by on St.Catherine.Rezoning of the street to allow for only one- or two-family dwelling on most of its | between de Maisonneuve boulevard and St.Catherine street has meant the neighborhood had gained more \u2018residential\u2019 atmosphere, and people would like to see this maintained by preventing through-traffic from travelling Westmount\u2019s entire north-south on Grosvenor, beginning at St.Catherine and Nixon notes lawyer's death Pro-Mayor Mel Nixon opened last Wednesday's city council meeting with words of sorrow over the death of City Attorney Arthur Weldon, who passed away in Sherbrooke Aug.21 (see last week's Examiner).\u201cArthur is going to be greatly missed by all those associated with him,\u201d Mr.Nixon said on behalf of city council, after extending sympathies to Mrs.Weldon and family.Mr.Weldon had suffered a short illness, and was still on city retainer at the time of his death.driving all the way to Queen Mary road in Montreal.Foresee problems Pro-Mayor Mel Nixon made little comment about the situation at the council meeting, noting that the petition would be given both to the city\u2019s administrative traffic committee and to the architectural and planning commission.He said there might be \u2018\u2018some problems\u201d closing the street while redirecting de Maisonneuve to one- way westbound.Mr.Lahaussois said he has received no negative reactions from residents while touring the neighborhood collecting signatures for the petition.Pro-Mayor Nixon pointed out that the city has also taken under advisement another petition from the same general neighborhood, asking that the divider on St.Catherine blocking eastbound traffic from left onto York, Prince Albert and Grosvenor avenues, be rebuilt in its entirety.PHOTOCOPY PRINTING DUPLICATING MICROFILM FAST Montreal Copy Centre 2019 Bishop 842-6817 Open Weokdays te Midaight Radio CFMB wants home on York street Radio station CFMB would like permission to set up shop in the former Boys\u2019 Club of Canada building, 35 York street, but must go through a city council zoning by-law amendment and public consideration before they can, even though the building is zoned commercial.It seems Westmount failed to include \u2018\u2018radio stations\u2019 in its list of possible uses for buildings in Zone C-1, in which the red-brick building is located.At present, radio stations are only allowed in buildings designated C-2 or greater.There are two in Westmount already, CHOM and CKGM, both on Greene avenue.Ald.Brian Gallery, presenting a notice of motion last Wednesday evening to call for such an amendment at a later council session, explained that the addition would not change the zoning regulations in any other way.He said he considered the purchase of the building by the radio station a \u2018\u2018desirable acquisition\u2019 for residents of the area.Over 35 Years Serving Westmounters FINE PAINTING & WOODWORKING All Types of Renovations (FREE ESTIMATES) Mrazik General Contracting Lid.731-6640 VETERANS TAXI ASS'N where were ! il lll .\u2014 they going?| ; The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week.Aug.23 12:17 pm: 321 Claremont, sick man transported to QEH ; 12:36 pm: Atwater métro station, smell of smoke; 10:02 pm: 4000 de Maisonneuve, strange odor; Aug.24 3:14 am: Alexis Nihon Plaza, fire in Montreal; 8:22 pm: 350 Selby (Dawson College).fire in rubbish on east si Aug.25 6:47 po: rear of 350 Selby, rubbish 7: 1e ® pm = \"York, transported g child to MCH: 8: 0 pm: 4123 de Maisonneuve, person locked out ; 9:05 pm: Claremont avenue, false alarm; Aug.26 4:20 pm: Alexis Nihon Plaza, sick n transported to hospital; 8:30 pm: 19 Stanton (fire station), red fireman transported Aug.27 2:47 am: opposite 4051 Dor- chester, auto accident (see story); 2:47 am: op 4051 Dor- chester, am nee transport to MGH; 10:27 am: 4000 de Maisonneuve, apt.1708, burnt food on stove; 4:53 pm: 621 Murray Hill, ambulance call for assistance; Aug.28 12:55 am: Dorchester and Columbia, auto accident; 9:19 am: 621 Murray Hill, elderly man fell and was assisted; 3:23 pm: Kensin ton and St.Catherine, false 3:32pm: 621 Murray Hill, elderly man fell and was ass 4:55 pm: 495 Grosvenor, convulsive person transported to hospital; 5:22 pm: 621 Murray Hill, elderly man fell and was assisted; 10:36 pm: 573 Lansdowne, sick person revived from heat exhaustion and transported to hospital; 10:44 pm: 14 Weredale, false alarm; Aug.29 5:21 am: 44 Academy, broken water main ca flood in basement; 3:07 pm: 4800 de Maisonneuve, n locked in elevator; 10:05 pm: 4224 Dorchester, fallen TV cable wire.Thursday.September 1, 1977 - OHMAN\u2019S oy WATCH REPAIRS Certified Wotchmokers Family Owned Since 1899 Island-wide ticket plan discussed Suburban Montreal mayors are concerned about the \u2018\u2018normalization\u201d of traffic tickets throughout Montreal Island and about the provincial tax department\u2019s apparent refusal to consider payments to municipal officers attending various conferences as expenses rather than income, Ald.Alwyn Lloyd to city council last Wednesday evening.In his capacity as permanent stand-in representative to the Conference of Montreal Suburban Mayors and Montreal Urban Community meetings when Mayor Donald MacCallum is away, Ald.Lloyd said that the mayors decided at a meeting two weeks ago to hold off on any Left holding the loaf A man drove into the POM Bakery car lot recently to buy a loaf of bread, leaving his ke inside the auto in custody of a person he thought was a company employee, with instructions to move it if it was blocking any bakery delivery trucks.The man came out, loaf of bread in hand, to find that the $6,000 vehicle was no longer there\u2014nor was the \u201cemployee\u2019.A witness told the police he had seen a suspect get into the car and drive off.He was described as about 18 or 19 years old, 5°5\" tall, 120 Ibs., French-speaking with blond hair, wearing blue jeans and a light yellow sweater.Je] LUMBER AND PLYWOOD Lo).HOME AND INDUSTRY ORDER DEPT VRE EE AX) SATURDAYS: 8:30 to 4 P.M.CALL 748-6161 SHEARER RUTHERFORD INC.50 STINSON BLVD.2 books E.of Notional Fim Beerd question regarding the traffic Recently there was talk that the various city traffic codes would be \u2018normalized\u2019 along with the tickets and fines, though this seems to have been now.The latest suggestion is that one traffic ticket be used here on the island, and that ce write in the name of the municipality in which an infraction occurs.Police sources have indicated such tickets might be payable at branches of banks anywhere on the island, rather than in the municipality itself, if the tickets come into effect.The mayors also found themselves holding off on discussions of the newly- pro; municipal tax on vehicles since this has yet to be approved by the provincial government.A an.MUC Meeting on Aug.à oy reported, main highlight was the appointment of Mayors Yves Ryan of Montreal North, Pierre des Marais II of Outremont and Gu ay Descary of Lachine, along wi three City of Montreal councillors Cut off car The three-lane-into-one merge of Dorchester boulevard west of Atwater avenue, coming into Westmount, caused another accident Saturday morning at 2:45 am, as one car cut off another and sent it swerving into the rassy ee ne middle e street, s a standard and a flower pot.P J.Bohemier, 22, of Montreal was driving west in the centre lane of Dorchester in a green 1970 Dodge, with a nger, Miss S.St.Onge, 18, of Verdun.Suddenly, he told police, a car cut him off I.FOR SALE Roval Trust THE SIGN THAT SELLS John Aird Jane Allan Catherine Barton Nora Bernier Joann Colby Margaret Evans Eleanor Fairhead Barbara Ferguson Brien Foster Susan Goldberg Sally Hallows Mrs.Aubrey Kinsman Eva Klein Royal Tru st to the new seven-man Public Security Council.The seventh representative is named by the provincial government.Cyclist hurt in crash A bus seems to have camouflaged a bicycle on Westmount avenue at Roslyn avenue on Monday, Jreventing a.driver from seeing rider and causing an ae which sent the cyclist to hospital.A.Caza, #4, of LaSalle, was driving a 1973 Chevrolet north on Roslyn, and sto to allow the bus to pass ded east on Westmount avenue.He did nat notice the cyclist, R.Duperl ly.of Montreal, who was ding directly behind the bus, stared inl the intersection once large y cle Duperly received un- injuries and was ice ambulance to the Queen beth Hospital.The Chevrolet was slighity damaged.determin transported hits median; from the right side, pulling into his lane.He swerved, host control of his vehicle and ended upon the divider in front of 4050 Dor- chester, just west of its intersection with Weredale Park.Collision with \u20ac the city property caused injuries both Mr.Bohemier and Miss St.© with the Westmount-based ambulance, 30-15, unavailable, they were transported to the Montreal General Hospital in an ambulance from Station 9 district (Little Burgundy-Pointe St.Charles) and in the Westmount for reside .[Anthony's JEWELLERS 3 WE.3.4046 1216 Greene Ave.¢ CITY Qe IOUN 1 Bi \u2026 d'URMES NO.doing, Te 6 flocng pi city ang ps - the past week : Aug.23 350 Selby: for Dawson College by selves, alterations to cafeteria, $16,000; 1235A Greene: for Mrs.J.Ma b Hasko Construction terations, $6,000; 350 Selby: for Dawson College by Ansa Construction, alterations to windows, $108,000; Aug.26 4200 Dorchester: for L'Ordre des Infirmiers and Infirmières by Claude Néon Ltée., to errect a sign, $800.two hurt Fire Brigade\u2019s ambulance.The accident caused more than $500 damage to Mr.Bohemier\u2019s car.Neither he nor an in dependent witness were able to give lice a description of the car which cut him off.VARIETY STORE Post Office Greeting ny Etc.Open 8 am to 9:30 pm (Closed Sundays) 4500 St.Catherine St.W.(Cor.Abbott) MUCTC BUS TICKETS Buying or Selling ntial real estate MONTREAL'S LARGEST REALTOR TO BETTER SERVE YOU Saturday morning 9 a.m.to 12 noon Drop in and visit us.our expert staff: Contact with confidence, in confidence.933-9184 487-4791 481-9157 481-8687 935-8625 932-6329 481-5403 488-8423 488-7980 487-5095 931-6571 937-3100 481-3530 Ruth Mary Joan McCa Brian McG Valerie Kyle Josephine Lantier Claudette Limoges Joan McGuigan Jean Murray Elizabeth Paul Nicole Powell Dorothy Raich Georgette Strous Shirley Taylor Louise Vocisano 4145 Sherbrooke St.W.James R.Quinlan, F.R.l., Manager 737-6911 932-0567 932-6257 481-5907 935-8154 487-6278 489-7150 935-7320 481-9915 935-4387 931-7190 487-2907 737-6704 935-5761 932-1112 Lewis ba A Examiner Mokiag net just your house but all of Westmount your home vERIFIRD Lei IVI 3g 0 [0 Published Every Thursday by J.W.Sancton & Sons Ltd.155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, P.Q.H3Z 2Y8 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 | ndependent, clean newspaper for the home, devoted to service.Mail subscriptions $7.50 per year; $4.00 half year; 2 years $14.00; 3 years, Twenty cents a copy.Member of the Canadian Community lic .00.Newspapers Association, Quebec Community Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4- Thursday, September !, 1977 A gift to the community The pledge of $3,000,000 to Westmount's senior citizens\u2019 residence, sponsored by The Rotary Club of Westmount which received word of the gift last week, speaks of more than simply the means of making the project possible.The anonymous donor has expressed endorsement of the concept, the plans and the Rotary Club.Confidence is demonstrated that the community, with the leadership of the club and of the city administration, is capable of carrying this project to reality for the long-lasting benefit to all concerned, not least of all the older persons who will reside in the new structure and make use of the older, storied Victoria Hall.Gratitude, growing with the years, will go out for this generous donation.Chief beneficiaries will be the elderly, those citizens who have made their main contribution to society and may look forward to comfort and security in a familiar setting with their contemporaries.The gratitude also will come from others, still involved in life\u2019s labors and pursuits, but who have parents and other loved ones whose welfare is a continuing concern.The Rotary residence, now brought closer to realization, will represent a civilized response to this growing human need.Every forward-looking citizen of the community cannot help but think about his or her own future\u2014when maintaining oneself in a house or even an apartment may become a burden.A well-appointed, well-located residence at reasonable cost in the heart of Westmount is comforting to contemplate.THERE are few if any conditions to this bountiful gift to which the club, the city or the citizens generally cannot readily subscribe.One is that the residence shall not be exclusive or restrictive.Another is that it adhere to the plans presented.This latter point means that the Victoria Hall-Lansdowne avenue concept has been strongly endorsed\u2014not as a rebuke to any who may be opposed, for whatever reason, to the chosen location but as a positive concurrence that the site, almost ideally, is the right one for this purpose.In the up-coming referendum test on Sept.13 of city council's enabling zoning bylaw, those who would cast their votes against might contemplate this powerful backing \u2014not of words or theories but of the means to make the residence possible.The people who reside immediately to the west of Westmount Park are fortunately situated.It will be a test of their generosity of spirit if they are prepared to share their district\u2019s extraordinarily fine amenities with others who deserve the same privileges in their declining years.Still more, it will be a test of their foresightedness if they are prepared to have their immediate community and their lives enriched by the presence among them as new residents of a pretty select group: our senior citizens.Those who have votes in this referendum owe it to themselves, if not to the city in which they justifiably share pride, to acquaint themselves with precisely what is contemplated for Victoria Hall and its adjoining site\u2014there is an information meeting in Victoria Hall next Thursday, Sept.8, for that very purpose\u2014and then to make every effort to turn out on Tuesday, Sept.13, to cast their ballots in favor of this very worthy project.If they don't, and if those who for whatever reason should win the day in defeating the necessary by-law, all Westmounters will have lost a classic, truly golden opportunity to do the right thing, in the final analysis for themselves.Such gifts, be they from anonymous but generous donors or from service clubs, rarely come around a second time once shunned.We take our cue from the Inuit THE bankrupt racism of the separatist Parti Québécois is simply but eloquently bared by the peaceful revolt of Ungava's Inuit nation.In Canada's North, where Quebec lays hollow claim to unearned jurisdiction, and that only lately, an ancient and gentle people humbles the inept emissaries from the south.The Inuit, whose culture and language were threatened by the mere coming and presence of the white man, refuse to be cowed by the legislation of the humorless psychiatrist who fashioned ot iid Mn Ra IE SR RES Rotary residence area enjoys tax advantage Sir: We, the owners of houses on Grosvenor, Roslyn, Lansdowne and de Maisonneuve, are paying substantially lower taxes than owners similar houses above Sherbrooke and much much lower than the owners of larger houses on the hill Therefore, the numerous advantages of our district are largely carried, to our benefit, by Westmount citizens living at some distance from the assets we enjoy.I ask one question of anyone who might wish to reject the Rotarians\u2019 gift: Are we all willing to have our taxes doubled in order to assume the carrying charges of our neighborhood's assets?I ask one question of the Rotarians: What can each one of us do, individually, to ensure that the seniors\u2019 residence will be built near Victoria Hall, the park, the library and the greenhouse?Future Senior Jacqueline C.Laflamme 4817 de Maisonneuve blvd.west WESTMOUNT H3Z 1M4 (Editor's note: The Rotary Club of Westmount and city officials, whose By-law 840 to enable construction of the residence is to be tested by referendum on Tuesday, Sept.13, say that those eligible to vote and who favor the project should get out to the poll in Victoria Hail that day and cast their ballots, urging their qualified neighbors and friends to do likewise.At least 80 votes in support of city council [and the Rotary Club] are Bill 101 as his personal prescription for salvation of the people of this province.Dr.Laurin\u2019s excuse for the excesses of his language law, its negativeness and its curbing of individual rights and liberties was that the French people of Quebec were threatened with the loss of their culture and language.Ha! say the Inuit.The minister has attempted, but never succeeded, to blame the woes of French Canada on \u2018\u2018the English.