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The Westmount examiner
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  • Montreal :Examiner Publishing Company, Limited,1935-2015
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jeudi 30 août 1979
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The Westmount examiner, 1979-08-30, Collections de BAnQ.

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[" \\ .during July ne By ANDY DODGE The \u201caverage Westmount home is now selling for something over $120,000, according to figures based on the local July real estate transfers, which showed a record number of houses changing hands here.A total of 63 residential sales were registered here last month and the growth in the average price shows that even with such a heavy volume, prices of moderately valued homes surged to a new high in early summer.Bus law at council on Tuesday City council is expected to approve its well-publicized bylaw prohibiting buses from the top of Westmount Mountain on Tuesday evening at its statutory September session at 8 pm in the council chambers at city hall.Council also is expected to set a date for the auction of \u2018unclaimed objects\u2019 (including a crystal ball, radios, cameras and a typewriter) seized in raids in 1968 and 1970 by West- mount Police (see The Examiner, Aug.16).Notice of motion might be presented for two zoning bylaws, and lists of accounts are expected for the months of June and July.Tenders for the purchase of gasoline and diesel fuel, opened Tuesday by city staff, will be read to city council.One more council resolution will involve the new provisions of Quebec\u2019s Bill 39, which requires approval of quotations for purchases above $5,000 (see separate article).Council is expected also to approve a redivision on Oakland avenue, though details about this were unavailable this week at city hall.The statutory September session is delayed a day from its normal first Monday of the month by the Labor Day holi- like an early Indian summer.NEXT WEEK'S WEATHER By CAPT.ERIC NEAL AUGUST 30 to SEPTEMBER 5 Morning mists or heavy dews and clearing for noon.Afternoons bright and quite warm with widely scattered showers.Some years we have cloudburst conditions and flooded underpasses at this time, but otherwise this is a pleasant period with night and day temperature range of 5 and 25 with 45 hours of sunshine.Mainly sunny, although cool in the evenings for the harvest moon week to open a very agreeable fortnight, The average price of all residential sales in July was $114,077, but this came on sales of properties with an average Montreal Urban Community valuation of only $70,394, below the mean valuation of all one- and two-family dwellings in Westmount, $74,658.Those houses sold for an average markup of price over valuation of 62.1 percent; applying this markup to the average valuation brings the normalized average price to $121,021.Devon sale highest The interest in moderate- priced homes during the past two months follows several months in which higher-priced houses have dominated the listings, with prices in the range of $300,000 and up.In July, the sale of 76 Sun- nyside avenue to \u201cThe Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning\u201d (McGill University) for $225,000 is classed as non-residential, leaving the $220,000 sale of a more modern home at 20 Devon road as the highest price purely residential transfer in the month.Prices ranged from that high down to $46,000 for 29 Burton Continued on page eight Bad reception A radio antenna was broken off a 1979 Chevrolet and used to scratch the surface of the car between 7:30 am last Tuesday and 3:30 am last Wednesday.The car had been parked on Dorchester boulevard between Atwater and Clandeboye avenues.Damage was estimated at $150.3 ELIF POL CHEE DCE RE MME | PER fe ES i at ER A 20\u20ac AIRBORNE! This skateboarder was \u201cfour wheels out\u2019 last Thursday evening at Alexis Nihon Plaza during a demonstration of the sport preceding the provincial skateboard championships held there Saturday.To execute this manoeuvre, the skateboarder pushes himself along the floor on his board, shoots up the ramp, jumps into the turn and shoots back down, miraculously unharmed.He is, however, wearing protective equipment, just in case.As well as the spectacular, the demonstration included freestyle manoeuvres on the flat.The provincial champions named Saturday were Normand Roy of Montreal and Sophie Bourgoie of Drummondville.Both won a trip to the national finals in Vancouver on Tuesday, where Ms.Bourgoie won the national championship.Students coming from closed schools: It's back to school time, and WHS will be bursting By RICK KERRIGAN Most Westmount students head back to the classroom next week for another year of studies and while there is little major change or controversy on the local education scene as classes get under way, things at Westmount High School will be somewhat different this year.While space at many high schools under the jurisdiction of the Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal goes begging for use, WHS should be close to bursting at the seams this year as enrolment is expected to soar to about 1,140.Last year\u2019s enrolment was at about the school's \u2018\u2018comfortable capacity\u2019 of 1,050 but this year the local high school will be receiving students who formerly attended Monklands High School and the High School of Montreal, both of which have been closed by the PSBGM.Approximately 102 and 76 students respectively will be coming to WHS from the two Four nabbed Four young men were arrested by local police Sunday at 6 pm after being found in possession of hub caps which had been taken from a 1977 Ford parked on Ramsay road.The Montreal youths, aged 18, 19, 22 and 23 were discovered walking down a street near Ramsay road carrying the hub caps.PE closed schools but WHS Principal Peter Klym expects the total influx might, at final count, be closer to 200 to more than make up the decline in students from the school's former area of coverage.The influx of students from the former downtown and Notre Dame de Grâce schools continues the trend of recent years which has seen the local school take students from areas further and further away from Westmount itself.Non-West- mount residents, in fact, will make up almost half the school population this year.Staff changes The closing of the two old high schools and shift of students to Westmount has also led to various staff changes at WHS, resulting in a net addition of eight staff members at the school.Seniority within the PSBGM takes precedence over service at an individual school, so some WHS teachers have been declared surplus and their places taken by more senior teachers from the two closed schools.Six teachers from each of Monklands and the High School of Montreal are being transferred here, but four have left WHS, for the net gain of eight.The new teachers here from Monklands are: Cyril Fergus, Guy Gordon and William Jamieson in the French department; Alain Lefevre, English; George Novosel, history, and Richard Williams, mathematics.Coming from the High School of Montreal are: Alain Chantegreil, French; William Fraser, English; Garvin Jeffers, new head of the mathematics department; John Maskell, biology; Don Oakley, mathematics; and Mara Ruzitis, art.Ms.Rudzitis is the only woman among the new teachers.Dwight Kennedy will be the Continued on page two THE END IS NIGH The coming of September traditionally means the end of summer and a return to more mundane things, such as school.To mark the event, The Examiner reports on preparations at local educational insititutions for the return of pupils next week.Most stories can be found in the educational section, pages six and seven.Before school starts, of course, there is one more long weekend to enjoy.The Labor Day holiday will mean most stores, public buildings and businesses in the city, including the offices of The Examiner and Publi Hebdo/Weekly Adservice, will be closed Monday. 2 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 City of Westmount ) NOTE official GIDO CE BOARD LABOR DAY WEEK GARBAGE COLLECTION Householders are notified that there will be no garbage collection on Monday, September 3rd, 1979.In order to provide service, garbage will be collected as follows: Regular Collection Day: Monday, September 3rd Tuesday, September 4th Will Be Collected Tuesday, September 4th Wednesday, September 5th There will be no special pick ups on September 5th, 1979.E.A.McCavour, City Engineer.Next Scheduled City Council Meeting Tuesday, September 4, 1979, 8 pm.CITY HALL 4333 Sherbrooke Street West WESTMOUNT, P.Q.H3Z 1E2 935-8531 Monday-Friday, 8:30 am to 4.30 pm Fire (Business Calls) 19 Stanton 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.fe 935-9696 934-2223 935-3528 935-2066 935-8037 935-8218 @ EMERGENCIES : + Police - 934-2121 Fire - 935-2456 \u20ac - Stanchem gets federal contract WHS .Continued from page one new career counsellor, replacing Vincent Milardo, who lacked seniority and has accepted a position on the west coast.Mr.Kennedy worked part-time with the guidance department two years ago and this year will be full time, or will be shared with another school.The only new course to be added this year is business mathematics, which has been introduced in the business education program.The course will concentrate on practical applications of math in the business world and will not include geometry or algebra.e professional cards « The Stanchem Division of PPG Industries Canada Ltd.4999 St.Catherine street west, has been awarded a $40,906 contract by the federal government to supply lubricating oils to the department of national defence.The contract was one of 133 for amounts over $10,000 awarded to Canadian companies by the federal government during the week ending Aug.10.Total value of the contracts was $10,946,116, including one of $1 million to Canadian General Electric Co.Ltd.for repair and overhaul of aero engines and components, also for the department of national defence.aN.DISPENSING OPTICIANS Cavendish Mall, Cote St.Luc SN, Mildon Morriss Butler! FOUR LOCATIONS TO SERVE YOU 1460 Sherbrooke W.(corner of Mackay) 3550 Côte des Neiges (Seaforth Medical Building) 5016 Sherbrooke W.(near Claremont) CONTACT LENSES 842-3809 932-6806, 487-5131 482-8290 Chartered Accountants 1310 Greene Avenue north nf de Maisonneuve, \u2018Too busy to have fear\u2019 By ANDY DODGE \u201cYou're too busy doing what you know you've got to do to be concerned with fear.\u201d \u201cSomehow fear doesn't enter into it.It's not as romantic as I anticipated.\u201d These were the reactions\u2014in retrospect\u2014of Gordon Jackson, 4358 Westmount avenue, and Greg Gubitz of Mountain street in Montreal, safe at home after their recent tangle with a fatal storm in the seas off the Irish coast, which killed 18 yachtsmen and wrecked 23 boats sailing in the Admiral\u2019s Cup boat race (see The Examiner, Aug.16).Both were members of the | 10-man crew of the Scara- mouche of Warwick, a Bermuda-registered 48-foot yacht participating in the race not for the money, but the honor of placing well in one of yachting\u2019's most prestigious contests.Both found themselves caught in one of the worst storms in yachting history, but both were confident the size and strength of their boat, plus the expertise of the crew, most of whom had already sailed the Atlantic Ocean in a previous race, would save the boat from the disaster which wrecked the race.\u201cThe only time I became close to afraid was when the water started coming in places it shouldn't have,\u201d related Mr.Jackson, \u2018\u2018and I had to pump it out manually because it was coming in faster than the bilge pump could pump it out.\u201d \u2018\u2019There\u2019s no better bilge pump than a scared man with a bucket,\u2019 chortled his racing colleague, who joined him for lunch in downtown Montreal this week.Trying to compare the storm to one of the ever-popular disaster movies does not work, they pointed out, since they simply found themselves working hard, moving fast and hoping for the best.They never saw another boat until close to Plymouth harbor, where they arrived 24 hours after leaving the storm, and they were unaware of the horror which struck other, perhaps less seaworthy, yachts.\u201cWhen we heard about the deaths we really flipped out,\u201d recalled Mr.Gubitz.\u201cThe worst part was arriving in Plymouth, where mothers would come running up to us asking us if we'd seen their sons.It made me feel really terrible.\u201d Started in sunshine The Admiral's Cup, in fact, started in bright sunshine and calm waters off the Isle of - Wight, but winds picked up as the boats headed into the Irish Sea.About 6:30 Monday evening (Aug.13) the wind began getting stronger, and by 10 or 11 pm was \u2018\u2018really screaming,\u2019 according to Mr.Gubitz.\u2018We were excited when the wind came up,\u201d he said, \u2018\u2018because this boat does well in winds.\" \u201cIt\u2019s a heavy weather boat,\u201d added Mr.Jackson.Mr.Jackson still can remember the phosphorescent froth blowing off the tops of the 10-metre waves\u2014horizontally \u2014 and the sun shining through on Tuesday, defying the hurricane- force winds which were forcing the velocity needle to rest permanently on its 60-knot maximum.\u201c16 way just-cold and wet.\u201d Gordon Jackson, left, and Greg Gubitz found a spot of water outside yachtsman says of storm = ile Place Ville Marie on Monday, to inspire their recollections of the storm- wrecked yachting race.reported Mr.Gubitz.\u201cYou just couldn't get dry.\u201d Both, however, claim they \u2018were able to sleep a bit during the storm\u2014a rather startling fact considering it kept up until about noon on Tuesday.*Not much,\u201d commented Mr.Gubitz, \u201cbut I did sleep.\u201d The storm came as a surprise even to Mr.Gubitz, the more experienced sailor of the two, who had weathered some strong winds during the months before arriving in England.He was ready, though, with a lifejacket and lifeline he had designed himself.\u2018\u2018Not one of us wanted to turn back,\u2019 Mr.Jackson related, adding the owner, Blane Bowen of Toronto, to the list.\u201cThis was his (Mr.Bowen's) goal\u2014he\u2019'd been building up to this for a year and a half.\u201d The decision was made only 14 miles from the Fastnet Rock turning-point, just off the Irish coast (The Examiner erroneously reported 40 miles in its story two weeks ago).The winds showed no signs of abating, and the crew could not determine which direction the storm was headed in, nor its speed.One of the two four-man lifeboats had been lost, the small engine, used mainly as a generator for the ship's batteries, had broken down (not, ostensibly, because of the storm) and the crew was trying its hardest to conserve electricity.Because of that, the radio was not on and the men had no idea of the damage to other ships around them, except for a few flares at night and two passing jets, one of which contacted them briefly and suddenly flew off on a \u201cmayday\u201d call.A helicopter, seen later, confirmed that the crew was in good condition and passed word on to authorities, who notified Mr.Jackson's wife in Plymouth and Mr.Gubitz' mother in Montreal only hours before the boat sailed into port.Sailed 6,000 miles The 22-year-old Mr.Gubitz had been on the boat most of the summer before arriving in England to start the race.He joined up with Mr.Bowen in April, boarded the boat in Antigua and had sailed some 6,000 miles already, first to Bermuda, then Marblehead (Cape Cod) and then in the annual transatlantic race in which the Scaramouche finished first by the Measurement Handicap System (MHS) and third under the International Offshore Racing (IOR) system.Mr.Jackson, a 42-year-dld Westmount stock dealer, joined the crew only for the British races, and claims his sailing experience is limited to four outings on ocean-size yachts (three of them on the Scara- mouche), mainly cruising with his family in the Carribean.Last May Mr.Bowen, an industrial executive from Toronto, invited Mr.Jackson to join the crew of the Scaramouche; Steven Owen, 464 Strathcona avenue, dropped out after the transatlantic race, leaving space for the rookie sailor.Mr.Gubitz, who will be studying law at McGill University this fall but considers himself a committed sailor, had no hesitation when asked if he'd do it again.