\u201d In his myopia he has found it impossible to be sufficiently honest to see that the disadvantaged state of his own people, from which they have been emerging without his doubtful help, was largely the result of the shortcomings of their own leadership through the years.Through all the anguish and tumult of the Bill 1 and Bill 101 debate, Dr.Laurin has proved unable to humble the non- francophone citizens of Quebec, which still remains a province of Canada.With passage of his ill-conceived measure, his troubles as a minister of cultural development will have, we predict, and hope, just begun.It is appropriate that those troubles should begin in the far reaches of the Arctic.There the man is hated.He is branded as a liar.His intolerance and inflexibility stand out as starkly as the barren landscape of Inuit country\u2014country the natives vow will not easily be yielded to outside conniving politicians pursuing policies inimical to all.It strengthens our own vow that, we, too, are not about to take unquestioningly the dictates of Bill 101, just because they have been passed into law.We shall resist every functionary sent our way to enforce its provisions whenever we feel our rights or those of others are impinged upon.The \u2018language police\u2019 sanctioned by this act do not frighten us.Certifications, licenses and permits demanded or withheld unjustly will be fought for or against determinedly.The Lévesque administration, corrupted in less than a year by its own obsession with narrow nationalism and messianic cultural mission, now has forfeited any latent hope we harbored for its trumpeted \u2018good government\u2019 promises.We refuse to be alienated from our French- speaking friends, colleagues and fellow citizens by the crabbed meanness of a regime which pretends to speak for them.We take our cue from the Inuit.We, too, hate lying politicians.necessary to ide the clear majority J \u2018Wide, open spaces\u2019 are not for seniors Sir: I am writing this letter as a former citizen of Westmount.I have been li recently in a senior citizens\u2019 home outside ( the city.First of all, let me point out that a new Continued on next page Thirty-five Years Ago September 3, 1942 \u201cEquipment of the St.Sulpice barracks of the Canadian Women's Auxiliary Corps s of Montreal and district with furnishings to improve accommodation has been undertaken the Westmount Rotary Club.Considerable material has already been moved into the barracks and arrangements have been made for loans of pictures from the art gallery to hang on the walls of the barracks.For some time the War Services Committee of the club has been considering means of assisting the CWAC to meet problems arising from the bringing of girls from many part of the country into the metropolitan area.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago August 29, 1952 \u201cWhen the giant lens of a television caméra focused on 10-year-old Freddy Kloos of 435 Mount Pleasant avenue, he took it all with the calm determination of a veteran actor.Freddy was guest on Sam Farber\u2019s \u2018Magic\u2019 program and the first Westmount boy ever to appear on video.Freddy was presented with a book on magic by Farber last Thursday as a reward for guessing the number of pages contained in a book which was di yd on the program the previous week.correct answer was 192 pages and Freddy\u2019s guess of 196 was the closest to the correct number.\u201d Fifteen Years Ago August 31, 1962 \u201cWestmount Indians, sponsored by the Kiwanis Club and affiliated with the Unity Boys\u2019 Club, won the Chris Doscher memorial trophy\u2014emblematic of little league baseball supremacy in Greater Montreal\u2014by defeating the Kiwanis East Dodgers in straight games at the Montreal Little League dium.In the opening game of a two out of three series, Dalton parnoff pitched brilliantly, allowing three hits, striking out 15 batters while giving up t one walk.In the second game the ndians trailed going into the bottom half of the fourth i the score of 3-2 but rallied to take the game 4-3.\u201d Five Years Ago August 31, 1972 \u201cIf MUC Police Director Daigneault has his way and if MUC Security Council Chairman Coderre implements it according to law, before the year is out the typical Westmount homeowner is going to feel unprotected, exposed and alone except for his neighbors, who will be in the same boat.Westmount no longer will have a police station.It will be served, instead, not by Montreal's familiar Station 14 in N.D.G.on Cote St.Antoine just to our west, or Station 10 on de Maisonneuve to our east.Instead, Westmount will no longer even be known as such but as a numbered district, No.30, one of several to be served out of Station 12 in Ville Emard!\u201d. You Say.Continued from previeus page life style is with us.Our children today do not welcome their father or mother living with them and they will tell you so straight to your face.few years ago 70 today, even 80 is not was old but not d.However, the wife is finding it harder each day to do housework; she just cannot cope with the work.If seniors can't live with their children, where in the name of God are we going to put them if not a seniors\u2019 home?ut people try to stop a home near their house.One of the who is against the project said these homes should be out in the wide, open spaces.Nothing could be farther from the truth than that statement.I know what it is like because I live in a home in the wide, open spaces.The bi ipe is \u2018\u2018We are too far out from town, an cannot afford the taxi bill: eight dollars from the residence to Drummond and St.Catherine.\u201d In my case, I take four buses.Wide open spaces be damned; just try it sometime.The big question is: Where are you going when your time comes?or, if you are young, where are your mother and father going to live when they get too tired to do ousework?One gentleman who is against the project said he thought the home would be ilt with the same architecture as Vic- teria Hall.That is a ridiculous statement because it is doubtful if you could find a stonemason and the cost of such a building would run into several millions for building alone.You have a vote but before you cast it think: Where am I going to put mother and dad, where do I want to go when I reach 70 or 80?Remember some day you are going to be old, too.Think before your vote.W.F.Close 413 Grenfell avenue TOWN OF MT.ROYAL H3R 1G6 Revert to Gladstone, opponents\u2019 suggestion Sir: Now that we have had a review of the sites studied for the Rotarian seniors\u2019 residence, The Westmount Examiner could do another community service by publishing a financial review, covering h the city\u2019s and club\u2019s commitment to this project.The Rotarians should be prepared that the Victoria Hall-Lansdowne location, like the other 16 sites studied, will not be available.Its rezoning was a known irement from the start.ther than mounting a massive PR cam ign directed at 157 ied voters, the club\u2019s time, money and determination would be more ive in \u201cselling\u201d the community of Westmount at large on their (\u201c\u2018next\u2019\u2019) \u2018\u2018most seriously\u2019 considered Tupper-Gladstone site.- Pressure should be exerted on the cit council by the Rotarians, the city administration, InterFaith, the WMA and the \u201ccountless citizens,\u201d in order that council could endorse \u201cthe loss of valuable commercially taxable property\u2019 at the -Gladstone location.seniors\u2019 home there could truly become a \u2018community project.\u201d By generously iving or selling to and oregoing future tax revenues on this community-held property and by aciously accepting a possible slight tax fcrease for its loss, all Westmounters could feel proud of their participation in the commitment to the seniors of our community.I suggest that city council cancel the referendum and withdraw By-law 840 and that council start serious discussion with the community and club for the construction of the \u2018Westmount Rotarian Seniors\u2019 Residence\u201d on the Tupper-Gladstone site.Virginia Spotton John Spotton 323 Grosvenor avenue WESTMOUNT H3Z 2M3 (Editor's note: Readers Spotton should have noted financial commitment of The Rotary Club of West- mount to the senior citizens\u2019 residence, previously published: Approximately $40,000, of which $30,000 was an anonymous donation for the purpose, for preliminary design and options up to the point of City of Westmount approval of the project.In the complete absence of any known or others.the club, in early July.committed another $50.000\u2014its total reserves built up over the years\u2014to detailed design to be pressed during the summer to assure meeting the scheduled start before frost this autumn.No public funds, city or other, have been or are expected to be committed.If the by-law should be defeated, the above-mentioned $90,000 will have been spent in vain and unrecoverably.Hemce, Rotary\u2019s determination to see By-law 840 approved on September 13\u2014quite apart from its view that Victoria Hall-Lans- downe is the best of all sites.) Why this questioning of experts and donor?Sir: We have not been in the habit of writing letters to editors of newspapers.However, we both feel so strongly about the need for and the excellent plan for the proposed senior citizens\u2019 residence sponsored by The Rotary Club of West- mount, that we are compelled to contribute our support to project by writing this letter.We have been happy residents of Westmount on Roslyn avenue, about a block away from the proposed site of the new residence, for 22 years.We are very unhappy that a few neighbors, apparently ill-informed, have taken a negative stand and committed their signatures to a document that is designed to stand in the way of executing this badly needed project in the service of our respected and deserving segment of our society\u2014the elderly.How fortunate we are, in this the next generation, to have had the leadership and training of our parents.They must have our support.The Rotary Club is providing us with an opportunity to say \u2018\u2018thank you very much.\u201d On the practical side, we have some knowledge of the difficulties in arranging for and financing a residence for our senior respected citizens.The Rotary Club has made a thorough study of methods, sites and alternatives to this great need of accommodation.If anyone doubts this we would refer them to the article on the project appearing in the Aug.25 issue of The West- mount Examiner which outlines that 16 alternative sites were considered.The proposed site and type of building is ideal for those whom our community is trying to help.Why is a handful of people trying to say that those who have s the needs and methods are \u2014and one of the experts has been ing to donate $3 million?Anne and Dugald Ramsay 376 Roslyn avenue WESTMOUNT H3Z 2L6 Bill 1071's final passage \u2018was chilling moment\u2019 Sir: Quebecers who have remained aloof and unconcerned about government actions in this vince should have been with me in visitors\u2019 gallery of the National Assembly on .26th to witness the passage of Bill 101, Charter of the French Language.Premier Lévesque gave a long and reassuring speech, as only he can, with most members of fe anal Assembly t.r , e was allotted for final statements from the ition parties before the vote on the When Gérard Lévesque, Liberal leader, rose to speak, many of the PQ members of the house left.By time he had finished speaking the only PQ member remaining was Premier Lévesque himself.After lunch gue Biron spoke with only a smattering of members present, none visible on the PQ side of the house.Speeches continued to an almost vacant house for two and one half hours.The PQ members returned and the vote was called.After successful passage of the bill, PQ members rallied around Camille Laurin, ving him an ovation and singing \u2018\u2018Gens u Pays,\u201d popularly adopted as Quebec's anthem since the election last Nov.15th.Those who have not heard this song are probably not aware that it is set to the tune of \u201cTomorrow Belongs to Us,\u201d the song of the Nazi Party in any during the 19308.It was a chilling moment.Quebecers who care about this province have the responsibility of familiarizing The Westmount Examiner, Thursday.September 1, 1977 - 5 TEXT OF MAYOR'S LETTER Following is the full text of a letter sent this week, in English and French, to the 157 eligible voters in the September 13 referendum on By-law 840, enabling the construction of a Rotary-sponsored senior citizens\u2019 residence on the Victoria Hall-Lansdowne avenue site: Dear Fellow Citizen: For several years both the real need and the demand for a Senior Citizens\u2019 residence in Westmount have been growing.In recognition of this situation, the Rotary Club of Westmount has taken the initiative in sponsoring a project which, when it has n completed, will provide an attractive residence with appropriate facilities at reasonable cost for some one hundred and fifty senior citizens.The capital costs of the project will be absorbed by private funding.The operations, under the ownership and management of a non- it corporation formed by the Rotary Club of Westmount, will be self-supporting.The Rotary Club of Westmount has advised the City that the tion will comprise resentatives their Club, augmented by representatives of other local organizations and the community at large and that the majority of the representatives will be Westmounters.One of the vital elements in the development and success of such a project is proper siting.In this case, many possible sites in Westmount were considered.Some were rejected on the basis that they would not provide suitable access for the residents to normal urban\u201d amenities.Others were rejected because the available land had a high ntial for acceptable commercial evelopment which would eventually enable the municipality to improve its tax base.When it was suggested that the project themselves with the Charter of the French Language and with the bill which sets out terms for the referendum.Democracy is only effective when people participate in it it.Westmounters will be interested to know that George Springate spoke that day and that their views were well represented.Barbara Moore 587 Lansdowne ave.WESTMOUNT H3Y 2V7 Bicyclists break law with growing impunity Sir: When, if ever, will the City of West- mount do something about making its ever-increasing number of bicyclists obey the rules of the road?I have had innumerable near-misses both in the car and on foot, because of these idiots riding on the wrong sides of the roads, going h red lights, etc.However, the other day was \u2018the pits,\u201d as these y would say.Two oung punks youths aged about 17 or 18 rode down Cote St.Antoine (going the wrong way, of course).They were a ntly playing \u201cchicken.