\u201cI'm going in the next Fastnet,\u201d he declared, referring to the midpoint of the course, \u201cand this time we're going to get around the rock.\" \u201cIf I were invited,\u201d Mr.Jackson announced, \u201cI'd say yes without thinking twice.\u201d Over 35 Years Serving Westmounters FINE PAINTING & WOODWORKIN All Types of Renovations (FREE ESTIMATES) Mrazik General Contracting Ltd.731-6640 A.F.LEPAGE WATCH REPAIRS ml COAST-TO-COAST REALTY SERVICE The Name Friends Recommend 935-8531 where were \\ ES i .| I~ la * v \u2014 cos = mes te CS CES SE ES a Gu = | they going?| The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week.Aug.21 1:10 pm: 215 Redfern, Reader's Digest, fire alarm, sprinkler system, (see picture last week); 1:10 pm: 55 Hillside, fire alarm (sprinkler system); 2:50 pm: 4592 St.Catherine, smell gas; 8:10 pm: 218 Redfern, alarm; 10:45 pm: 4813 St.Catherine, blanket smouldering (see story last week); Aug.22 4:30 am: 52 Academy, taken to QEH; 8:31 am: 35 York, electrical appliances; 1:41 pm: 600 Victoria, electrical appliances; 7:42 pm: 4000 de Maisonneuve, Apt.3210, burnt food; 8:47 pm: mutual aid to Outre.mont; 11:12 pm: 4040 Tupper, false alarm; false man Aug.23 11:30 am: 4000 de Maisonneuve, man taken to MGH; 12:10 pm: 250 Kensington, Apt.510, flood in bathroom; 4:18 pm: 5 Springfield, strange odor; Aug.24 4:37 am: 379 Roslyn, defective alarm system; 9:50 pm: 4646 Sherbrooke, Manoir Westmount, ambulance call; 9:55 pm: 1110 Greene, defective furnace; Aug.25 5:18 am: mutal aid to Outre- mont, 8:50 am: 4000 de Maisoneuve, Apt.2003, man taken to MGH; 9:50 am: 7 Park Place, Apt.7, flooded roof; 1:51 pm: 4192 St.Catherine, service call; 5:52 pm: 4000 de Maisonneuve, Apt.916, burnt food; Aug.27 10:48 am: Springfield and Met- calfe, fire in car; 1:45 pm: 4849 Sherbrooke, false alarm; 3:40 pm: 1 Westmount Square, ambulance call; 5:42 pm: 4849 Sherbrooke, defective alarm; Aug.28 1:10 am: 1 Rosemount, Apt.7, burst plumbing; _ 1:25 am: opposite.446 Victoria, sptfied gasoline:- * \u2014- ++\" +=\" \"Ur TW ESTMOUNT Examiner Thursday, August 30, 1979 - 3 Family Owned Since 1899 OHMAN\u2019S WE.3-4046 Certified Wotchmokers JEWELLERS 1216 Greene Ave.Car fire takes seven minutes Local firemen took just seven minutes from fire call to finish Monday morning when a Sun- nyside avenue resident's car burst into flames at Springfield and Metcalfe avenues, just a block from the Stanton street fire station.Fire brigade officials are not sure of the cause of the fire, which was found coming from the area of the transmission console beside the driver's seat.The call was received by firefighters at 10:48 and and the fire was out at 10:55.Damage was estimated at $300.CHIVALRY WITH A PURPOSE: One of the hazards of the Greene avenue \u201cexperiment\u201d is the presence of concrete blocks to designate the diagonal parking spaces, which, it seems, have become a nemesis for more than one driver.Here, a woman is helped by another motorist, who succeeded in lifting her \u2018hung up'' car off the block\u2014so he could occupy the parking space after she drove away.The following building permits were issued at city hall during the past week.Aug.21 .71 Belmont: for A.Nesbitt by i Building Alterations, alterations, $2,000; Aug.24 250 Lansdowne: for F.Souza by owner, alterations, $18,000; Aug.27 50 Sunnyside: for H.Black by Cassidy Electric, installation of emergency generator, $800; 629 Belmont: for D.Phillipaco- poulos by self, renovations to front entrance, $4,500; Aug.28 450 Claremont: for B.Henke- wick by owner, alterations, $1,000.THE SIGN THAT SELLS \u201cWe're here FOR Camera snapped A camera worth $450 and a purse containing $45, keys, personal papers and glasses were taken from the seat of a locked 1973 BMW which was parked on Greene avenue at Selby street Sunday between 3:20 and 4:20 pm.The left rear window had been forced open.Petty theft Petty cash thieves got away with $17 after breaking into a St.Catherine street automobile dealership sometime between 6 pm Aug.17 and 9 am Aug.20.The building was entered through a window, the petty cash box broken open and the contents removed.Anthony's VARIETY STORE Post Office Greeting Cards - Etc.Open 8 am to 9:30 pm (Closed Sundays) 4600 St.Catherine St.W.Cor.Abbott MUCTC BUS TICKETS when you need us.HI 9 LUMBER © AND PLYWOOD \u2018 FOR dT AND INDUSTRY ORDER DEPT WEEKDAYS: 7:30 to 5:30 P.M.SATURDAYS: 8:30 to 4 P.M.CALL 748-6161 In tightly knit communities, neighbours aren't faceless strangers.They're people you chat with in supermarkets, shops and school auditoriums.Royal Trust Real Estate Services is certainly one of these neighbours.You're familiar with the sight of our busy offices.And we're familiar with every part of the communities we serve.As responsible 4145 Sherbrooke Street, West neighbours, we at Royal Trust \u2014 manager, real estate agents, office personnel \u2014 would welcome the opportunity to be of help to you whether you're buying or selling property.We are, of course, a Canada-wide organization.But we mean it when we say we're here when you need us.Royal Trust REAL ESTATE SERVICES Telephone: 932-1112 James R.Quinlan, F.R.1., Manager aHADIAN COMMUNE r I HE Examiner Making not just your house but all of Westmount your heme 6\" \"4\" 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 independent, clean newspaper for the home, devoted to public service.Mail subscriptions in Canada, $8.50 per year; $4.50 half year; 2 years $16.00; 3 years, $22.50.Twenty cents a copy.Outside Canada, additional $2.50 per year Member of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association, Ontario Weekly Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4 - Vol.LI, No.35, Thursday, August 30, 1979 CCNA // hi dalldl {-] CIRCULATION PAID AAR SRR Westmount party line WHETHER or not there was any necessity\u2014other than satisfying the provincial régime\u2019s compulsion to centralize, codify and regulate\u2014to impose big-government style rules on municipal elections is moot.But the new law which will govern West- mount's next polling this November and procedures leading up to it poses some interesting prospects.The whole question of finances, for example.Westmount has managed to produce many city councils, most of them very good ones, without much worry in this regard.If candidates did happen to have some expenses, in the rare circumstances that they were opposed for office, it wasn't a big or worrisome thing.Personal pocketbooks very easily took care of them Or, if the prospective councillor felt lonely and wanted a friend or two to help, that's all there was to it.Now, says the law, he must have an \u201cofficial agent.\u201d Most intriguing of all is the business of municipal political parties.It would seem that clusters of candidates who may happen to be like-minded on certain issues should form parties.In.the past we simply chose persons thought to be best for the job and who could be relied upon to use their own individual best judgments in some form of consensus on each problem or issue as it arose.This always struck us, and probably most Westmounters, as the best way to have our city run.One advantage of our old \u2018system,\u2019 if you can call it that, was that it allowed for honest disagreement without making mavericks feel they were being disloyal or breaking the party line.Talking to members of the present council, all of whom have announced that they intend to run again for new four- year terms, there has been no declared intention to run as a \u2018party,\u2019 or even as a slate.They just happen to be prepared to desert hearth and home for long and sometimes tedious stretches of city business, receive phone calls from citizens at awkward hours at work or leisure, take abuse from angry groups, and rarely be given credit or thanks for doing some things right in behalf of the community.But maybe now that the law propels them in that direction Mayor Mac- Callum and his happy team of aldermen will form a party, though what they might call themselves could.be a problem.\u2018The Old Smoothies,\u201d \u2018\u2018Don\u2019's Doers,\u201d \u201cThe Establishment\u2019 or \u201cSix Guys His Worship could send out a Mayor's Letter asking citizens for suggestions.He could slip in a little electioneering to boot, thereby probably neatly circumventing one or more of the new regulations\u2014and to the howls of would-be opponents.And just who might some of those opponents be?We have yet to hear if the \u2018party in power\" is to be contested, but it will make for much more fun if whole parties coalesce, with colorful names in the process.\u201cThe Bicycle Party\u2019 would be timely which, if they wished to amalgamate with the conservationists, could call themselves \u2018The Recycle Party.\u201d Also still useful would be \u201cThe Dog Party,\" specially if it had two opposing wings, \u2018\u2019The Anti-dogs' and \u2018The Pro-dogs.\"\u201d And there always will be room in Westmount for an \u2018\u2018Amateur Architectural (Never Tear Anything Down) Party.\u201d Things also could be lively if there were an amalgamation of the various organized and informal district groups, either once or at present active, representing Somerville, Greene, Lower Westmount, Côte road, de Maisonneuve boulevard, and Summit Circle (the anti-bus brigade).À surefire formula for this force would be to just add a few more districts such as Priests\u2019 Farm, Gasoline Alley (The Boulevard), the Grosvenor-Victoria 20-mph League and the Clark Avenue Anti-hill Association and then they could call themselves the \u2018\u2018All- Westmount Party.\u201d But that, after all, is what the present and previous councils are supposed to have been\u2014representing everyone.So why change the system?Patronage and the Tories IF Tories quoted in one of the dailies over the weekend mean what they reportedly said, they must be given full marks for candor.They intend to switch federal government patronage from Liberal to Conservative supporters.We're not sure that this is the best or\u2019 most efficient way to run governments, but it would be naive to think that spoils don\u2019t go to victors.\u201canda Gal\" all might be apt.Perhaps What was] Jmtriguing 3 in the piece > Was the ee.idea that Quebec Anglophones are to get the short end of the stick in favor.of Quebec Francophone Tories, simply because the Clark forces feel this is the way to build up their base of support in this province.There wasn't anything particularly new in that: the English-speaking Canadians of Quebec have been quite used for some time to being regarded by whoever is in power in Ottawa as not of much political importance.After all, there are only about one million of us! So carried away, however, are the new lot of Ottawa power-brokers that, in discussing a party directive that every minister must have a senior Francophone adviser, possible unfairness to Anglophone Quebeckers was dismissed with the suggestion that we \u2018\u2018are represented very well by all the MPs from outside Quebec.\u201d That's odd.We were under the impression that we are represented in Ottawa by our own MPs whom we elected from here, such as Westmount\u2019s Mr.Donald J.Johnston.Or does he not count, just because he is a Liberal?If quoted correctly, this new gang in power is being carried away by the notion of patronage and, more important, by the their own interpretation of the meaning and practice of representative government.Wondrous diplomacy PERHAPS we are venturing a little beyond our constituency in commenting on the woolly incident in New York over the weekend when the Americans barred takeoff unto the third day of an Aeroflot jet for Moscow.However, Westmount has more than an ordinary proportion of seasoned air travellers who very likely have their own thoughts of how they might have felt had they been aboard that aircraft, either as Russian citizens returning home or as non-Russians travelling for business or pleasure to the USSR.They would have been exceedingly angry.The U.S.excuse was that the ballerina wife of another member of the Bolshoi company who had defected had not herself defected\u2014ignoring the clear possibility that, like other husbands and wives, the couple did not see eye to eye on this serious step.The clue to this likelihood surely lay in the fact that the Godunov couple had not defected together in the first place.One of the things we love our American cousins for is their abiding faith in the notion that their country, their system and their way of life are the best in the world and that all non-Americans, specially those under communist rule, surely must wish dearly to be Americans, too.This blind patriotism is admirable but frequently a source of much trouble to that great nation.It gets them into situations, such as on this occasion, when they look plain foolish.Imagine the fuss they would have made if that had been an American jet delayed at Moscow for three days because the Russians wanted to question a U.S.citizen aboard it! Let's face it, Washington can produce some most obtuse diplomacy.They were almost the last nation on earth to recognize the de facto government of mainland China apparently only because it was a communist régime.The other day they let go their UN ambassador, Mr.Andrew Young, because he talked to a representative of the Palestinians\u2014which seemed to be a logical and worthwhile thing todo and which must.eyentuallyd \u2018be, done if itdhere , , Organiza tion pe pia is ever to be peaee in the Middle East.(Mr.Young apparently fibbed about his conversation, knowing his masters\u2019 unreasoning attitude toward these radicalized, dispossessed people.) How the Americans comport themselves in their relations with other peoples is vitally important to us.After all, we are \u2018\u2018other people,\u201d too.As their closest friends as well, it does no harm to tell them when they act stupid\u2014which, we say, they did last weekend.Tae Wes taraunt Cosusues Fr wt Revar Sov Thirty-five Years Ago September 1, 1944 \u2018Westmount Protestant school officials announce there is no shortage here in regards to teachers for the Protestant schools, and all available teachers have been lined up ready for the opening of the schools on Tuesday, Sept.5.It is pointed out that although there is no immediate sign of lack of accommodation, non-resident pupils who attended Westmount schools during 1943-44 will be allowed to continue attendance but no new non-resident pupils will be accepted.This will be the first year that free textbooks will be available to all students attending grades 1 to 9.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago August 27, 1954 \u201cA Westmount pilot is currently organizing a Canadian association that will join forces with volunteer groups from other countries to actively fight communism.Albert Mah is at the head of a campaign here associated with the United States and led by Gen.Claire Chennault.\u2018We learned a good deal about communism,' says Mah, \u2018and in so far as the Far East is going to stand against communism it has got to stand on its own legs.Saving the Far Eastern peoples from themselves is not the best way of doing it.Don't let us have French and American and other peoples\u2019 soldiers fighting the Asiatic peoples\u2019 wars for them.That's demoralizing.\u2019 Fifteen Years Ago August 28, 1964 \u2018The city-owned parking lot on Greene avenue should open within the next two weeks, a city hall spokesman said Wednesday.Westmount city council has voted $83,200 in partial payment for four properties on Greene avenue, site of the lot.The buildings, from 1370 to 1380 Greene, were heavily damaged by a fire in January 1963.Westmount had hoped to open the lot before construction of a two-storey building began on the site of a private parking lot near Western but it was unable to proceed with expropriation for many months as it was unable to locate the owners.