\u201d My husband, who was driving, had just started off from one of those innumerable stop signs and red lights when the two advanced right into the path of the car.My husband continued to drive ahead (about 10 m.p.h.I guess) as was his right.One of these \u201cpi \u201d started to scream abuse.My husband (who is 6\u2019 5\u201d and wei about 240 lbs) slammed on the brakes, got out of the car and strode toward them.On seeing him, they took off in a hurry\u2014still in the wrong direction, and still using utterly obscene language.If only our son had been in the car (6°6° and plays for his university football team), he would have caught at least one of them and dragged him into the police station nearby.I realize this letter is far too long, but perhaps you could t some of it.Something must be , before a real disaster occurs.(Mrs.A.8.) Dawn R.MacTavish 419 Victoria avenue OUNT H3Y 2R3 (Editor's note: The City of West- mount no longer has any police powers of its own.The demand for action should be addressed to the Montreal Urban Community security council, of which Mayor Yves Ryan of Montreal North is the new chairman.) could be built on the eastside of Lans- downe Avenue just south of Sherbrooke utilizing a part of Victoria Hall for dining and recreation facilities, this site was greeted with what appeared to be almost unanimous approval.From the point of view of the future residents, the site is virtually ideal, being close to Westmount Park, the public library, the Y.M.C.A., the already established Senior Citizens\u2019 Centre, convenient transportation and excellent shopping.From the point of view of Rotary, more of the available land area can be devoted exclusively to the apartment building and dining and certain other facilities can be provided in Victoria Hall at reduced expenditure of space and probably dollars.From the point of view of the City of Westmount and its taxpayers, the economic advantage of this utilization of part of Victoria Hall, without interfering with the availability of halls, m rooms and other remaining facilities to the City and all organizations designated by the City in accordance with established practice, is attractive.Your Council therefore endorsed this concept, being convinced that it is in the best interests of the citizens of this City, provided satisfactor leasing arrangements can be made for Victoria Hall.On July 4, 1977 at a public meeting Council adopted an amendment to the zoning by-laws to permit construction of a Senior Citizens\u2019 Residence in Part 4 of Zone R3.It was necessary to as uickly as possible in view of expiration at e end of August of the options obtained by Rotary on the properties involved.Following the publication of an official notice of this by-law amendment, thirty- two of the one hundred and fifty-seven eligible propert owners in this area appeared at City and demanded that the amendment be submitted to a poll.Such a poll could, by law, have been held as early as the third week in August, and from the point of view of the property options this was desirable.Nevertheless your Council took into consideration the ibility that some eligible voters might out of town in August.It was therefore decided at the Council meeting of August 2 to defer the poll to Tuesday, September 183, to give a8 many proprietors as possible an opportunity to register their views.The design of the proposed has been carefully studied by ALE to tural and Planning Commission.It is their opinion that by careful selection of proportion, texture and color and the fifty- oot height limitation of roposed, modern building will blend favorably with Victoria Hall and its immediate area, as the older brick library and the conservatory have done.I urge all those entitled to vote in the forthcoming referendum to do so but first become fully familiar with all aspects.For this latter purpose the Rotary Club will hold a public meeting at Victoria Hall on Thursday September 8, at 8 p.m., at which Council will be represented to explain further the City's position on this mast important project.Yours very truly, D.C.MacCallum Mayor - FLOWERS Westmount Flori Ln.Please make note of Our New Address 360 Victoria Ave.(West side, between Somerville and Sherbrooke) Our New Phone 488-9121 6 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday.September 1, 1977 Deadline for toys Sept.9 Residents who have not already donated unneeded to and children\u2019s books to t summer student collection have only until next Friday, Sept.9, to drop off items at the children\u2019s library in the Westmount Public Library.The drive, conducted as a student summer employment project, has aimed at collecting enough children\u2019s goods to supply community day care centers in and around Montreal, particularly in low income areas.Response to the drive has been good and project workers say they are grateful for the response received so far.They note, however, that they have 23 need centres to supply and there is still a shortage of books and toys.items can be left at the library during regular hours and pick-up service can be arranged by calling 933-6304 daily between 9 am and 5 pm.HUGH SAVAGE Sixth Floor Chartered Accountants 1310 Greene Avenue North of de Maisonneuve and COMPANY 937-9227 i Established 1913 James H.Macintyre Ltd.D.Gardner Pres.¥ & Heating 2 Contractors Phone 482-4924-5 342-B Victoria Ave.Westmount Le épris BILINGUE: Closure of de Maisonneuve boulevard through Westmount Park was made even more permanent this week with the sinking of posts into the pavement and construction of a fence parallel to Melville avenue, along with a truly bilingual international road sign.For those who might not be able to tell at first glance, the double-arrow on the left side is in French, the one to the Bike toll right is English.Five bicycles were stolen from various parts of lower West- mount during the past week, including one taken in front of 4444 Sherbrooke street west last Wednesday, one from in front of 4471 St.Catherine street west and another from Argyle avenue north of Sherbrooke street on Sunday, one from St.Catherine near Claremont avenue and one more from the city swimming pool on Monday.1350 Sherbrooke W.(Main Office) 1011 St.Catherine W.831% GICs 281-1570 281-1570 You don\u2019t always have to wait 6 months for your interest! At National Trust our Guaranteed Investment Certificates are available on a semiannual interest or monthly interest plan.So if you're on a fixed income, maybe our monthly interest plan is what you need to provide that added income.It\u2019s like getting a pay cheque every month.Only it\u2019s deposited right into your National Trust account for your convenience.Unlike some financial institutions, we don\u2019t reduce the interest for this service.It\u2019s a service we provide free of charge.Available in terms of 1 to 5 years with interest rates up to 8%% per annum.Semi-annual interest certificates are available in amounts of $500.00 and over.Monthly interest certificates are available in amounts of $10,000.00 and over.It's just another way we're counting your pennies to save your dollars.§Trust SINCE 1898 Rockiand Shopping Centre 739-4758 Town of Mount Royal Cavendish Mall 482-3430 Talk to the Money Managers at National Trust.Just who you need these days.Nat onal Quick meeting got busy; seven attend City council\u2019s mid-month session, hastily called last Wednesday to deal primarily with one item, almost turned into a full-blown meeting, as five of seven aldermen appeared at city hall, dealt with 14 agenda items in front of an audience of 7 and then opened the floor to discussion with citizens for about 10 minutes.The 31-minute formal session was called mainly to push through an appropriation of funds for an intermunicipal communications system for the six mutual aid fire departments, but the councillors took the opportunity to clear up other items of city business at the same time.Somehow, several citizens had heard about the unpublicized meeting and were on hand to present a petition to keep Grosvenor avenue closed at St.Catherine street (see separate article).Mayor Donald MacCallum and Ald.Pierre Lamontagne were the only council members absent.ov Ho = - WN W ~ = Ça + - \u2019 Le / Tee ; .v ~~ |; you're in the doghouse! One of these days Remember that subtlety - Always pays.: JOHN WATSON (Quebec) Limited W.Hartley Barber, President PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Service & Quotations on request 368 VICTORIA AVE.487-1760 A 2 Short cut to highway is cut off The lane north of St.Antoine street no longer is to be a throughway for traffic trying to skip lights in its attempts to get on the Ville Marie Expressway eastbound, and people will find it more difficult to park outside the police station if they have extensive business there, as a result of resolutions approved by city council last Wednesday evening.The St.Antoine lane, between Greene and Atwater avenues, is to become one-way eastbound, so that any traffic intending to go from Atwater to Greene avenue will have to use St.Antoine itself.As an added precaution, council called for a sign prohibiting left turns for the eastbound traffic once it gets to Atwater, thus preventing inevitable tie-ups which might occur when cars feed out of the lane onto the busy thoroughfare.City council also changed the parking regulations on the east side of Stanton street, so that only police vehicles will be allowed to park directly in front of the police station, and parking elsewhere on the east side of the street, from the Selwyn House driveway to the fire department doors, will be restricted to one half-hour, rather than two hours it is now.Council also changed the \u201cno parking\u2019 zone from the east to the west side of Metcalfe avenue south of St.Catherine street, so Rabbit bit An overnight bag, expired American Express card and personal papers were stolen from a Volkswagen Rabbit in Weredale Park sometime between 7 pm Saturday and 7 am Sunday.The car had been locked, its owner told the police.BEFORE SELLING YOUR HOME, CONSULT Frank A.Norman & Co.Ltd.731-6817 Mr.Frank Norman 738-6791 Bob Johnson 737-2673 Arthur Sansome 733-8973 A.P.Duke 341-7405 Mrs.D.H.Lewis 430-4011 J.P.Valiquet 737-3161 E.Ermacora 735-0744 Garnet M.Pride 73343% \u2018Mrs.L.Aucoin 342-9300 Mrs.M.Touchette 738-7285 Mrs.John Bates 932-2224 Mrs.F.L.Woodfine 739-6863 Mrs.LP.Raymond 739-1423 Lorne H.Wood 738-1077 Mrs.R.Douek 733-9437 Mrs.P.D.Charest 737-6431 Mrs.D.Trent 7396182 Mrs.A.Cosgrove 937-7729 Mrs.L.Rumin 737-4951 Mrs.D.V.Spillane 7388739 Mrs.AF.Lalonde 733-0389 Mrs.Martha Fogh 738-6765 Mrs.Isabelle Coté 482-471 Mrs.Camille Fauteux 277-6689 Mrs.L Millar 4350564 Mrs.J.Lambert 737-5645 Mrs.L Longtia 342-9393 Ernest Shutezky 737.5281 he cars now will be able to park on the east side, while being prohibited on the west side.Ald.Alwyn Lloyd, who called for the changes in place of the missioner Pierre Lamontagne, said they all had evolved from discussions with citizen ps, and added they might rescinded or changed again if absent Public Safety Com- preliminary design stage for the Weredale oo use of the Victoria Hall-Lans- downe site.We believe, in any Continued from page one event, that this is the more changed and that it is now available, but Rotary President John Sancton replied on Monday that the club is \u2018\u201c\u2018too deeply committed to the Lansdowne (avenue south of Sherbrooke street) location to turn back.\u201d Just for information Officials of Crown Trust point out that they sent the letter purely for information purposes, since they are not at this point pared to give all the details about the building, nor has a sale price been determined.Having received authorization to sell the building, and knowing (from last week\u2019s Examiner) that Rotary had been giving very serious consideration to its purchase, they felt it only fair to inform Rotary immediately of its emergence on the market.As explained last week, Rotary Club had been told several weeks ago that the provincial department of social affairs intended to use the building as an \u2018\u2018emergency shelter for juveniles\u2019 once the present resident population was moved to a newly-coeducational Girls\u2019 Cottage School (expected to be accomplished by next spring) or to various government-sponsored group homes.\u201cWith this advice,\u201d Mr.San- cton wrote Crown Trust this week, \u2018\u2018it was the club\u2019s decision to proceed beyond the suitable site to meet the specifications indicated by the results of our survey of the needs (of senior citizens in West- mount).\u201d\u2019 Mr.Sancton added, however, that Rotary surveys indicate a need for more housing for senior citizens than will be available in the Lansdowne building and whoever might undertake conversion of the building for senior citizens \u2018\u2018is to be encouraged and commended and would, in the eyes of the Rotary Club of Westmount, be complementing our own efforts in this direction.\u2019 Spent reserves on plans Rotary reportedly has spent nearly an of its cash reserves in planning for the Victoria Hall ocation, The Examiner was told some weeks ago.Further funding totalling $3 million has been pledged by an anonymous donor, and inembers of Rotary are hard at work trying to raise additional funds to come up with the estimated $4.5 million which will be needed to construct the building.Use of the Lansdowne avenue land for the residence will be the subject of a zoning referendum on Sept.13, and the Rotary Club is working hard continuing to convince eligible voters of the need to approve the zoning change, which was approved by the city council on July 4.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 - 7 Is your phone tapped?© Can you afford not to know for sure?Confidential survey of your home, office, boardroom, hotel, car or aircraft, etc.We can detect hidden bugs on your phone or anywhere in a room.Results kept in strict confidence.Fast reliable service by experts.Send $10 for copy of \u2018Electronic Surveillance\u2019 '\u2014 how it\u2019s done and how to protect yourself against electronic eavesdropping.Phone (514) 363-6822 stroman COMMUNICATIONS LIMITED 99 BISHOP POWER, SUITE 400A LASALLE.QUE HBP 2P3B General Electric Centurion-lonization SMOKE DETECTOR List $54.95 Now only $39.95 battery incl.C IRVINE \u201cProne: ELEC ERIC INC 937-7431 1206 Notre Dame St.W.Montreal, Que.Your own boutique in Westmount If you are, we would like to show you why WESTMOUNT PREMIER can offer you the high-potential, high-profit Westmount retail location you've been dreaming about.S.1.Brock or Mike Gutwillig da} | A.F.LEPAGE sonne IMMEUBLES WESTMOUNT REALTIES SIMPLY GIVE EITHER OF US A CALL AT 842-5011 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 Recreation scene busy in season changeover Draw sheets have been posted for the first round of the West- mount tennis tournaments.Information concerning junior categories can be found at the junior courts, while the adult sheets are located at the clay courts in Westmount Park.Again this year it will be the responsibility of the players involved to arrange their matches and record the results.Those participating should keep up to date so as not to slow down others as the draw progresses.A great number of tennis enthusiasts are taking part in the tournament which should run right through the fall season.The summer playground program completed a very successful couple of months last week.The group made their second trek to the Tamaracouta Scout Camp, and, thanks to some sunshine, spent a great day on the water.In conjunction with this year\u2019s **\u2018Hobbies We Enjoy\u2019 theme, the Westmount Park and Prince Albert Park sections combined for a special arts and crafts By NICK KASIRER display and competition.A huge number of classic pieces were created, and several talents were discovered, among them Debbie Harris, Syuva Sung, Danielle Vickers, Sil-king Tse, Raynaldo Fernandez, Lara Hansen and Jeff Dunn.Everyone seemed to agree that this was one of the t summers ever.New soccer tourney Boy's soccer has become increasingly popular in Canada, and Westmount is no exception.Both Westmount\u2019s mosquito and pee wee inter-city teams are doing very well.Starting later this fall will be the Mini World Cup tournament, as local boys will form teams in two divisions - to play for this Westmount honor.All boys currently involved in the program are to play, as well as any other interested residents between the ages of seven and 14.Next Friday will be the last day to sign up.Registration ends Thursday, Sept.8, for this fall\u2019s touch football leagues.Boys at least eight and under 13 as of Jan.1, 1977 are eligible to play in the novice-atom or pee wee-plus divisions.Older boys wishing to coach or referee are also invited to register at the recreation office.