\u201d Five Years Ago August 29, 1974 \u201cMayor Paul A.Ouimet in a statement this week suggested that expert police professionals be retained to advise on the structure and operation of the Montreal Urban Community police force.Mr.Ouimet stated that the latest $10 million deficit in the police budget must be a matter of grave concern to all taxpayers on the Island of Montreal.\u2018It is apparent that the cost of operating the MUC police services is either uncontrolled or uncontrollable,\u2019 the mayor said.\u2018In either case it is absolutely jmperative that radar analysis of the Cet ske pr pp PT TS PnorisE The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, \"August 30, 1979 - 5 An \u2018old china hand\u2019 By JOAN CAPREOL BUSINESS-like Betty Ramsay is an authority on antique English china.A slender, forthright woman with a professional manner, Miss Ramsay is manager of the exclusive China Shop on Mackay street.She has worked there for 33 years and taught there for 27.\u201cIn the antique world it is not only your work but very often it becomes your hobby,\u201d said Miss Ramsay.\u2018I am with the China Shop which is owned by Fred Cowans, and has been in business since 1942, specializing in antique English pottery and porcelain.\u201d Miss Ramsay said she got into the china business at a particularly fortunate time as, right after the Second World War, quite a number of books specializing on the subject were coming out with new information about the English potters.\u2018By law the potters did not have to mark their wares with the factory name until 1891 when the MacKinley Act was put through the U.S.Congress stipulating that the country of origin must be placed on the piece,\u201d she said.\u201cThere is a tremendous amount of china unmarked so it becomes a challenge to identify the unmarked pieces.It is more or less a detective search and then one must recognize the different shapes, type of paste and glaze to establish which factory made the piece.The shapes help date a piece.\" Extremely interesting During the past 25 years, Miss Ramsay said, a great many archaeological digs near the old factories have gone on and there have been more and more books published with new information which has made her job an extremely interesting one.Miss Ramsay has a private china collection.\u2018Personally I have always been interested in the early blue and white English porcelains running from about 1760 to 1790,\u201d Miss Ramsay said.\u2018\u2019This period was experimental with the English potters as the secret of por- celain-making was held by the Emperor of China.\u201cThe potters knew that the porcelain was made from several clays but, like baking a cake, did one put the baking powder in or didn't one?So the early pieces are almost more interesting for their imperfections because until about 1800 the English potters had not found the true secret.The blue and white china is nearly all copying the little Chinese pieces which came to Europe in the tea chests when tea was being imported.Through the years I have collected this period.\u201d What is the most valuable china in the world?\u201cThere is no way of telling that care bmn Miss Betty Ramsay because there is German, French, Chinese, Japanese and English china and the early quality of all these demand one\u2019s respect and bring their own price,\u201d Miss Ramsay replied.\u201cThere is no way of determining that one country's culture is more valuable than another.\u201d Photo contest idea to catch bike thieves Sir: I have just had an idea that I will hastily pass on to you.(I am catching a plane.) My son\u2019s tricycle(l!) was stolen yesterday (Aug.20) from the bike rack outside the Westmount Library.After a three-quarter-hour search\u2014feeling certain no one would steal a tricycle\u2014I reported it to the park attendant and asked the librarian if she thought it really likely that a tricycle would be taken.Both the librarian and park attendant said, yes, it happens all the time! I was incensed.I hung a sign on the library bike rack warning people and reported to the police as I was told I should, and realized that nothing ever comes of hundreds of thefts of that kind.My idea is this: Would it be at all effective or successful to try to set up a sort of contest\u2014asking Westmount kids to take pictures in the park of a few key areas where bikes are frequently stolen from (i.e., the library) and see if a by- chance picture of a theft in action could lead to police tracing the thieves?Awards could be offered to photographers who come up with the successful photo (This theft was at 11 in the morning when park was full of people and anyone might have noticed.) Maybe it is far out, impractical, etc.But the complete apathy and nonchalance I met with concerning my son's stolen bike led me to imagine that something, some scheme, surely could be dreamed up.My haste is also due to fact that a scheme such as this should be started before school recommences, as this is prime stealing time according to the police.Susan M.Henwood 24 Melbourne avenue WESTMOUNT H3Z 1H?Examiner photo by RICK KERRIGAN What china does she recommend to a bride?\u2018\u2018Maybe I would recommend a dessert service,\u201d said Miss Ramsay.\u2018Today people use a dessert service or they use it for a decoration.If the bride wants some ornaments I would try to determine what her taste was.If she liked really tailored things or if she liked flowers or if she liked Imari type decor, which is the dark blues and oranges in the Japanese manner.\u2018 Miss Ramsay pointed to a pair of square 1810 Coalport fruit dishes in the Imari type decoration.Another piece was a Worcester fruit plate circa 1825 with a wide peach border and a bouquet of flowers in the centre.*'In the shop we also have papier mfché trays which people use on stands for coffee tables,\u201d she added.Teaching for 27 years Miss Ramsay has been teaching the history of antique English china in the shop for the past 27 years.Starting next month she conducts a course of an hour class each week for 10 weeks.(She gives the same lecture two different days a week.) \u2018I can have 15 or 18 people in the class,\u201d she said.\u201cI have had teenagers, young married couples and persons up to 80 years old.With the lectures being in the daytime it is primarily women who take the course, but surprisingly I have had quite a number of men who are interested in attending the classes.\" Miss Ramsay was born on Wood avenue and has lived in Westmount for her entire life.She is the daughter of Mr.and Mrs.Walter B.Ramsay.Her father owned the Ramsay Paint Company.Her younger sister lives in England.She was educated at Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School, attended a boarding school in Wimbledon, England, and a finishing school in Florence, Italy.Her first job was clerking in a shop.During the Second World War she was in the cosmetic business, teaching demonstrators how to apply make-up.Then in 1946 she joined the China Shop.Miss Ramsay was the president of the Canadian Antique Dealers\u2019 Association from 1972-74.She was the first woman to become president of an antique association in the world.Miss Ramsay has travelled extensively.She has visited European countries, Central America, Mexico and Jamaica.NEXT WEEK'S PROFILE: Gabor Sziasi says.It has been a quiet summer.Thankfully, politics has been at a low ebb, forgotten by most.1 pray that you enjoyed the lull because September will bring political infighting.And you, the voter, will be in the middle of all the debate.It is your vote the separatist and federalist will be going after.The National Assembly reconvenes on October 11.In September, however, is the all important enumeration.In November we face three by- elections in what I predict will be a mini- M.N.A.George Springate The up-coming storm referendum.Both sides will present their Canadian or \u2018\u2018let\u2019s-split\u201d arguments in earnest during those November by-election days.December will see Premier Lévesque announce the proposed wording of the question or questions to be posed on the referendum ballot.Though the law requires 35 hours of debate to discuss the wording, the PQ's majority in the house assures that the wording will be as René Lévesque so dictates in December.Prepare your ears for the up-coming storm. 6 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 F EDUCATION, Enrolment drop varies at elementary schools Westmount's two Protestant elementary public schools will welcome less students next week than they had enrolled at the end of school in June but the decline is hitting the two schools in varying degrees.Westmount Park School will lose some 50 students this year, dropping the enrolment some 14 percent from 350 to 300, well above the overall enrolment drop in Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal schools of 10 percent.Enrolment at Roslyn School is expected to drop only by about seven percent, from some 700 students last year to about 640 or 650 this year.Overall in the PSBGM schools, some 38,273 students are expected to enrol this fall, down 10 percent from last spring's 42,524.The decline is St.George's gets intern counsellor St.George's High School students will benefit this year from the services of a counsellor intern and an increased emphasis on study skills and work habits.The counsellor comes by way of the McGill University education department and will help students with course and career decisions.To improve study and work skills, the students will use special kits obtained by the school.Principal Norma Passeretti, who is starting her second year as head of the school, reports also that a health course is being added to the physical education program, requiring the hiring of a part-time teacher.Two new replacement teachers will also join the staff.Enrolment at the high school is 278 at this point, up from 273 last year and, according to Ms.Passeretti, applications are pouring in.At the administrative level, Mrs.Kathleen Piesina has been appointed vice-principal in charge of the elementary school, She replaces Héléne Pothier who was the temporary vice- principal for a year.A practical science course has been introduced in the elementary school and enrolment is up this year to 187 from 179 last year.spread almost evenly between the elementary and high school levels.Student population at West- mount Park last year was boosted by the addition of classes d'acceuil, special classes which are used to introduce new Quebec students to the French education system under the requirements of Bill 101.Those classes are being moved to another school this year, but Westmount Park will gain about 36 children in three special education classes designed to help them with specific learning disabilities and one class for those with multiple handicaps, including emotional disturbances.The only \u201csplit\u201d ciass at the school this year will be a combined grade 4 and 5.Last year there were four such classes involving every grade.The school will have two fewer teachers this year.Roslyn School will also have two fewer teachers this year and there will be five new faces on the staff.No new programs have been planned for the school and the French immersion courses, pioneered at the school, are unchanged for the present.Changes in policy by the Quebec ministry of education, however, could alter the nature of such instruction next year.Grades 5 to 8 most popular at The Study Enrolment at The Study private school this year has shown a bulge in grades 5 to 8 while the overall enrolment for the school remains stable at about 245 students.Headmistress Jean Scott says there have been a lot of applications for those grades and that they are \u2018absolutely packed.\u201d .Staff changes for this year include a new kindergarten teacher and a new member of the French staff, both are replacements.The in-school extra-curricular activities program has been expanded this year and students in grades 4 to 6 will spend one afternoon per week in such subjects as woodworking, sewing, cooking and crafts.Secondary students have a lunch-hour extra-curricular program.French program, computer new at Selwyn House Selwyn House School, 95 Côte St.Antoine road, has officially entered the computer age this year with the acquisition of a micro-computer to be used for educational purposes.The computer has three terminals and Principal Alexis Troubetzkoy says it will have applications in the math and sciences departments but, considering that few fields of human endeavor now are untouched by the computer, it should find applications in all areas of study.The computer will also be available to the boys for extra-curricular activities.Another innovation at the school this year is the introduction of a French program called \u201cLa 6ième.\u201d The course Eight-day cycle set at ECS Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp\u2019s private girls\u2019 school will be running its schedule on an eight day cycle this year to minimize individual subject time lost by holidays.Headmistress Jean Murray points out that most single day holidays fall on Monday or Friday and result in considerable lost time to subjects taught on those days.The eight- day cycle, which has been adopted by several other private schools, will spread the lost time over all courses.Miss Murray said it also will benefit those girls who participate on school sports teams and often miss classes on the same day each week.In another schedule change in the junior school, the previous half school day on Fridays has been lengthened but, to keep the same number of minutes each week, students will be dismissed slightly earlier every day.Miss Murray reports that enrolment for this year remains stable at about 285 to 290 and that there are no staff changes or new academic programs.has been in the planning stages for about a year and a half and Mr.Troubetzkoy stresses that it is more than just an immersion course.Boys in the sixth grade will receive instruction in science, math, social studies, music and art in French and this will be supplemented by an \u2018\u2018ex- Short hours next week at St.Leo's St.Leo's School will open briefly next Wednesday morning, the children staying only 90 minutes between 9 o'clock and 10:30 am.School hours on Thursday and Friday will be 9 to 11:30 am and 1 to 2:45 pm, then the following week normal hours will be in effect.The school expects to have three extra classes d\u2019acceuil for non-Francophone youngsters entering the Catholic school system this year, since more space will be available now that adult language classes have moved to St.Paul's School (see last week's Examiner).The overall \u2018\u2018catchment area for normal studies at St.Leo's remains unchanged, however.Registration is going on this week, but officials yesterday were not ready to estimate final enrolment figures.Mlle.Madeleine Downs continues as principal of the school.Roslyn sale on Thursday The annual school supply sale sponsored by the Roslyn Home and School Association will be held next Thursday, Sept.6, all day, at the school.Regular school supplies will be available, as will all supplies recommended by teachers in all classes at the school.Funds will be used by the Home and School association for activities during the year.pression orale\u2019 course given by an \u201canimatrice\u2019\u201d who is a theatre specialist.As part of the program's French culture, appropriate outings and excursions have been planned.There will also be exchanges with Francophone students and each boy will spend one week living with a Francophone farm family.According to an outline of the program in the school's newsletter, the course aims \u2018\u2018to have the boys view French not as a subject taught in school but as a communication medium with which one can study and learn.