À reminder that to sign-up for these, or any of the other activities, your permit number is required.Sidewalk program extended Westmount is extending its street and sidewalk repair program for this summer, having completed most aspects of the originally-planned i announced at the beginning of the season.Some odd patchwork of city sidewalks is being handled by the public works department, and tenders now are being called to ES DOWNTOWN SALES = SERVICE À PARTS 2107 St.Catherine Street West Your local downtown Datsun dealer.DATSUN BODY SHOP MAJOR ACCIDENT REPAIRS 1 FLOORS OF SERVICE 932-7136 Atlantic T.V.Au Jardin Vert Bank of Montreal Bata Shoes Bigi Shoppes Classic\u2019s Books Cojana Contact Cortina Ski Shop Discorama Freedom Heft's Men's Wear India Bazaar Jean Junction Kent Shoes Trans Electronics During Sept.and Oct.from 9:00 a.m.to 6:00 p.m.with a minimum purchase of $5.00 at any of the following stores.Be sure fo obtain your validation stamp when you make your purchase.Key Centre La Fayette Jewellery La Maison Diana Le Bag Le Rouet Metiers d'Art Les Galeries Chantale Maharaja of India Natalie Fashions Needlecraft Old Europe Pant City Pennington\u2019s P.J.Pet Centre Pour Toi Prom Shoes Radio Shack @ alexis nihon plaza Entrances: St.Catherine St.or de Maisonneuve Blvd.py eT » Rags Reflection Reitman\u2019s Salon des Perruques Sherman\u2019s Record Bar Smart Set Studio 10 Studio L Sugar\u2019'n\u2019Spice Therese Bergeron Tip Top Tailor Trans Electronic Via Paris Villager Shoe Shoppe Singer ATWATER SUSE Jim Heward golfs to Games' bronze Jim Heward, 21 Grove Park, won a bronze medal in the Quebec Games golf competition last week in Sherbrooke, teaming up with Jim Dankowski of Pointe Claire for the honors in pairs play.In fact, the two narrowly missed the silver medal, losing in extra holes to a team from Abitibi-Temiscamingue.In singles play, Jim placed ninth out of 36 players.Meanwhile, at the sailing course, Paul Arsenault, 625 Murray Hill avenue placed first on the first race of the 404 class and came ninth out of 15 in the second race, but was unable to complete in further races because of illness.While officials at first were worried that Paul might have had acute appendicitis, it turns out the troubles were not that drastic, though the exact cause of illness could not be determined right away.Police take is $430.50 Police in Westmount collected $430.50 worth of overdue ticket payments for various municipalities during the past week, all in arresting drivers passing through town.At least $36 was for tickets issued by Westmount; another arrest last Friday turned up a driver who owed $153 on the basis of five different warrants issued to him.Last Thursday, a taxi driver caught with outstanding warrants worth $53 was discovered driving his cab without the proper pocket number, and was charged for violating that rule, one two to be so charged during the week.One more person was found on Saturday, driving a car without a valid driver\u2019s license.contract out larger sidewalk reconstruction projects for The Boulevard from Clarke avenue to the eastern city limits; on Stayner street; on Olivier avenue between de Maisonneuve boulevard and Sherbrooke street; on Victoria avenue between St.Catherine street and Sherbrooke; on Lansdowne Ridge; on Roslyn avenue just north of Sherbrooke and on Tupper street.Once that work is out of the way the city hopes to do some resurfacing work on the corresponding portions of Roslyn, Tu r, Olivier and Lansdowne e.Public works officials also point out that they have installed a \u201ccheckerboard\u201d sign on The Boulevard west of Clarke avenue, to warn westbound motorists to bear right as the street turns.It is hoped the sign will reduce the continuing problem of traffic sliding across the intersection into the eastbound lanes moving from The Boulevard onto Cedar avenue.BIG 2 IDATSUN! - SAVER! e Front Wheel Drive e Independent Suspension e Radial Tires e Rust-Proof and Many Other Standard Features ACT NOW Don't Delay - See Us Today! Limited Quantity DOWNTOWN DATSUN (Mtl.) Ltd.2107 ST.CATHERINE (2 blocks east of the.Forum) DATSUN F-10 SEDAN ST.W.ve a a 0» Q 0 most schools throughout the MCSC.A pessimistic report from year but there have been some ILDREN, TEENS & ç Montreal Catholic School the commission notes that this is changes through transfers and FOR CH Los LTS Commission will result in a net an accelerating decrease while retirements.Three new teachers increase of only about 25 at St.the decrease in the Frenchsector are coming from St.Ignatius: Teenage Workshop Thursday, September 1, 1977 - O Scan x L 1977 9 St.Ignatius to send 75 to St.Paul's Thanks to the closing of secondary classes at St.enrolment figures termine remous energy LY and nesday after Labor Day.The first Ignatius school in N.D.G., St.Paul's Academy on Cote The principal also has not seen St.Paul's students will be full day of classes, however, will St.Antoine road will increase its enrolment this year.any concrete examples of the returning to school Tuesday be on Wednesday.Principal Leonard Tynan estimates the student population will be about 500, up from 476 last year.While about 75 student will be coming from the N.D.G.school, the natural decline in student populations being experienced by H&S sponsors sale of supplies The annual stationery sale of the Roslyn Home and School Association will be held next Thursday, Sept.8, at the school.All types of school supplies will be available.Paul's.The increase is particularly significant in light of a 10 percent decrease in enrolment in the English sector of the is slowing down.Mr.Tynan reports that the school has received about 20 other applications for secondary one level including some from the Baldwin-Cartier board and some from the French sector of the MCSC.Some of the latter, says Mr.Tynan, are doubtful cases under the new language legislation restricting admission to English schools and for this effects of the language legislation other than the additional forms that parents have to fill out and have approved by the commission.St.Paul's is maintaining the same number of teachers as last Sister Dorothy Bagdoo will be in charge of the new secondary level thematic program, Anne- Marie Scerbo is an English specialist, as is Doris McTavish, although she and Ms.Scerbo will be teaching additional subjects.The hiring of a fourth teacher, a French specialist, is as yet unconfirmed.Principal nan describes Sister Bagdoo\u2019s position as a \u2018huge challenge\u201d P\u2014 AY RATHBONE THEATRE Courses and Practical Experience in All Phases of Theatre Arts FALL COURSES starting OCTOBER '77 Personally supervised by PAULINE RATHBONE, L.G.S.M., ENROLL NOW: CALL 482-7074 Are you looking for a good academic, university-bound education at high School or CEGEP level in an environment where students are treated as human beings and not as mere numbers?If so, consult CENTENNIAL ACADEMY x.at their spacious new location (MINISTRY OF EDUCATION PERMIT NO.749-701) (Grades VII - XI) TO ARISE?The HIGH SCHOOL RECOGNIZED FOR GOVERNMENT GRANTS WHY WAIT FOR PROBLEMS The COLLEGE (C.E.G.E.P.) equivalent The only completely private, post-secondary, English-speaking CEGEP-equivalent recognized by and in the Province of Quebec.Successful students, as in all other CEGEP's, obtain \u201cle diplôme d'études collégiales\u201d issued by the Quebec Ministry of Education.University scholarships have been granted to Centennial students (including McGil).Anticipate them and deal with them now! Experience shows that academic difficulties in grades 10 and 11 have thew souce in grades 7, 8 and 9 COURSE OFFERINGS: Health Sciences Pure and Applied Sciences (including Computer Science) Social Sciences (Arts) Commerce (Including Accounting) DUE TO OUR EXPANDED FACILITIES AND CURRENT RENOVATIONS, WE HAVE A FEW OPENINGS IN GRADES VII and IX LIMIT OF CLASS SIZES: Grades 7 & 8: maximum of 15 pupils Grade 9: maximum of 18 pupils SPECIAL FEATURES ® Very small classes ensuring success e Art (Studio and History) available as a complementary course e Students accepted with Secondary V Certificate of 14 units of credit e Make-up courses for Secondary Certificate available on the premises Special low rate student commutation tickets on railway and buses from e South Shore, Lakeshore, Chomedey, etc.e M.U.C.T.C.buses 102, 103, 104, 105, 17 e College recognized by government for loans and bursaries upon application by students to Quebec government æ * Remedial work in Mathematics and English available in grades 7 & 8 © Art available in all high school classes ¢ Full Physical Education programme for boys, both curricular and extra-curricular e Laboratories for Chemistry, Physics and Biology eo Small classes ¢ Highly-qualitied, experienced teachers e Constant communication with parents e Scholarshipe, Grades VII-XI e Lunch Room, audio-visual centre, students activities rooms o Beautiful new modern library in the charge of a fully qualified Librarian (M.L.S.McGill) 3641 Prudhomme Avenue (Corner Cote St.Antoine Road) 481-7672 481-7672 We accept pupils of average intelligence or better, but we do not accept students who are behaviour (disciplinary) problems Special Children Classes Beginning September 12 + das Introduction to Classical Dancing.Boys and Girls ages 7 years up.Registration beginning.The Montreal Professional Dance Centre ;( 223A Melville Ave., 932-5048 Director Seda Zaré Continuing Education MUSIC and ARTS (ose | university New for Fall 1977! Practical Photography (16 courses, beginners through advanced) Fashion Designing and Pattern Making (certificate programme, begins week of Sept.19) CAMMAC Adult Programmes (group lessons in recorder, guitar, theory, in French and English) CAMMAC Children\u2019s Programmes (can be ar- BA CK TO SCHOOL 1977 10 - MCSC pilot project: Taddeo plan allows early English It is not yet known whether St.Leo's Academy will be one of 10 involved in a pilot project of the Montreal atholic School Commission which would start teaching Fnglish to French students in grade one.Westmount\u2019s MCSC ward three commissioner Donat pr oddeo propo e project in orm of a motion which was adopted by the commission last week.A similar pilot project at St.Emile proved successful last e teachers were not English specialists, according to Mr.Taddeo, but were competent and highly motivated.His proposal would include only 10 schools because it is the project\u2019s \u201cintention not to disrupt\u2019 the pro s plans.plying to a question about the effectiveness of increasing the amount of English instruction to only 120 minutes per week as the project would, | Renovations at Dawson | Dawson College's Selby campus has been undergoing numerous renovations this year, mainly to the student cafeteria and to the windows fronting on St.Antoine street, to improve the environment inside the building, Director-General Robert \u2018\u2018Squee\u2019\u2019 Gordon told The Examiner this week, since efforts to relocate the campus have been scrapped at least for the time being.The entire CEGEP will have just over 7,000 students on several cam in the Montreal area, a figure slightly lower than last year, but about out what the college had antici ago.Interestingly, a drop in demand yar science programs and an increase demand for technological and professional studies.Up to 3,500 of the students will be attending Westmount's Selby campus.Mr.Gordon claims this will be a \u201cstatus quo\u2019 year, the quietest year the eight-year-old CEGEP had in terms of staff and curriculum changes.More substantial enrolment reductions are forecast for the future, but for the time being the Selby campus will see just about as many students as it did last year.stories by Rick Kerrigan and Andy Dodge ranged in any school) Visual Arts (Threads, Jewelry and Metalcraft, Paper, Drawing Bodies in Motion, Stained Glass) Private Study Music (credit and non-credit instruction on all instruments and voice) Most courses begin 1st week October Information: 879-8405 FRENCH COURSES REQULAR EVENI TUITION FEE: $97.\u2014 tor 45 nous TESTING & REGISTRATION PERIOD Free Parking Beginners Ill and Intermediate I: Wed.intermediate || and ii: Tues.7:00 pm.Advanced I: Thurs.700 p.m.to 10:00 MORNING COURSES Groups 10 to 12 students \u2014 45 hours At all teveis 9.30 a.m to 12:30 p.m.TUITION FEE $118.REGISTRATION $13.concordia university Continuing Education MUSIC and ARTS A bright new creative music programme CHOOSE A SOUND, MAKE A SOUND (for children 3-15 years and adults) Saturdays, beginning in October Information: 879-8405 NG COURSES PAYRENTS 07 METALNGNT POSHIOLE FOR MBOMLAS EVENING COURSES OMY August 22 to Sept.6, 1977 REGISTRATION: $13.Beginners I: Tues 700 p.m to 8.30 p.m & Thurs.830 pm.to 1000 p.m Beginners II: Tues.830 pm.to 10:00 pm.& Thurs.700 pm.10830 pm FREE ORAL TEST 700 p.m.to 10.00 p.m to 10.00 p.m.p.m.students.From 9:30 to 12.45 p.m TUITION FEE: $170.& WRITTEN FOR ADULTS TAX DEDUCTIBLE West End of Montreal, Quebec FROM SEPT.10 to Dec.23, 1977 Fluent conversation \u2014 correct grammatical construction \u2014 idiomatic knowledge.Limited number of students per class.All classes meet three hours a week for à duration of 15 weeks at MANOIR NOTRE-DAME DE GRACE, 5319 N D G.Avenue (corner Decarie).SATURDAY MORNING COURSES At ali levels.Semi-private groups from 5 to 7 RESISTRATION: 825.FOR DOCTORS and NURSES EXTRA FRENCH CONVERSATION Based on MEDICAL TERMINOLO Yen 2 hours à week: Monday 7:00 p.m.to 9: Group of 12 students \u2014 30 hours.Québecoises.TUITION FEE: 8127.REGISTRATION: 813.TUITION FEE: $127.ADVANC eo STUDENTS ONLY Students ACTUALITES QUEBECOISES conversation et composition à partir de publications et revues Monday.7.00 p.m.t0 10.00 p.m = REGISTRATION: $13.Morn.$110-Aftorncen $105-E tment, information MANOIR FRENCH School Founded n 1988 Sett-improvement Permit No.749770 Text coxs\u2014\"Lengue Civilisation Française by G Ma SIX WEEKS SEMI-INTENSIVE COURSES 3 hours, twice a week, total 38 hrs.Registration $13.00 $100 From uger or registration, please ceN: COURSES INC.\u201cWE EXPLAIN WHAT WE TEACH\" MR.GEORGES NAKIM, M.A, 5.84.Br.A.institution recognized by the Quebec Department of Educanon Phone 482-2461 rom 0 o.m.te 9 p.m.Thursday, September 1, 1977 replied, \u2018\u2018It\u2019s better than what we have now.