\u201d Enrolment at the school remains at about 430 and one additional and three replacement teachers have joined the staff.Preschool Involves parents too The back-to-school season isn't just for those children of school age.Preschoolers can also get in the act, as can their parents, by joining a cooperative nursery school, such as the Westmount Preschool which operates out of West- mount Park School.The local preschool has a program of activities four mornings a week for three-year- olds and five afternoons a week for four-year-olds.Activities include field trips away from the school.The local preschool is a cooperative one, meaning it is organized and run by the parents.Trained teachers are employed to direct the program of psychological, emotional, intellectual and physical development and parents regularly spend time in the classroom to join in the fun.Further information about the Westmount program is available by calling 484-2452 and information about the cooperative philosophy is available from the Quebec Council of Parent Participation Preschools, 457-5291.are you SURE their shoes are being properly fitted TTAB AOS FOOTWEAR FOR CHILDREN pp\" offering responsible supervision in the fitting of children\u2019s footwear WESTMOUNT 4930 A Sherbrooke St., West.(East of Claremont Ave.) 486-2345 UTILITY OR \u201cEVERYDAY\u201d SHOES ® ORTHOPEDIC FOOTWEAR ® CASUAL SHOES @ PARTY SHOES GYM SHOES @ RAINBOOTS @ OVERSHOES © SLIPPERS SAVAGE + BUSTER BROWN « START-RITE « KAUFMAN « DAVIS ¢ BONNIE STUART (England) {Twe Convenient Locations to Serve you) ( Portugal) WIDTHS B-C - D - E - EE - EEE - EEEEE VALOIS 45 Donegani Ave, (East of Valois Station) 697-0410 74 OPTIONS ARE You 15, 16, 17, 18 years old?e Out of School?e Ready to learn?Or ready for a job?e Ready to work hard for 13 weeks?THIS PROGRAM AIMS TO HELP YOU: Return to a High School as a full-time student OR Find a job OR Enrol as part-time student THE PROGRAM Lasts for 13 weeks and includes English, French, Math training, Career Exploration, Community Projects, Drama and Art.Telephone: LINDA DONNELLY Protestant School Board of Greater Montreal 482-6000 Ext.269 Application Deadline: September 21, 1979 7 PREP SCHOOL =.» = _/ \\ Registration now open for Day School commencing Sept.10, 1979 ELEMENTARY: Grades 1 to 6 SECONDARY: Grades 7 to 11 Preparation for Provincial Exams Small classes enable the school to offer a maximum of individual attention to all students from Grades 1 to 11 4240 Girouard Ave.489-7287 Brochures on Request RATHBONE THEATRE FOR CHILDREN, TEENS & ADULTS Teenage Workshop Courses and Practical Experience in All Phases of Theatre Arts FALL COURSES starting OCTOBER '79 Personally supervised by PAULINE RATHBONE, L.G.S.M.ENROLL NOW: CALL 482-7074 Ministry of Education Permit No.749975 FRENCH 15 Weeks Twice Weekly at CONGREGATION SHAAR HASHOMAYIM Leisure Institute Members and non-members are welcome For Information Call: Bunny Kirsch, 937-9471 ae ua 828000000000 The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 - Mrs.J.H.Doupe, M.Ed,, Principal 3495 Simpson Street, Montreal, Quebec, H3G 2J7 (Tel: 935-2644) Trafalgar School for Girls EDUCATION, == WEST END PLAY GROUP Established 1947 | Director - Sylvia Smith A Co-Operative Nursery Daycare Children 2-5 years Full and half-day sessions e Outdoor playground Kindergarten after school, rich program, lunch, swimming, skating, French, art, music.2880 MADISON 6680 vernment subsidies available 486-7940 Director \u201cDance Center\u201d John Abbott College FALL SESSION starting week of October 1st CERAMICS: handbuilding, wheel, moulding.design.TEXTILES: batik, lacemaking, quilting, printing on fabric.wearable art, floor loom weaving, functional weaving, upright loom weaving, spinning.dyeing VISUAL PERCEPTION: water-colour.history of art, history of costume OTHERS: jewellery, stained glass.COURSES FOR CHILDREN: play and clay, art and clay.multi media, draw ing, painting, ceramics, textiles ASK FOR OUR BROCHURE 488-9558 VISIT OUR SHOP AND GALLERY design, drawing.painting., 350 Victoria Ave, .DOWNTOWN Classical Ballet \u2014 Jazz \u2014 Jazzercise and Disco Musical Comedy Tap \u2014 Dance Orientale (Belly Dancing) Free Style Disco All Levels - Elementary - Intermediate and Advanced {minimum age 11 years) Masonic Bidg.2295 St.Marc (corner Sherbrooke, Guy Metro) Studio: (Va Brochure: 932-8221 For Appointment Min.of Ed.Teaching Diploma No.11153-73 \\ Centre de formation professionals J Cote st.Luc MONTESSORI SCHOOL Registration 1979-80 French or bilingual classes 7 locations \u2014 Transportation 5818 Westminster, Cote St.Luc 481-9764 FO INFORMATION 272.7040 GREAT NEWS!!! DOROTHY DAVIS sn: VIOLET WALTERS directors of the CHILDREN'S THEATRE Phone now for application form ANNOUNCE NEW STUDIOS 2225 REGENT AVE., N.D.G.A | » 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 TRANSFERS .Continued from page one _ avenue, the same price obtained for 4 Burton in June and otherwise the second-lowest sale price here this year (4915 de Maisonneuve boulevard, nearby, went for $45,000, also in June).The July sales also included the highest markup of price over MUC tax valuation of the year, 182.7 percent, for the relatively modest-appearing brick dwelling at 467 Côte St.Antoine road.The lowest markup, 12.4 percent for 4836 de Maison- neuve boulevard, is the highest minimum for any month this year.The house, by the way, was sold by Runo Developments Ltd., which was unable to include it in plans for an apartment building at the eal Estate By EUGENE A.ZINAY, F.R.L, Manager, Westmount Branch A.E.LePage (Quebec) Inc.Homeowners insurance is great.It can protect you against almost any conceivable damage or accident that can happen in, on, around and even away from your home.But do not make the mistake of thinking that your homeowners insurance will pay off your mortgage upon the breadwinner\u2019s death.It won°t.For this type of protection, and it is desirable, you must purchase a certain type of term life insurance policy for a period of time equal to the length of the mortgage loan.The premiums on such policies are relatively low\u2014in fact, they are about the lowest cost life insurance policies you can MORTGAGE PROTECTION (QUEBEC) INC., 1367 Greene Ave., Westmount, phone 935- buy because the insurance protection decreases with the reduction of your mortgage.Most insurance companies will tailor a plan to fit your needs and in many cases you can have the payments included in your mortgage payment to the bank.Check with your insurance agent and he will be able to give you the details regarding this protection.If there is anything we can do to help you in the field of real estate, please phone or drop in at A.E.LePAGE 8541.We're hers to help! 20 Devon highest residential, $220,000 corner of de Maisonneuve boulevard and Victoria avenue.Record volume The 63 residential sales are the most recorded in the past seven years, beating out the 59 of July, 1973, and the 57 in July last year.Several of those sales, the listings show, involved families selling one Westmount home and moving into another.On the non-residential side, corporations are listed as the purchasers of four single- family dwellings.These are not counted in residential averages because the demand situation often is different for various reasons.Sale of a three-family dwelling at 336-40 Grosvenor avenue constituted the only markdown of the month, selling for slightly less than its $58,000 valuation.Other nonresidential sales involved a rooming house at 33 Prospect street and the land in front of 2 Forden avenue, which has been subdivided by the city and is to be developed soon, according to city officials.Totals for month The listings below show 46 residential sales for which prices were registered during July, involving a total price of $5,204,200 for property PPP INT EREALTY.PPPPP rr P ddd 4 \u2019 3591 rue Université Montréal H3A 2B1 Ann Rolland Téléphone: 288-5702 Rés.: 989-1421 eco} A.E.LEPAGE TC The name friends recommend! Ft evaluated at $3,192,300.The other sales include nine which sold for \u201ca dollar and other considerations'' and eight for which no details are available.Those carried a total price tag of $1,982,650 for homes evaluated at $1,242,550.The resulting $7,186,850 which changed hands in residential sales during July is almost $2.5 million over the previous high monthly gross in Westmount, in July last year.The seven priced nonresidential listings were buttressed by two others which brought the total in that category to $1,158,000 for property evaluated at $787,400.Beyond these, three homes with a total valuation of $147,875 changed hands through estates, and another assessed at Continued on next page 29 Burton lowest price, $46,000 Architect