\u201d Regional directors are now studying schools in their respective areas to determine which schools might best be suited to the project and which principals would be willing to undertake it.The attitudes of teachers and ; nts will also be consi e feasibility is due in two weeks.report The project, however, must be approved by the Ministry of considerable flak from Quebec nationalist organizations and teachers\u2019 unions.Mr.Taddeo is confident the project could succeed and adds that if the plan is rejected it will not be because the parents don\u2019t want i St.Leo's changes principals St.Leo's Academy has a new principal for the coming school year, Miss Madeleine Downs.She replaces Miss Marguerite Lacombe who spent four years in Westmount.Miss Downs reports that she expects a slight increase in enrolment this year, perha because of the increase in immigrant population of West- mount and centre-west Montreal, from which the school draws most of its students.Enrolment figures are not complete, however, and probably will not be available until the middle of the month.Besides Miss Downs\u2019 ap- intment, the school will also ave a new teacher for the combined grade 4 and 5 class, and new teachers at each of the four- and five-year-old levels of preschool.The school now houses only students between preschool and grade 6 levels, along with adult French language education classes in the evenings.Peter Pan Nursery for Children \" (Established 1945) MORNING PROGRAMME Arranged For Pre-School Children Opening Sept.12th Registration Sept.8th & 9th Mrs.A.F.D.Macdonald 220 Prince Albert Avenue Westmount 215, P.Q.Phone: 486-4310 \"BACK TO SCHOOL Thursday, September 1, 1977 - n Vagueness of rules hampers enrolment Continued from page one ficult to determine who is eligible to attend because the school has not yet-been sent a copy of the regulations concerning enrolment and they have been forced to proceed on what they learn from the media.The unsettled situation is not good, she says, because it would not be beneficial to the student if he or she had to change schools after settling in at Roslyn.Complicating the situation further is a motion passed by the PSBGM Monday evening in which the board decided to ask the federal government to have the Supreme Court of Canada rule on the constitutionality of certain aspects of the bill.Until a decision is reached the board will explain the regulations to parents and advise them where their children should be attending school according to regulations.Should the chil not qualify for English schooling they will be invited to attend a French school in the PSBGM system.But they will be under no obligation to do so and the board will allow them to attend an English school if they so desire.Westmount's ward four Commissioner Joan Rothman told The Examiner that the board will explain the law \u201cbut is not In PSBGM schools: going to act as a policeman.\u2019\u2019 She added that the board will neither refuse admittance to any students nor evict any that are already enrolled.Rules not complete Interpreting the regulations is difficult, Commissioner Rothman explained, because they are not complete.For instance, she said, they do not explain how many grades constitute elementary education in determining the schooling of parents.Nor does the bill fully define transient students.Mrs.Rothman said the board is against breaking the law \u201cbut could be persuaded otherwise by the actions of the government,\u201d although such actions would have tobe very belligerent.According to Mrs.Rothman, the action of the board is supported by all administrative and teaching personnel in the board.While most elementary schools are experiencing decreased enrolments because of a drop in the birth rate, Ms.McKnight claims the decrease at Roslyn would not have been as great were it not for Bill 101.At resent, though, the effect of the ill seems to be indirect, as Ms.McKnight says many parents are leaving the province, and implies New science course, special grade seven only program changes A new science program at Westmount Park school and a special grade seven class at Westmount High School are the only planned course changes in this community\u2019s Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal schools for the coming academic session.The science program, according to Westmount Park principal Cliff Stirling, will be a \u201cbasic introduction to the concept of science\u201d and give students \u2018\u2018some idea of what science is all about.\u201d He claims that science in elementary grades has not been emphasized the way it should be, partly because some teachers feel uncomfortable with it and partly because textbooks and equipment are so expensive.To help overcome the first problem, the teachers who will be responsible for the course have attended summer workshops to familiarize themselves with scientific concepts and the course.The program will be given throughout the elementary grades starting with the basic study of nature and working up through the grades to sm experiments.An important aspect of the new program, stresses Mr.Stirling, is that the course is easy for teachers to follow.This will be of obvious benefit to the student.The special grade seven class at Westmount High is designed to make entry into high school easier for those students who have dif ficulty with such subjects as math and reading.The one class will be kept small and the students will have the same teacher for English, math, history and geography.Principal Al Gamble says it is h at the students will benefit from the increased personal attention received from one teacher.Principal Barbara McKnight says no course changes are planned at Roslyn School providing the enrolment figure lds and they are able to keep their specialists.Small Groups SHAAR HASHOMAYIM FOUNDATION SCHOOL 450 Kensington Avenue, Westmount Registration \u2014 September, 1977 Limited number of vacancies still available in the various groups.\u201c\u2018An enriched activities program, that fulfills the needs of the pre-school child in an environment of love and respect.\u2019\u2019 TRANSPORTATION AVAILABLE For further information call: Rose Ruckenstela, Supervisor 937-5471 local 41 Qualified Teachers they are leaving for political reasons.Westmount Park School Principal Cliff Stirling attributes the decrease in student numbers at his school to the political climate, as well.Westmount Park will have 50 or 60 fewer students than the 407 it had last year.He said he expected the drop because so many parents had told him before the close of school that they would be leaving the province.He says this proba ly has more to do with the political situation in the province than with the legislation alone.\u201cThe ones who can get out,\u201d he says, \u2018are getting out.\u201d For now, however, Principal language Stirling doesn\u2019t feel Bill 101 will have as much effect on West- mount Park School as schools in other districts.He explains that the majority of the school\u2019s students are Anglo-Saxon and that the non-Quebec students are, for the most part, here on a temporary basis.Bill 101 regulations allow anglophone Quebec immigrants to attend English schools if they are in the province on a temporary basis.Westmount igh School Principal Al Gamble the bill is having no effect on enrolment at the school and that the student population will be about 1,060, the same as last year.He believes that the bill will affect the primary schools before No pain or practice in new music program A new, creative music program being offered Westmount children at Concordia University makes the intriguing claim of offering a way of teaching music without the practising and pains of learning a musical instrument.The program is called \u2018\u2018Choose a sound, make a sound\u201d and classes allow the participants the same 0 unities to choose and create with sounds that they have in the visual arts with colors, paints, clay and other materials.For the program, which offers classes for both children and adults simultaneously on turday mornings starting in October, Concordia\u2019s music and arts building at 2140 Bishop street will be a sound castle of rooms filled with many sound resources.One room, for instance, will have unusual objects suspended from the ceiling or on tables, another will have tape recorders and microphones and another will have a piano \u2018prepared\u2019 with bits of string, wood and paper between the strings to produce unusual sounds.During the sessions participants will, in effect, become composers, learning about music and what makes it by doing it.The department is also involved in more traditional courses made available at West- mount\u2019s Roslyn School through the home and school association.The CAMMAC: (Canadian Amateur Musicians) program will be taught by André Laporte and is offered to any child attending Roslyn.Information on Concordia\u2019s music programs is available at 879-8405.the secondary schools and the enrolment figures for Westmount Park and Roslyn seem to confirm this belief whether or not the bill is the direct cause.Mr.Gamble says, however, that WHS has a few students who may not be able to register at the school because of the new regulations, but adds that \u2018\u2018where it appears a student is eligible, then we go ahead and register.\u201d No teachers lost Despite the decreased enrolment at the two elementary schools, neither have, so far, suffered any loss of teachers despite the number of teachers a school is allowed depending on the number of students.Part of the reduction in student numbers is taken up by the new student- teacher ratios written into teacher contracts this year but Mr.Stirling fears that some teachers might have to be released next year if enrolment drops any further.Hinting, perhaps, that West- mount Park may have more than its share of teachers he said, \u201cLet's hope we can get away with it for one more year.\" THERE IS AN ALTERNATIVE to large classes or the pressures of competition ECOLE WESTON INC.ESTABLISHED 1917 CO-EDUCATIONAL NON-SECTARIAN ELEMENTARY & HIGH SCHOOL Special English Courses for grades 10-11 Introducing BROWN READING SYSTEMS Reading improvement / Studies Skills Program for grades 5 to 11 Recognized by the Department of Education for the purpose of Grants - Secondary level Permis no.749004 pour enseignement général élémentaire Gr.|-VI accordé aux termes de la Loi de l'enseignement privé WESTON school inc.124 Ballantyne Ave.S.Montreal West.486-6339 Mrs.J.H.Doupe, M.Ed., Principal 3495 Simpson Street, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 2J7 (Tel.935-2644) Crafalgar- School for Girls LEARNING AND LOVING ITI .AT VANIER COLLEGE Vanier has the courses to help you upgrade your business or technical qualifications .courses to qualify you for university .and courses to help you live more creatively and fill your leisure time more meaningfully.CREDIT COURSES Registration begins August 22nd by appointment.Call now to arrange a convenient time! Classes begin the week of September 12the Accounting e History e Anthropology e Humanities e Architectural Tech.e Intensive English e Biology e Intensive French e Business Admin.e Italian e Chemistry e Learning Skills e Child Care e Mathematics e Cobol e Mechanical Systems e Commerce e Music e Creative Arts e Physics e Data Processing e Philosophy e Drafting e Political Science eo Economics e Psychology e Electrotechnology e Secretarial Science e English e Sociology e Fortran e Spanish * French e Stenography e Geography e Typing e German PLUS MANY MORE! FREE TUITION: To qualify for free tuition, you must: \u2014take 12 hours of credit courses per week \u2014be at least 18 years old and out of school for one year OR have a Secondary V Certificate \u2014be a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant \u2014apply by September 2nd.INTEREST COURSES Come and discover a fascinating new interest in the company of new friends.Classes are held at the Ste-Croix and Snowdon Campuses Patchwork and Quilting / Macramé / Crafts / Makeup/ Auto mechanics/Basic Car Care/Judo/ Jazz Ballet/Yoga/Tap Dancing/Keeping Fit & Healthy / Popular Guitar / Childbirth Preparation/ Parent Effectiveness Training/Layman\u2019s Law/ Caring for Houseplants.FOCUS PLUS 60 Courses designed specifically for citizens aged 60 years and over, during the day-time at the Snow- don and Ste.Croix Campuses.Indoor Gardening/ The Adult and Creative Change/ Contemporary Moral Issues/ Quebec Literature / Yoga / Poetry / Music Appreciation/Art/ Current Affairs/Body Movement to Music/Awareness/Art Through the Ages/Canadian History / Cratts.THREE CONVENIENT LOCATIONS: e St.Laurent « Snowdon - Chomedey FOR MORE INFORMATION OR A REGISTRATION APPOINTMENT, CALL sop.333-3920 \u201cever Vanier College Center for Continuing Education _BACK TO SCHOOL 12 - The Westmount Examiner.Thursday, September 1, 1977 Visual Arts Centre responds est to applied arts inter The regular increase of free time for each of us as well as a new trend for hand and homemade goods have created in recent years a great interest for applied arts.e success of the Visual Arts Centre, 350 Victoria avenue, tends to prove this eloquently.Relocated for now three years in their newly renovated and spacious building, the centre receives every year more than 1,500 students of all ages coming from all sections of the island.A non-profit organization, the centre aims to stimulate the public\u2019s awareness of the importance of good design and craftsmanship.Its gallery and shop form part of the school and give an opportunity to the public and the students to be exposed to the best products of our contemporary craft media.This fall, the llery will exhibit Alex Mogelon\u2019s \u2018Collection of Boxes,\u201d work done by ceramists Maurice Savoie and Paul Mathieu, and sculptured leather by Rex Lingwood.The Visual Arts Centre offers multiple part-time courses as well as a full-time program, a diploma in applied arts and design for adults interested in becoming professional craftsmen in textile or ceramic arts.Part- time courses are offered in ceramics (handbuilding, wheel throwing, glazes and decoration), in textiles (weaving, macramé, batik, silkscreen on fabric, experimental stitchery, wearable art, quilting and upright loom + gt ; = 5 £ LEARNING EARLY: Children play wit h clay during a class at the Visual Arts Centre, one of the many programs the centre offers both children and adults.weaving), in visual perception (drawing, painting, watercolor and design), as well as in jewellery, stained glass, history of art and interior decoration.A broad program for youth in the craft media and also basic concepts of art are offered to children age 3 to 15.Clay and play, clay and art, book illustration, film, drawing and ceramics are just a few of the varied programs offered after school and on Saturdays.Enrolment steady, few changes at ECS \u201cYou just don\u2019t know, so why worry?\u201d This is the attitude of Jean Murray, headmistress of Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp\u2019s School, concerning the effects of Bill 101 and its attendant school admission regulations.There have been no immediate effects, she says, but adds she doesn\u2019t know what will happen in the future.This year\u2019s enrolment will probably remain at last year's figure of 285 and won't go above 290 so it appears the school hasn't suffered in this area.ECS receives a grant from the overnment for its secondary evel so new students entering these grades will be subject to regulations of the language bill.Miss Murray reports no new courses for this year and the teaching staff will remain the same size.The only addition to the school this year is of a business manager which the school has never had before.\u201cIt is something we badly needed,\u201d said Miss Murray.Among other things he will handle much of the statistical work that is necessary at the beginning of each school year.937-3916.bveveues Westmount Park After School Program 2:45-6:00 P.M.FOR CHILDREN GRADES | THROUGH Vi Program is open to all children ages 6 through 12, although priority will be given to children of working parents and/or single-parent families.For information regarding fees, etc., please contact Martha Howlett at the Westmount YMCA, Again this fall, the centre will present a series of three lectures on decorative arts given by Aline Gubbay, another series of three lectures on \u201cDesign in in ventions\u2019\u2019 given by three Canadian inventors.Also planned is a workshop with El Jahr, a well-known American ceramist; a workshop with Nancy Belfer, distinguished american artist, in experimental stitchery; a workshop with Peter Collingwood, British weaver who will explore the \u2018\u2018sprang\u201d technique with the participants and a papermaking workshop with Kathryn McCardle Lipke.Starting date for the courses is the week of Oct.3.Information regarding dates, ices and detailed description is available at the centre, 488-9559.Night gives St Leo's a new role St.Leo\u2019s Academy, 360 Clarke avenue, will again this year be donning an evening role as an adult language training centre, offering semi-intensive courses in both English and French as rt of the Montreal Catholic chool Commission\u2019s adult education program.These language courses are given over a seven or eight week period, including weekends of immersion during.which there are special activities.Language laboratories are also used for each of the courses which are given at six different levels in each language.Placement is decided on the basis of results of a placement test.Courses are given three nights a week on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday with registration scheduled for St.Leo\u2019s daily, Sept.12 to 16, from 5 to 9 pm.he MCSC also offers a wide range of evening courses for adults in other fields including academic and popular subjects.The courses are offered in ap- proximatel 30 centres throughout the MCSC'\u2019s terri .Further information on all programs is available at 273-0481. Like other private schools in Westmount, wyn House is experiencing a quiet year in terms of improvements and innovations.The school is maintaining last year\u2019s enrolment figure of 430 and the same number of staff members, \u2018altho four new teachers will be replacing vacated positions.The only new acquisition, says The Westmount Examiner, Thursday.September 1, 1977 .13 Selwyn House enrolment holds steady Headmaster Alexis Troubetzkoy, is of a school bus to transport the school's athletic teams.Again reflecting the mood of most private schools, Mr.Troubetzkoy says of Bill 101 that \u201cfor the moment we can live with it.\u201d\u201d He adds that he hasn't witnessed any great exodus from the province and that the school only experienced the usual loss of boys over the summer.Should there be any great emi ration of Westmount nts in the future, it would probably affect the school, though, as Mr.Troubetzkoy revealed, in a survey taken two years ago it was discovered about 48 percent of Selwyn House students lived in Westmount.foul , a.CHURCH SERVICES AT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE UNITED UNITED ANGLICAN DOMINION DOUGLAS UNITED CHURCH Westmount Boulevard and Lansdowne avenue Rev.Phyllis Smyth, B.A., 8.D., Ph.D.WESTMOUNT PARK CHURCH (United) Lansdowne Ave.and Maisonneuve Blvd.Rev.J.E.Nix, B.A.B.D., S.T.M Organist: Mr.David Hall, B.Mus.ST.MATTHIAS\u2019 Cote St.Antoine Road Archdeacon J.N.Doidge The Rev'd.G.L.Campbell TRINITY XIII SUMMER SCHEDULE 8:00 am Holy Eucharist 11:00 am Holy Eucharist Sermon: The Rector Stephen A.Crisp, ARCO Organist and Choirmaster FUNERAL FOR MOTHER SUPERIOR: The body of Léa Man- deville, Soeur St-ignace, former mother superior of Congregation Notre Dame, is carried from the church in the Order's Mother House at Atwater avenue and Sherbrooke street following funeral services last Thursday afternoon.Soeur St-ignace, who died early last week at age 91, was leader of the order from 1940 to 1952, later serving in other offices to continue her work with the church and SEPTEMBER 4 10:45 am Music Before Service Chimes\u2014AIl the hymn tunes in our new hymn book.Beginning this week at No.47 11:00 am Morning Worship Joint Summer Service SEPTEMBER 4 11:00 am Joint Morning Worship at Dominion-Douglas Church education branches of the community.She began her career at Les \u201cTHE NEWSIS STILL GOOD* CHURCH OF Cèdres outside Montreal, rising to become mother superior of the Dr.Phyllis Smyth THE ADVE NT smaller community before heading the whole congregation.She is Organist & Choir Director: Social Hour after worship Corner of Wood and survived by two sisters, Mrs.Thérése Salvail and Sister Bernadette Ted McL , ARCCO Mandeville, CND, and a brother, Arthur, as well as a number of ec Nickearon Crib Corner Maisonneuve, Wesimount nieces and nephews.The Study consolidating The Study has no changes to report this year but acco to Headmistress Jean Scott the school is in the process of \u201cconsolidating\u201d last year\u2019s improvements in art, French and instruction.Enrolment at the private girls\u2019 school will remain stable at 255 and there has been no change of staff size.Bill 101, Mrs.Scott feels, \u201cundoubtedly will have an effect\u2019 on the school \u201cbut how is something we cannot tell.\u201d The Study receives provincial grants for its secondary grades, t Mrs.Scott adds that the school has very few new student entering the school at this level.Most the secondary students started in the primary level.For this reason Bill 101 regulations restricting admittance to language schools might not have MERCIER & TOUTANT Arpenteurs \u2014 Géomètres Quebec Land Surveyers 4898 de Maisonneuve O.any immediate effect on the school.Mrs.Scott hopes that \u201ceverything carries on as it was.\u201d Party starts CEGEP year The Institut Marguerite Bourgeoys, Westmount's private French language collegial institution, began its school last Wednesday, registered about 830 students and then held a daylong festival in the large West- mount avenue building late in the week.The size of the student body remains about the same as last year, very close to the considered maximum, according to its director, Sister Gisèle Mathieu.The building continues to host the music faculty of the Université du Québec à Montreal, , offering the many rooms and resources the former Ecole Normale de Musique.This year will see an \u201cintegration\u201d of student activities into the normal course program for students, though details were BAPTIST 11:00 am 7:30 pm WESTMOUNT BAPTIST CHURCH Sherbrooke Street West at Roslyn Avenue Nearest Downtown Baptist Church Director of Music: Deirdre Morrell, B.Mus.SEPTEMBER 4 Dr.Edgar Bailey GLORY IN THE CROSS Communion Service TODAY IN PARADISE MIDWEEK SERVICE: Wednesday, 8:00 pm VISITORS ALWAYS WELCOME CHRISTIAN SCIENCE 11 a.m.Church FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST Westmount 390 Lansdowne Avenue at Sherbrooke Street Lesson Sermon Subject this Sunday: Golden Text: Hosea 1:10: In the place where it was said unto them, Ye are not my people, there it shall be said unto them, Ye are the sons of the living God.11 a.m.Sunday School 489-8251 unavailable this week.\u2014ffildens «æ- Dispensing Opticians © Opticiens d\u2018Ordonnance CONTACT LENSES © 4 LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 1460 Sherbrooke W.(corner Mackay) 842-3809 2550 Cote des Neiges (Seaforth Medical Bidg.) 932-6806 5016 Sherbrooke W.(near Claremont) _ Cavendish Shopping Mail, Cote St.Luc Wednesday, 8:00 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 7:45 p.m.ALL ARE WELCOME UNITED St.ANÔREW's ChURCh 101 COTE SL.ANTOINE RD.SEPTEMBER 4 11:00 am Joint Summer Service at Dominion-Douglas Church REV.E.A.KIRKER, M.A, B.D, D.D.Rev.H.W.White, Th.M., Ph.D.Rev.E.C.Armstrong, B.A.Gordon White, L.Mus., B.Mus.The Rev'd Eric Dungan, M.A.TRINITY XIN 8:00 am The Holy Eucharist 10:30 am The Sung Eucharist (Nursery Facilities) HOLY EUCHARIST DURING THE WEEK 9:30 am WEDNESDAY Organist and Director of Cheir: Rafael de Castro, Dipt.Cons.Mus.ST.STEPHEN'\u2019S DORCHESTER and ATWATER The Rev'd.R.G.Guinness SEPTEMBER 4 10:30 am Morning Prayer WELCOME TO ALL PRESBYTERIAN STANLEY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Webster Hall 4695 de Maisonneuve Blvd.W.Rev.Scarth Macdonnelt Sunday Service 9:30 am VISITORS WELCOME SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM 450 Kensington Rabbi Wilfred Shuchat Canter Emeritus Nathan Canter Joseph Gross Assistant Canter Herman Muller SABBATH SERVICES Sabbath Eve, 6:30 pm in the Chapel Sabbath Day, 9:00 apn in the Chapel Sabbath Twilight, 7:20 pm DAILY SERVICES Morning Services: Sunday, Sept.4, 8:45 am; Monday, Sept.5, 8:30 am; Tuesday-Friday, ry 6-9, 7:10 am.Evening Services: Monday- Thursday, Sept.5-0, 7:28 pm. Try vs once.[J you'll always LEAN IN G ; 2 Z ; gr ?% A Fi Ze i ; LI LLI AN Residential & Commercial HEMBLING B.& D.UNIVERSAL BABI) & DUGGAN TRAVELLERS : g 7 4 Ë 4 \u201c4 1 Le Cleaning Contractors Inc.45 Victoria Avenue 14 - Thursday, September 1, 1977 933-1935 482-2388 482-9101 We're open Sept.7 2 The Nearly.New Shop ® UPSTAIRS at 1448A Mountain St.Weekdays 10 am to 4:30 pm \u2018Don\u2019t throw it away, send it to us° i praceads go 10 the Auxiliary of \u2018 treal Children\u2019s & Royat Victoria Hospitais 849-7245 @® CENTER for CONSERVATION and RESTORATION of ART 1460 Sherbrooke West - Cor.MacKay St.Tel: 844-3863 - By Appointment only > PLANNING ART SHOW AND SALE: The 18th annual outdoor art D = show of the Lakeshore Association of Artists will be held Sept.10 Men's & Ladies om Care and 11 at Stewart Park in Pointe Claire and busy planning the INC.event, which is sponsored by West Island Adaptation Services Inc., WESTMOUNT, P.Q.are, from left, Roy Wilson, president of the Lakeshore Association of Artists; Bilt Grandin, art show chairman for WIAS; Bill Lambert, president of WIAS and John Collins, art show chairman for CO ATS .the artists\u2019 association.One-third of the sale\u2019s proceeds goes to Going on holidays?Away for the weekend?WIAS to support their many programs for persons with an intellectual handicap.The show is open from 10 am to 5 pm both days DIRECT Why not take advantage of our unique house-minding service?Let us and admission is free.water your plants, collect or forward your mail, feed your indoor pets, FROM THE check your windows and doors, etc.N um be rs ge me FACTORY For information call 933-5191 J .1 Lo 4 City council redivided property one, acquiescing to the provincial 1625 Chabanel W.Kathy MacCulioch Mary Cape Payson at 5 Bellevue avenue last Wed.government \u2018\u2018one-building-one- Room 410 nesday to bring seven lots into lot\u201d Policy and allowing for construction of a garage for the Apartment Hotel çrER | * pert \"416 BEVERLEY.Pavillon Villa Decarie an tne ins TOWN OF MOUNT ROYAL, QUEBEC.Thursday, 8th September, 1977.Under New Management (In two sessions commencing at 10:00 a.m.and 2:00 p.m.) e Senior Citizens Welcome © Containing fine DAMASK LINENS, fine porcelain including DRESDEN and other GER- MAN figures, porcelain and china by CROWN DERBY, ROYAL WORCESTER and other Join us for modern, comfortable accommodations, in an ENGLISH factories.An attractive RIDGWAY dessert service.Decorative glassware.Im- area with easy access to stores, restaurants, theatre, etc.ortant and decorative furniture including a REGENCY beech framed chair, a pair of DWARDIAN mahogany salon chairs.A fine set of eight CHIPPENDALE style mahoga- We offer a private, furnished 12 room apartment, the ny dining chairs, a CHIPPENDALE style break front cabinet and serpentine front com- comfort of air conditioning and the convenience of a mode.Decorative pictures and engravings, MINIATURES, SILVER and SILVER PLATE, kitchenette.JEWELLERY and other miscellaneous pieces.Each apartment offers: private com, te ,Ç television plus facilities available in the recreation room such as: arts, crafts, bingo, etc.PREVIEW: Tuesday, September 6th (late mgr).10:00 a.m.to 9:00 p.m.Wednesday, September 7th, 9: .24 hour nursing call.Varied menu of 3 meals day.a.m.to 3:00 p.m.Reasonable raves.per day Maid Service \u2014 Decter on Call 480 t.Francis Xavier Street, Montreal, P.Q.5900 Decarie Blvd.735-6333 Telephone (514) 842-1803 | or also at 867 MADISON AVENUE, NEW YORK (Just below Van Horne) -\u2014 Beyond A random sampler of things to see or do Westmount's in the bigger city surrounding us Borders By RICK KERRIGAN There are a couple of opportunities around town for aspiring musicians.One is the Big Band of the Saidye Bronfman Centre which is holding auditions Tuesday from 7 to 10 pm.The are looking for musicians for a positions in the orchestra but are particularly in need of male singers and electric bass players.The only hitch is that you have to be between the ages of 17 and 22.I'm not exactly sure what significance the age restriction has, though, as it seems rather arbitrary and it\u2019s not explained in the release I received.The band orms under the direction of li Rubinstein and gives a series of concerts each spring.If you're interested in auditioning, call the centre at 739-2301 to register in advance.Auditions will take place at the centre, 5170 Cote St.Catherine.The other opportunity is open to Free Delivery 935-0039 934-0995 11 am to 2 pm musicians of all ages who want to play in the Concordia Orchestra.They are looking for amateur string players who enjoy playing the \u2018\u2018orchestral symphonic repertoire.\u201d If you're interested, give Irving Mandel a call at 486- 5894 in the evenings.Rehearsals are every Monday night on the Loyola Campus of Concordia University and concerts are open free of charge to the public.Concordia University is getting back into action after the summer holidays and the art galleries at the Sir George Campus have their exhibition program lined up for the coming year.Two artists from western Canada will have their work displayed Sept.8-27.Ann Kipling will be having a retrospective exhibition organized by the Vancouver Art Gallery to be shown in the Weisman Gallery.She describes her work thusly: \u201cMy images are by-products of encounter.They are an immediate response to what I am confronted with at those times.\u201d The drawings and paintings of Norman Yates, organized by the Edmonton Art Gallery will be shown in Galleries One and Two.His paintings \u201care bathed in clear bright light, a prairie light or glaring snow and burning sun.It is the pure hard light of the After the show or even before .to enjoy a fine meal or just some delicious Cappucino Easy parking Open until 1359 Greene Ave.midnight 932-7777 every night ape welcomes you À HUDSON NTIQUES CLOSED Tuesday to Thursday inclusive Except by appointment OPEN Friday to Monday inclusive 10 om - 6 pm except Sunday 1 pm - 6 pm (Note Large selection of traditional & Canadian Furniture in stock) Location: Junction Trans-Canada (40) & Hwy.342 Exit 17 Hudson (E.Side) western plains, making celers vivid and sharp.\u201d The galleries The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 - are located at 1455 de Maison- neuve and are open Monday te Friday, 11:00 am te 9:00 pm aad Saturday, 11:00 am Le 5:00 pm.Another exhibition is i Sept.7.This one is at the Galerie Kitchens & Furniture in the Modern Style We specialize in \u201chard to get\u201d products: \u2018Quality Fittings DO IT YOURSELF ENTHUSIASTS! (and cabinetmakers) Libre and it is the first solo \"Special Board LL.exhibition of Tilya Helfield.It -Plans & KnowHow 4 will consist of photo-etchings and You get: the title of the show will be \u2018The tender trap.\u201d She has previously exhibited at the Saidye Bronfman Centre and as far afield as British Columbia and Winnipeg.Her work was part of the \u2018\u2018Art Femme °75\" exhibition at the Musée d'Art Contemporain in Professional Finish \u2018European Styling * Modular Construction HOME WORKSHOP Supplies 29 WESTMINSTER N., MONTREAL WEST (AT SHERBROOKE ST.BESIDE TEXACO STATION) OPEN: THURS /FRID 6-9 SATURDAYS 9-5 481-3111 1975.The gallery is open Tuesday to Friday, 10:00 am to 6 pm, and Saturdays until 5:00 pm at 2100 Crescent street.* .* If you plan to be in Ottawa between Sept.2 and Oct.9, make time for a visit to the National Gallery to see the photographic works of John Vanderpant who lived between 1884 and 1939.The 50 photographs include abstract images of grain elevators and intimate studies of plants and vegetables, and they \u2018explore the tenderness and beauty of texture and the design possibilities of form and shadow.\u2019 Vanderpant was a leading figure in the artistic scene in Vancouver during the thirties and his work was influenced by various artists including Frederick Varley, a member of the Group of Seven.Enosburg Falls, Vermont TEL.(802)-933-5590 Driving Through Vermont?The Village Restaurant Only 70 miles from Montreal, just south of Frelighsburg Fresh Maine Lobster Served Daily a I» 48 7-6980 A eq \u2014_ ao NE Le Sem re 7) ONE- 2 OF- Hammond M3 (w tone generators) $ 2000 Hammond Porta-b & Leslie 4000 + Hammond Phoenix (21 2 yrs.oid; 4000 Lowery TG 88-1 (8 months old) 3000 Lowery TG 88 (2 yrs.old) 2800 Wurlitzer 306 Funmaker (Display) 860 Wurlitzer 429 (76 Model) 1850 Wurlitzer 565 (with 3rd Keyboard) 4760 Yamaha B-2 (with double keyboard) 995 Solina G110 Demo 1695 Solina A211 Demo (8light scratches) 2196 Solina B206 Demo (slight scratches) 26956 Solina B303 (New) 2595 Solina B313 (like new) 2795 Solina B318 (like new) 3195 Solina C112 w Arp synthesizer 4495 Eminent 310 Theaterette Demo § 41958 w/Arp 3rd keyboard synthesizer 1098 Package Price $ 5290 Eminent 2000 Grand Theatre 12,500 Haven - Crummar Rapide runmachine; 899 Haven Crummar Prestige (consoietre 4196 Heintzman 303 Piano, New 1898 Heintzman Salzburg Piano 2598 Goetze 5'6 Baby Grand Piano (Used) \u2014 Lindsay Upright 61°\u2019 Piano (Used) - Lone Gu = \u2014 2 \u2014 = po ~- A-KIND ' ORGAN CLEARANCE Orig.Price gaie $998.2498.\" 2498.8498.1798.788° 1668.3498.498.2 1898.2 1898.1908 °° 8198.2398.3698.3498.% 2998.698.3690 °° 9998.699.3498.1698.8848.1498.780.% 487-6986 Neg \u2014 -.= = x - 170002000000.000 cs e Roesidentia CHRISTIE PLUMBING LIMITED Complete Plombing Service Fast - Efficient os Commercial o Industrial .24 Bewr Servies 484-2010 JIA Sherbrooke W 16 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING \u2014 PHONE YOUR ADS \u2014 931-7511 10 Words *1 °° 10 cents each additional word REGULAR DEADLINE WEDNESDAY 10:00 A.M.; TOO-LATE-TO-CLASSIFY, 2 P.M.Accounts may be paid by telephone by Chargex or Master Charge or by cash or cheque at the Weekly Adservice and The Westmount Examiner office, 155 Hiliside avenue, Westmount; at The Monitor and St.Laurent News offices, 6525 Somerled avenue at Cavendish, N.D.G.; the Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post office, 233 Dunbar avenue; the North Shore News office, Ste.Genevieve Shopping Centre, 11120 Gouin boulevard west, Roxboro, or any branch on the Island of Montreal of The Royal Bank of Canada or Adtakers on duty Monday and Tuesday, 8 am to 8 pm: Wednesday.Thursday, Friday to 5 pm For best service, phone your ads early the Bank of Montreal.Advertising not paid in advance of publication is subject to a 35-cent billing charge.Advance pay ments without invoice canngt be accepted by banks but may be paid at a ny of the above newspaper offices.(Armstrong -eaturing - | me materials.$45,000.00 $15,000.00.boro, NY.150'x140°, Adirondack terms.$30,000.00.Wilisboro, NY.$44,500.00.Investment Lands 5 acres at Exit 34 Adirondack Northway the Northern Gateway to the 1980 Olympics.Suitable for Motel or other business.$45,000.00.Business site 7 acres on Route 9N near Exit 34.$25,000.00.140 acres near the entrance to Macomb State Park, Peru, NY: Macomb Park has full recreational facilities, beach with lifeguards, campsite, etc.; these 140 acres can be subdivided into V2 acre lots.The tract has 4000 feet of paved road frontage with electric and telephone lines and 4000 plus feet on Trout Brook.40 wooded acres with 4700 feet of paved road frontage with electric and telephone lines.Beach privileges.APA red, Keeseville, NY.Lake Champlain lake frontage.200 acre estate with 2 houses, 2 large barns, 990 feet of lake front with view of lake islands and Vermont mountains.Must be seen.$189,000.00.Furnished Lake Champlain lake front cottage on V2 acre lot with stone fireplace, etc.Wills- 3 bedroom Lake Champlain lake front cottage with fireplace on lot 90\u2018\u2019x485'\u2019, Port Douglass, NY.$33,000.00.Elegant fully furnished Lake Champlain lake front cottage with 4 bedrooms, large living room with fireplace, electric heat on lot William R.Laflure, 1 PROPERTY FOR SALE 47 rss vo er 24 DUPLEXES TO LET 3G CM Fon su PROPRIETE À VENDRE BUREAUX A LOVER DUPLEXES A LOUER AUTOS A VENDRE OUR GOAL is to find what vou ° are looking r.e w FLORIDA Attractive supply you with listings of Datsun § .properties tha - ; Finest quality luxury Medical Office ficviar needs and preferences \u201cDr.Sere and otfier town houses In On a daily basis until you have extras.30,000 miles.$2,500.accepted the one that suits :30 and 10 2, 3, 4 bedrooms, 2 car you.Hart Rental Service, 484- Call between 5:30 a pm.electric garage.Cen- Cote des Neiges area for sublet 113) or 274-4377.' 737-3205.tral air conditioning October 15th.TORINO \u201875.28,000 highway Roman bathtub, 2% * 625 feet .miles.Excellent condition.bathrooms, equipped os Cartierville Best offer.363-2478 or 484-4847.with all appliances.Car- * Carpeted Upper 5V2 large rooms, ample CARS WANTED peted.Country Club at- © New building wSupboard space.heated, | ot 37 auros nemauses mosphere.Olympic .¢ .balconies, awning, facing park Pool.Tennis Courts.Call business hours: with beautiëur view of WE pick up old cars for scrap Priced to Sell.Your down mountain.Near CN commuter iron.632-2168.payment refunded to 733-21 34 train and bus.Suitable for you in 10 years by U.S.bank.Can be bought by single units or quantity purchases.Only 10% down payment.Call Mr.Bernie Purzak 483-2620, 684-1848 Bravy Purzac OSMAN \u2014'MAPOSO SS A REALTIES CORPORATION Exclusive brokers for Olympian Village Florida Pompano Beach For rent: New luxury condominium.2 bedrooms, 2 bathrooms, dining room, all equipped, modern conveniences, ocean heated pool, saune, tennis court.Call 336- ' LOTS FOR SALE 1 1 TERRAINS À VENDRE REALTOR ! LAKE CHAMPLAIN, Port seville, NY 1 EP RR etre .x # i x e Keeseville, N'Y 12944 $14,500.Also lots overlooking REALTOR Telephone 518-834-7709 lake 35,000.1-518-963-8608-1-518- after 5 P.M.5 = \u2014 8-834 PLATTSBURGH area r 51 7204 hospital.Lots for single- family homes, minimum size.125 x 190, $4,000.each.1-518- 963-8608-518- 563-4940.Westmount COUNTRY PROPERTY FOR SALE poppy 3 PROPRIETE DE CAMPAGAE À VENDRE 15 Conveniently located.ESPACE À LUVER Attractive fully equipped ivate residence bathrooms, modern kitchen, .5 bedrooms, separate living room with open fireplace, din] room.jarge M Lake entrance all, nishe og basement.2-car garage, open emp re 9 front and rear balconies, sundeck, d large fully (east side of Fitch Bay) ancscape garden ape Outstanding waterfront pro- vacant adjacent lot.Total area - approximately 11,500 square [Perty.Three bedroom mod feet.All for $179,500.Call 488- 7256 or 937-1494.ern cottage.Exceptional el: ectrical features throughout property including power lift Y OF THE YEAR! and 17 ft.75 hp motor boat.Be stnccunt, near West: $35,000.Call 019-876-5810 or mount Station.Will sell 6% 1-819-876-2876.room flat; equalling 1/3 ownershi in friplex, low taxes.Tel: 467-4605 or 331-8839.COUNTRY PROPER 3 PROPRIETE DE CAMPAGNE À VENDRE] 5 COUNTRY NOUSES TO LET MAISON DE CAMPAGNE À LOUER ST.ADOLPHE, tireplace, rock garden, fully , $4000 down or rent.Also 2 lots, nearby on route 364 west.484-4847 or 363: equipped 2478.TY FOR SALE LAURENTIANS, Lac des Seigneurs, 5 modern, 2 bedrooms, electric heating, fireplace, $2,900 winter season.Call 381 for 0436 or 381-4470.SRR IN PRIME LOCATION AIR CONDITIONED ELEVATOR INDOOR PARKING Space to suit your situation call: LOUISE BLONDIN 878-1205 360 Victoria.Offices $125.-$150.monthly.488-9123.George 9 am-5 pm.quiet adult couple.Tel: 331- 2 DUPLEXES WANTED DUPLEXES DEMANDES 21 APARTMENTS TO LET APPARTEMENTS À LOUER N.D.G.5717 Sherbrooke west, apt.2.1/2 and 42 equipped.N.D.G.\u2014Wilson Between Sherbrooke and.de Maisonneuve.4Y2-5V2.Heated.Moderate rental.Immediate occupancy.Call for information, 487-4452 or 487- 3412, PENTHOUSE 74, $550., 2 complete bathrooms, 360$ Ridgwood, 739-9480 - 342-0212.Westmount Sublet, Chateau Bonavista, central air, luxury 2 bedrooms, Dishwasher, two bathrooms.Every convenience.Immediate.842-5008 days, 482-0987 evenings.N.D.G.Large 4Y2 equipped, osen iconv.clean, quiet.489- Atwater 3500 Large 1 bedroom, decorated.656-5220.N.D.G.large studio basement apartment, Heated, equipped.Call 481-8434 or @)- newly N.D.G.Beaconsfield avenue 2V-3V2, electricity, hot water, $110.to $125.monthly.Immediate occupancy.733-6062, 488-7248.T.M.R.Luxurious new air conditioned bedroom, 2/2 bathroom townhouse.Call 669-4900.(24 2mm, Duplex Westmount Bright lower 62.Large living room with fireplace.Modern kitchen, dishwasher.Two bedrooms, two bathrooms.Den, dining room, wall to wall carpets.Heated, hot water.Garden, garage.October \u2018st.Adults.$625.monthly.Call 935- 4231 or 802-796-3678, collect.e Call 482-624 WANTED: Older 5-room flat, preferably with garden and fireplace.June or July 1978 , occupancy.Reply to Box 682, c/o Weekly Adservice, 155 Hillside Ave., Westmount, Que.H3Z 2Y8.N.D.G.availabl Room and board for elderly woman.Cr MATURE responsible person seeks room and board at reasonable rate, with lady that requires someone to be there only at night.Call 931-7896.36 CARS FOR SALE | AUTOS À VENDRE CHEV 1972 station wagon, V8, automatic, power steering, power breaks, radio, Ontario car, no rust, excellent, $1400.Call 684-5502.DATSUN 1200, 1971, 4 new radial tires, rebuilt engine, transmission and starter, original owner $300.Call 684- 8718 after 5 pm.BUICK Skylark 71, convertible, power windows.Good condition.Will accept best offer.733-5479.CHRYSLER Newport Custom 70.Excellente condition mécanique.$400.Appeler 336- DATSUN 1974, B-210, four-door sedan.Automatic.AM-FM radio.28,000 miles.489-6145 after 6pm.== HONDA CL 70, excelient condition.Moving out of town.Must sell.No reasonable offer refused.488-2864.C Lowest Prices Are you losking for a place to de Jour own car repairs?Call 761-5891 GARAGES TO LET GARAGE A LOUER GR EENE sag Venue.heated arage .Ca - 342-0214, 7480 43 prs nome WEST area, garage wanted immediately.Pierre Ranger.Days 875-2130, evenings 931-6524.CR Help Wanted Part time casual position General office and sales experience Oriver\u2019s licence needed Ideal for retired person Call Mr.Martin 861-7995 6 PONTIAC Le Mans 1971, V8, avotmatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, excellent condition, no rust $1,100.Call 684-5502.CAMARO 228, 1970, new engine, 4-speed standard, mag wheels, 375 HP, excellent condition.$2,500.Cal) 684-5502.NOVA 1973, hatchback, V8, automatic, power steering, power brakes, radio, excellent condition, no rust, $1650.Call 684-5502.OLDSMOBILE Delta 88, 1974, fully equipped, 2 door hardtop, excellent condition $2400.Call 684-5502.C=.PART TIME live out janitor gory dilable.West end.Call 935- Reliable Nurse Available for home case.Care for invalid or elderly.Excellent references.Call 842- ENGLISH nanny available from January.Call 482-2713.TOYOTA Corolla, deluxe, 1971, four-door standard, radio.Very good condition.$500.Private.935-9581.BUICK Skylark, 1970, AM- M., power steering, power brakes.Bestoffer.684-6232.DOMESTIC HELP WANTED AIDE DOMESTIQUE DEMANDEE TEEN or older wanted to help with house chores.Monday, Wednesday, Thursday 4 to 6 pm.$15.per week.937-8603. J bm or 35- re 12- le |p 6 \u2014 CARPENTRY The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 - SERVICE DIRECTORY MAINTENANCE MOVERS PAINTING FINANCIAL COURSES INTERIOR and exterior PAINTER: Interior-exterior.ti i The Professionals.Lowest cenovatine 2nd ry ttion Household fates anywhere.insured.Free 10, Vers experience.Work LADIES!!! binet making.A complete\u2019 R i estimates.Tim, 481.6385.-2477; 768-0957.woodworking facility.Eres epairs M 222?rates.Ca TT | For anything trom odd ibs to] T.C.MOORE oney painting, etc., cit 932345 -| TRANSPORT MRAZIK Do the financial pages confuse you?MRAZIK ES MOVING & STORAGE Se Why?Guaranteed Lowest Rates in the City ° GENERAL CONTRACTI MOVER UD we OVERS FREE ESTIMATES 731-6640 Feel left out of money-talk?* MOVING somewhere?Stora ; -i See Ad Page 2 731-6640 alist.Trucks available.a Se = investigate pl ficiency with Pare.Insure - Money Learning Course Efficiency with care.insured.y See M Page 2 Reasonable rates.John 842- Painting & Call or : Arborite counter tops._\u2014+ 5 moviNG_ soecisi Paper Hanging a balconies, Bplay rooms.es.Good weeken d rates.insu rec Call MUSIC INSTRUCTION At moderate hourly price.OS MOS 692-6242 Private homes only.Call 481- Bose 761 761-7811 after 4p.m.4477 6pm-9pm.PENTRY: kitchens, FIANO pre a Licensed 695-1430 Qos ais, cotl Gomalé Snook Cartage |isacher preparing \u201cWEGH, PINTRE Weekdays inc theory, harmony.All ages, go CARPET CLEANING \u2019 levels 243 4053.deu 10 ne: ience.2 térieur ans d'expérien Moving & Ouvrage garanti.Estimation MOVERS Stora ge Piano Lessons gratuite.365-2477 768-0957.° .Advanced method.Michael Carpet Specialists Wrob graduate Warsaw's PLASTERING onservatory.eg Cleaning Contract Work sévanced pupiis.Cail 844-8096.WILSON TRAN SPORT Ultimate new method in carpet RELIABLE, INSURED.PIANO lessons\u2014Frances cleaning.Satisfaction REASONABLE RATES Zyto.Preparation for McGill Gyproc y aranteed.Reasonable.Call .and Toronto examinations.o plaster e Stucco e Ceramic aul 481-5748.Call Anytime Festivals, theory, solfége.and Acoustic Tiles o Suspend Free Estimates Westmount.481-8246.ed ceilings ° Metal divisions MCGILL music student etc.Free oral estima a DRESSMAKING 842-4071 available for piano,\u201d theory A: Jubinville, 767-4502 and 767- Specializing In 842-2371 lessons.845-9738.: A HOME & OFFICE MOVES COUTURE Experienced in design \"4 taiiorin of quality FAINTING & WESTMOUNT also anytime.ree estimate.BILL'S ainting and .S Specainy torsion Peter, 676-0498 or 761-3431.decorating.co interior; In Plastering CALL ANYTIME ee cat Si RAMSAY lone; stucco; spray painting; plasterina: Repairs ot 482-6910 Moving-Cartage | na.call 489-2506, 489-2041.with steam.Work guaran- ELECTRICIAN teed.Call: L.Pelletier.Storage 4 R.ti Building Service.ainting - peinture, interior- Locai and Long Distance exterior; plaster repair - 653-3440 SEWING MACHINE REPAIRS ALL KINDS of electrical work.réparations; window washing - or 659-1576 484-1469 \u2014 484-1565 lavage vitre: carpenter - After 6 P.M.Specialists in electric heating.3-7187 leave message or 276- 9490 evenings.menuisier.524-9909.FURNITURE REPAIRS The Furniture Physician.We Polish-Refinish-Repair and do inlay work on anything from end fables to pianos.atity work, reasonable ces.For appointment call 473-0278.Pianos Refinished eo Complete Furniture Service ¢ Upholstery /Drapery eo Furniture Remodeling eo Custom-made and Handcrafted e Antique Restoration Glen Cabinet Makers 4104 St.Catherine W.Westmount Est.1955 Call 932-4444 GENERAL REPAIRS @ MRAZIK GENERAL CONTRACTING LTD.731-6640 See Ad Page 2 HOME SERVICES MRAZIK GENERAL CONTRACTING LTD.731-6640 Sen Ad Page 2 TA ROOFING HALLEROOFING Reg'd.One of the most reliable firms in the westend ALL TYPES OF ROOFING Tar & Gravel e Asphalt Shingies e Brick Pointing Cement Work e Chimneys Repaired - Rebuilt Sprayed Urethane Insulation Attic Inspection FOR FREE INSPECTION BY PROFESSIONALS Cor Ve | BAL OX FULLY LICENSED CONTRACTOR COMPLETE METAL SHOP Tinsmith \u2014 All Types of Metal Slate Roofs \u2014 Roofing \u2014 Foundations \u2014 Brick Pointing Cement Work \u2014 Plastering \u2014 Painting \u2014 Bricklaying Chimneys Repaired, Rebuilt \u2014 Fireplace Repairs Aqua-Chek Waterproofing All Work Guaranteed\u2014Free Estimates\u2014Terms FULLY INSURED AND BONDED 3466 US Ba LLL A Aa TARY AS guaranteed repairs TENSIONS\u2014CLEANING Compressed Air Method OILING\u2014MOTOR BELT ADJ.TESTING IN VARIOUS FABRICS FREE ESTIMATE IF MORE IS NEEDED THAN JUST TUNE-UP (24 years of Sewing Machine Servicing in the Arca) LAKESHORE SEWING MACHINE LTD 51 Cartier, Pointe Claire RENT OUR EXCLUSIVE Trame Cond\" BERNINA Se/ecta IF YOU LIKE IT, APPLY RENTAL FEE AND BUY 697-3173 697-1715 CLOSED SATURDAYS AT NOON PLUMBING & HEATING SANDING FLOORS fren fis Io.Sanding Floors Industria Old Floors WESTMOUNT Made New PLUMBING & Sending HEATING LTD.oc Fah 208 an ler Ave.FERNAND CLOUTIER 935-1189 321-1069 18 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 SERVICE DIRECTORY (ae mens.ROOFING [À ONKLAND = ROOFING ar LICENCED WESTMOUNT CONTRACTOR Specialist in: Chimneys Home Repairs o¢ Brickwork Attics o Basements eo Tuckpointing MEMBER OF MONTREAL CONS ASC.5733 MONKLAND ro 486-0665 OFFICE SUPPLY COMPANY REQUIRES PERMANENT PART-TIME PERSON FRIDAY \u2014Wednesday, Thursday and Friday afternoons only \u2014Typing and general office work \u2014Knowledge of French an asset \u2014Ages 25-45 .Call: Howard Odell 489-7595 N.D.G.AREA Construction number 1421-2936 \u2014p_ (52 MOTHERS HELP AIDE MATERNELLE Mother\u2019s Helper Available from England for November.$70 per week.Low agency fee.Excellent references.Call 767-2292.HELP WANTED PERSONNEL DEMANDE CHAUFFEUR Une compagnie d'envergure nationale recherche chauffeur avec expérience pour livraisons urbaines.e Doit être bilingue, au moins 21 ans, TREE SERVICE TREE SERVICE Remc -ais.Dwarfing.Pruning.Call Don Brocklehurst, 1-829- 2832.WAREHOUSE MANAGER National Food Company requires the services of a Warehouse Manager.This position requires a person who has had at least 3 years\u2019 experience in all phases of warehouse management.Must be at least 25 years of age.Be bilingual and possess a chauffeur\u2019s licence.Salary to be discussed.For further Information call: MANAGER 336-8224 avec permis de chauffeur et dossier satisfaisant Ch DOMESTIC WORK WANTED 56 TRAVAR DOMES TIOUE DEMANDE Cleaning Lady Wanted Two days weekly.Friday and Monday or Tuesday.N.D.G.References.487-0885.CLEANING lady wanted once a week.Westmount Park area.Non-smoker preferred.References.Call evenings between 8 and 10.932-5759.CLEANING lady wanted once weekly.References.Call 35-3311.Part-Time Maid Required with local references.Other help kept.Plain cooking.Every Wednesday, 4 p.m.fo Thursday 4 p.m.and 2 Saturdays 4 p.m.to Sunday 4 p.m., other 2 Saturdays 4 p.m.to Sunday 8:30 a.m.Upper Westmount.For details phone 484-2694.Housekeeper Canadian English-speaki preferred.Hours of wor 11:30 am to 7:30 pm.City references required.Salary to be discussed.Côte-des-Neiges and Sherbrooke area.Call 933- BABY SITTERS WANTED 54 GARDIEMNES DEMANSEES Baby Sitter Wanted in Westmount, 2 or 3 af- fernoons a week for 2 children, 2 and 4 years.Call 931-7649.Baby Sitter Wanted For 2 school aged boys, 2 days weekly, 3 t0 5 .U westmaunt.catP 931-0656 evenings.Person Wanted To care for 4 year old girl and do light housework.11:30 am 5: pm; Mondays, Wednesdays, Thursdays.Victoria Avenue.Call 482-6784.e Ce poste est permanent et offre de nombreuses possibilitées d'avancement e Salaire à discuter APPELER: Gérant de Bureau 336-8224 GERANT No Experience For our sales positions.We supply training and customer appointments.All you need is a car and a desire to work.For your interview call: Mr.Reed 483-2942 d\u2019ENTREPOT Une compagnie d'envergure nationale recherche un Gérant d'Entrepôt.Ce poste requiert les services d\u2019une personne qui avec au moins 3 ans d'expérience dans toutes les phases de la direction d\u2019un entrepôt.Doit être âgé au moins de 25 ans, être bilingue, et aussi avoir permis de chauffeur.\u2014Salaire à discuter Pour de plus amples informations appeler: GERANT 336-8224 DRIVER National Food Company requires the services of à chauffeur experienced in city delivery.He must have a good driving record, be bilingual, be over 21 years of age and possess a chauffeur\u2019s licence.This is a permanent position with unlimited opportunity for advancement.Salary to be discussed.For further information call: - MANAGER 336-8224 Baby Sitter Wanted Must be available short notice school mornings for working mother.937-7316 evenings.Baby Sitter Wanted Mature reliable woman to baby sit 2 month old baby in my home while mother works.No housework, 4 days weekly.Approximate hours 8 am to 4 m.September to June.eferences.Please call between 7 and 8 pm.482-8462.Baby Sitter Wanted To help working mother.Children ages 3-10.Four days weekly.Montreal West area.482-7133 after 6 pm.Baby Sitter Wanted Responsible person.Tuesdays and Fridays for September to June to care for our 2- and 4- ear-old boys.T.M.References.Call 733-3536.Baby Sitter Wanted LaSalle area.For more in- a ormation, 363-2478 or 484- 56 DOMESTIC WORK WANTED TRAVAK DOMESTIQUE DEMANDE CLEANING lady available 1/2 days per week.Excellent references.737-8117.RELIABLE charwoman seek day work.$25.References.32-1640.We Want You To Be Happy When you apply to MacCallum Domestic Placement Ltd.we know you will be happy with our service.Our Experienced Placement Officer will find the right iob for you, or the right employee for your job.We place Couples, Cooks, Housekeepers, General House-workers and Cleaning Women on a live-in or live-out basis.484-5327 CA DIAL-a-maid.We offer general assistanceg\u2019' 'n cleaning homes, of .motels, hotels, etc.Our $78ff are experienced elderly people.Call 2-8108-9; evenings 849-0437.FOR SALE-CLOTHING & FURS A VENDRE- VETEMENTS ET FOURAURES Mink $1,599.Coats made for you by specialists.688-9264.Alsosfur.1e St.Alexander.Room WILD mink stole.Mint condition.$150.Call 933-7218.BEAUTIFUL hand-crocheted Ponchos, $20.Makes a lovely gitt.Call 484-2930 after Spm.(07 DINING room suite, 7 pieces.Call 336-3952.DINING room set, Thomasville, seven pieces, off white, green trim.Excellent condition.487-9992 or 487-6846.LARGE dining room table walnut, 1 leaf.Reasonable.Call 733-8515.61 FOR SALE LIVING ROOM FURANTURE A VENDRE\u2014- MOBILER BE SALON CUSTOM-made seven foot couch, dark blue corduroy, like new, from executive office, $700.Call 933-6118.LOVESEAT, French Provincial, solid fruitwood finish, reversible down cushions, recently recovered, imported tapestry, also wing- back chair recently recovered with foot stool to match.Call 733-2737.Ch 6-PIECE mahogany bedroom set; including 2 lamps.$550.Call 733-8792.(84 Fass oe me SKATES, brand new, B Special Pro 99, size @ C.C.M.Tacks, size 8, condition.Call 489-0106.SALES (es VENTES Estate Sale Apartment closing sale.Furniture and furnishings.Apartment 311-3 Westmount Square, Thursday September sthfrom 10am.Garage Sale 218 Westminster Avenue North.Montreal West.10 am to 4 pm.Saturday, September 3rd.\u2014 TO MARKET IN 4 = AD Gk FOR SALE-GEMERAL 66 A VENDRE- GENERAL YOUR WEST END | AS A FLUENT FRUITS & VEGETABLES 4 MARKET Reasonable Prices e Come and Visit e e Now is the Time to Buy e AUBIN GARDENS 6125 ST.JACQUES WEST 484-5198 e DON'T MISS IT! WAREHOUSE CLEARANCE SATURDAY, SEPT.3rd at Simpsons Montee de Liesse Warehouse A few pieces of fine furniture left.Only private sale.Call from 9 am to 4 pm.382-3610 extension 288.Vacuum Cleaners Reconditioned and new.All kinds, $10.up.Over 500 to choose from.Rental parts, dust bags and repairs of ail kinds.Mr.Sweeper Monsieur Balayeuse 353-8290 481-1221, 637-1179 TELEPHONE answering machines.Government approved.New and used.Sa es Service \u2014Rental.342- MIRRORED Antique Windows, various sizes, $40.to $100.call 486-3549.FOUR Michelin tires, 165- 15XAS radial, Al condition; ping-pong table; stainless steel counter top and sink, one unit.Miscellaneous items.Call 483- SEWING Machine, Singer table model, zig-zag, model 413, 4 years old.$75.Perfect working condition.Call 937- 7316.BICYCLE 10 speed, brand new, adult size, $60; hand made pottery dinner set, 6 settings $150.Call 484-1640.RUGS: dining, living, bedroom, green, $150.Call 739-8563.C.B.Transceiver S.B.E.Trinidad 11 23-channel base station.Wood cabinet, ¢''H x 19'Wx §\u2019D.$175.84.Call evenings 684-4731 634-9665 C= COLONIAL crib and mattress $35., stroller $15, high-chair $10.; changing table with bath and baby support $35.; toilet seat $5.two dressers $30; desk and chair $20.Call 931: CREDENZA tor office or ; teak coffee table; sofa; paintings: drapes; bedspread; Bell & Howell Super 8 movie outfit, tripod; bookshelves; extra long desk: typewriter; etc.Call 482-1888.WASHING machine, Sanyo semi automatic.Excellent condition.Evenings: 341-7903.COLONIAL girl's desk and chair, white, $75.; night table $30.; chest of drawers $70.Excellent condition.Cal} 482-8799 after 5pm.CONTEMPORARY bedroom set with king-size bed $350.; | twin bed $25.; hide a-bed sofa with matching rocker and foot rest, like new $200.; many other small items.487-2291.Registered Appaloosa Colt 15 months old.Extremely well marked.Good family line.(Red Eagles Doublet).$1,200.or best offer.634-9665 684-4731 Standard Bred Mare Needs A Good Home Good tempered.Re sive mount.Ideal for beginner or experienced rider.English or Western.$200 or best offer.ali: 634-9665 684-4731 WROUGHT iron kitchen set; \u2018- mahogany bedroom set; chairs; buffet-bar.Large mirror; floor polisher; lamps; beaver coat.488-1690 week daysonly.Moving Bedroom set, Hespler mahogany, complete; living room tables, mahogany; lamps; all in excellent condition.Call 844-1981 ext.28; evenings 336-8516 or 488-3737.Moving Sale Modern wall unit, $850; kitchen set; stereo, drapes, efc.Must Sell!! 482-9457.MOVING from large home to apartment, innumerable household effects for sale.Call 738-4011.Must Sell Apartment furniture.Call 935- 4460 between 10 am to 12 noon.Moving G.E.trash compactor; living room sofa and chairs; girl's bedroom furniture; 2 girl's bicycles; double bed; spring and matiress; etc.484-4128.Firewood Dry seasoned hardwood.Delivered, $30.Call 484-8194.PALOMINOS: 2 well-trained riding horses, 12 years old.Must sell before October 1st.con Knowlton 1-243-5711 or 937- 6473.SONY T.C.330 reel to reel and cassette, with 2 lid speakers, completely portable $500.; 19- inch black and white television rtable, $45.; carpeting, dark lue, 3 feet x 17 feet, $25.Call 935-9581.MAPLE SYRUP Best Quality.Grade AA.Available in quarts, halt lion and gallon cans.Cail 35-9206.C= COLONIAL livin kitchen sets; Spanish and contemporary bedroom; marble tables; 20 inch color TV.3237513.Cid room and UPRIGHT piano.$300.Call evenings 486 2956.gg \u201cous ANTIQUITES a UNUSUAL Victorian sofa, red velvet, mahogany.$700.Call 488-0413.Dide-Atwvar Antiques WE WISH TO PURCHASE :- \u2014Fine Antiques \u2014Silver \u2014Furniture ~Doolton Figurines 481-9059 : 69 Westminster North Open Monday - Saturday 10 A.M.- 6 P.M.69 STAMPS & COINS TIMBRES ET MONNAIES | AM interested in buying Canadian mint stamps.465- 3682 EDUCATIONAL (73 INSTRUCTF French \"Ftench tutor gives.classes on weekdays.933-2227 after 1 am.DECOUVREZ votre avenir.En développant vos talents psychiques et spirituels.Clairvoyance; clairaudience; psychométrie; méditation ; Quérison; Spirituelle réflexologie; peinture d'huile.Information 331-2359, 681 4409, - 735-4912,- 769-3601.UNLOCK your future.Develop your psychic and spirituat gifts.Clairvoyance clairaudience - psychometry - meditation healing reflexology - oil painting.Information 331-2359, 681-4409, 735-4912, 769-3601.Tutoring Elementary school Math.Intermediate algebra* commercial Algebra.West- mount area or vicinity.484- MATHEMATICS tutor.Quebec qualified, ex- rienced graduate feacher.repares senior, junior high hoo! students.David, 737- = Attractive Tour New York City for Thanksgiving weekend.Excellent hotel.Please call 843-3894.FRENCH person wishes to meet interesting son who speaks English only, in order to learn English.482-4780.TRANSLATIONS Professional.English-French, French-English.Rush service available.Mme Beaulieu, 739 3304 (office hours).The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, September 1, 1977 - 19 = Wanted Piano By handicapped man.Limited income.483-2309 Oriental Rugs Wanted Used GREGORY'S Days: 932-4277 Eves: 738-4605 ABSOLUTELY neea aining room set, older style, from private home.Call 626-5838.Piano Wanted 481-8246 Will pick up usable furniture, electrical appliances, etc.ARARAT RUG Will Purchase Used Oriental Rugs Any size.Any condition.Highest prices paid.288.1218.WILL pick up usable unwanted articles, furniture, etc.Call 61-6233.SELWYN house school and sports clothes.Size 14.Call 488-7196.Typewriter Wanted in\u2019 good condition.75ogectric or manual.Call 935 WANTED to*purchase large _ desk and chair.Call 733-1212.PIANO wanted.Will ay cash.Call 272-8285, 274-5984 78 DOMESTIC PETS ANIMAUX DOMESTIQUES AFGHAN puppies.Excellent with children.Reasonable.Call 684-5490.NEUTERED male cat, 2 years, looking for good home.Owner going away fo school.Call 935-1703.GOOD home being sought for Tigger\u2019.A well-mannered adult male (neutered) cat.Quarantine regulations regretfully prevent him ac- companyin owners on Transfer.Please phone 684: 2 Siamese cats to give away to a food home.Must remain together.Call Brian 637-9772.Police display set for plaza A display of the MUC Police Department's various protection programs and equipment will be in the centre mall of Alexis Nihon Plaza from next Tuesday, Sept.6, until Saturday, Sept.10.exhibit, sponsored by the plaza\u2019s merchants\u2019 association will also be the launching point the MUCPD\u2019s public awareness program of the metric system, which will be used for speed limits starting this fall.Members of the crime prevention and drug squads will of also be on hand to distribute literature and answer questions.On the Atwater entrance, ground level at t be on display.The exhibit will he uad cars, motorcycles and ambulances will be open during regular store hours. 20 - Thursday, § % 4 * » Fy September 1, 1977 SE RVICE FOR \"HANDICAPPED: Handicapped persons who cannot use regugar bus service offered by the Montreal Urban Community Transportation Commission now have at their service the facilities of Minibus Forest Inc., which, for 50 cents per trip, will pick up passengers and deliver them to their destination.The service's specially-eqipped vans allow passengers to stay comfortably seated in their wheelchairs which are secured safely to the van\u2019s floor.Reservations can be made by calling 524-7410 or 524- 1949 at least two days in advance though regular service can be arranged as well.Priority is given to workers and students who use the service regularly.Reservations will be taken from 9 am to 5 pm weekdays and the service is available from 7 am to 11 pm weekdays though a seven-day service is being planned.Because there Is only one driver in each van, patrons with more than three stairs to negotiate must arrange to be at the sidewalk when bus arrives.Mutual aid system: Easier communication causes messy red tape When a municipality wants to pass a by-law, it must go through a series of complicated ste before the regulation actually comes into effect, and the whole procedure takes a great deal of time and effort for a great many city officials.Imagine, then, six municipalities wanting to approve the same by-law and start up.a program affecting all six ties.The complications are multiplied by more than six, given the co-ordination that is involved.Imagine further, for a moment, that the program has a deadline: then you are creating the situation which somehow was resolved, in time, last Wednesday evening.Westmount, Cote St.Luc, Hampstead, Outremont, St.Laurent and the Town of Mount Royal, which share a mutual aid firefighting pact, are now about to spend some $364,655 for a new communications system among the municipalities; and the burden has fallen upon West- mount to purchase the system on behalf of all the towns and cities.Still, it would seem that all six municipalities shared the headaches, given the resolution which Westmount\u2019s city council approved at its hastily-called meeting last week.Each of the cities had to approve by-laws to allow for establishment of the communications network, each ed by a formal notice of motion and followed by approval of the by-laws by the Quebec ministry of municipal affairs.The other five municipalities had to pass resolutions authorizing Westmount to go ahead urchase the system, then estmount had to pass the resolution accepting the tender and committing funds to buy it.And all of this had to be done by August 29, the agre: | deadline under whicl te 5 worked Westmou
de

Ce document ne peut être affiché par le visualiseur. Vous devez le télécharger pour le voir.

Lien de téléchargement:

Document disponible pour consultation sur les postes informatiques sécurisés dans les édifices de BAnQ. À la Grande Bibliothèque, présentez-vous dans l'espace de la Bibliothèque nationale, au niveau 1.