Designed Home, $350,000 Built for present owners.Secluded location.Semicircular living room with outstanding view.Many luxurious and unique features in this 4-6 bedroom home.Elegant detached stone residence.5 bedrooms.View of city.Sunken living room.Indoor pool.Edith Berman 935-8641, res.935-4205 You'll Find the Best Westmount Homes Behind Our Signs CY) Agent of the Week .Guy Labrecque Forden Avenue, $249,500 Elegant and spacious 13 room Ruth Sinclair 935-8541, res.935-9796 home.Ideal for entertaining.Tastefully renovated.3 1/2 WwW C Sell bathrooms.2 fireplaces, sun- e an deck, garden.Garage.Lynne Robinson 935-8541, res.933-0975 Ursula Clabon 733-6745 Your Home Faster And For More Telephone us for a professional market analysis without obligation to you, indicating the present worth of your home on today's market.935-8541 We have been serving Westmount clients since 1910.1367 Greene Ave., Westmount Must Be Sold! $138,000 Bright modern home.9 rooms, cross hall plan.Open fireplace, ground floor den and powder room, double garage.Françoise Bibaud 935-8541, res.482-1143 Exciting Listing Ultra modern split level bungalow.Air- conditioned.Double garage.Beautiful pool, cabana area overlooking city.3 + 1 bedrooms.Shirley Cohen 935-8541, res.833-3769 Deluxe Stone Bungalow 1 Forden Avenue.\u2018\u2019His & Her\u2019 bathroom in master suite.Panelled den.Garage.Co- M.L.S.Mrs.Rita Anne Conn 935-8541, res: 937-4462 The Westmount Exa er x rs 4836 de Maisonneuve lowest residential markup, 12.4% $47,150 was passed between family members.July details Details of the July transfers, listed alphabetically by street, are as follows: 35 Aberdeen: from Mrs.Louise Bouvier to George Gary Mackis, sale price $195,000 (MUC valuation, $106,000); 524 Argyle: Mrs.Charles James Wakefield to Mrs.Irwin Barry Gerchicoff, $117,000 ($70,000); 593 Argyle: Clifford S.Malone to Les Immeubles Marken Ltée, $200,000 ($115,100); 29 Barat: Mrs.Gretchen Morecroft Home to Conrad Porteous, $119,000 ($80,400); 641 Belmont: Mrs.Severino Mastromonaco to Mr.and Mrs.Harold Lehrer, $148,500 ($92,600); 667 Belmont: Mrs.John Edward Greenberg to Mrs.David Goltzman, $115,000 ($71,800); 777 Upper Belmont: Gonzalo Chong to lan Greenberg, $146.000 ($93,550); 29 Burton: Mrs.Viola St.Clair Mcintosh to Mr.and Mrs.Jacques Jacquet, $46,000 ($30,000); 54 Chesterfield: Michael J.Hayes to Hartland William Price, $110,000 ($50,200) 381 Claremont: John Harward Somerville Doupe to Nicholas Theodore, $64,000 ($39,500); 428 Clarke: Mrs.Goldie Leah Miller to Mrs.Sergio del Pozo, $99,000 ($54,150); 533 Clarke-3262 The Boulevard: Mr.and Mrs.Brian H.Fripp to Mrs.Alan Brown, $119,500 ($73,800); 629 Clarke: Mrs.Richard Charles Blundell to Mrs.Roy L.Heenan, $1 and other considerations ($123,100); 74 Columbia: Public Curator of Quebec to Jules B.Desrochers, $56,200 ($48,950); 467 Cote St.Antoine: Trevor Smith Mears to Mrs.Alan Strachan, $109,000 ($38,550), 649 Côte St.Antoine: Mrs.Maria Lewan- dowski to lgtidar Gilani, $93,000 ($60,800); 31 de Casson: Judge Emmett Joseph McManamy to André L.Demers \u201cin trust,\u201d $110,000; André L.Demers \u201cin trust\u201d to Les Placements Immocorp Ltée, $1 and cons.($83,100); 48 Delavigne: Mr.and Mrs.Alan Henry Mitchell to Montreal Trust Co., $175,000 ($99,300); 55 Delavigne: estate Allan Anderson Aitken to A.Keith Ham, $1 and cons.($116,600); 4445 de Maisonneuve: Mrs.Douglas Hugh Mitchell to Terence Reid, $1 and cons.($54,150); 4836 de Maisonneuve: Runo Developments Ltd.to Mr.and Mrs.Frederick C.C.Andrews, $63,000 ($56,050); 20 Devon: David M.Marcus to Habib, Fady and Mrs.Joseph Habib Acar, $220,000 ($138,450); 22 Edgehill: Mrs.Harry Bowler to Mrs.Kenneth James Morrison, $1 and cons.($99,450); 38 Edgehill: Mr.and Mrs.James Pitblado Continued on page 12 a> wl alii Alli There is more REAL ESTATE in the THE WESTMOUNT Examiner CLASSIFIEDS (page 14) and on page 3 miner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 - 9 Squatters\u2019 house sold The once-controversial home at 74 Columbia avenue moved out of the hands of the Quebec Public Curator last month, thus closing the case involving squatters who were evicted from the house by court order last spring.The row-house had been the property of Mrs.Gladys Wilkins Harvie, who was committed to the Douglas Hospital suffering from senility.Her property was turned over to the public curator for management but was occupied for 18 months by Mr.and Mrs.Ivar Rushevic.Though the Rushevics at one time offered to buy the house, they refused to meet the curator\u2019s asking price.CENTRAL MONTREAL 6 room apartment prestigious building across from the Ritz Carlton Hotel.Top floor, bright, quiet, open fireplace.Low carrying costs.Mrs.Pauline Bates, 731-6817.HAMPSTEAD JUST REDUCED TO $149,000.00.Detached Dutch Colonial home with sunken living room and marble fireplace.Spacious separate dining room overlooking mature garden, bright knotty cedar kitchen with separate dining area.4 bedrooms with sundeck off master, 2 bathrooms, finished playroom.M.L.S.Offers invited.Mrs.Lydia Rumin, 737-4951 or 731-6817.BAIE D'URFE WATERFRONT Early Canadian home on Baie d'Urfé, Circa 1787.One of Quebec's classics, this charming stone residence was carefully restored, renovated and enlarged in 1970, yet retains its distinctive architecture.Located on the waterfront, and only 30 minutes from downtown Montreal, it has 2 swimming pools, indoor and outdoor, sauna, and lighted tennis court.This superb home has 5 bedrooms, 3 bathrooms, 2 powder rooms, and an artist's studio.120,000 sq.ft.of land.Now $295,000.For appointment, please call Mr.Frank A.Norman, 731-6817.FRANK A.NORMAN & CO.LTD.Licensed Broker 731-6817 FRANK A.NORMAN & CO.LTD.731-6817 Licenced Broker AEGIS taf Li Le in most SPECIAL! SPECIAL! No other house offers what this one does.Eight bedrooms, 11 bathrooms, indoor pool and international squash courts plus many other features.This magnificent home is fully air conditioned, humidified.M.L.S.$485,000.Call Mrs.F.LeSage Wood- fine, 739-6863 or 731-6817.5 0 ADJACENT WESTMOUNT Delightful townhouse with separate living and dining rooms, 4 bedrooms, modern kitchen with eating area.Small garden, garage.Exclusive $79,500.Mrs.Pauline Bates, 731-6817.«HOMES OF DISTINCTION 10 - The Westmount Examiner, SUMMER PRIZES: The Westmount recreation department summer playground program held its closing event last Thursday afternoon.There was an exhibition of the youngsters' art work done during the summer and a costume contest.Winners of the different art categories were, left to right in rear, Silking Tse, clay creation and design; Francois Adams, best overall; left to right in front, Brent Walsh, popsicle stick art; Wendy Tse, clay modelling; and Jennifer Alderson, coloring and drawing.Miss Alderson also won first prize for her costume.The summer program is supervised by Beverly Adalabu Adams.Thursday, August 30, 1979 F SPORTS Mike Fisch seeking spot on football team A local resident who won an athletic honor letter at Lower Canada College last year will be a candidate this fall for the 1979 Dartmouth College freshman football team.Mike Fisch, son of Mrs.Jean Fisch, 4501 Sherbrooke street west, will be a member of the class of 1983 at the Hanover, New Hampshire college.He plans to major in economics.First-year players are ineligible for varsity football action under Ivy League rules so Mr.Fisch will seek a spot on the freshman team.Dartmouth's varsity team took the 1978 Ivy League championship.Mr.Fisch was a member of the LCC football squad which took the 1978 city championship with a 10-0 record.The six-foot, two-inch athlete also played on the school's championship basketball team.Marathon man Among local runners who finished the full 26 miles of the Montreal Marathon Saturday was Paul MacLaren, 18, of 638 Belmont avenue.The race was his first marathon, though he has run in other contests of up to 10 miles, and he finished even though he slipped and fell at one point and was forced to walk the last six miles.He is a student at Marianopolis College.Non-Westmount bike path offers pleasant riding Westmounters are soon to have their own bicycle bath on Maisonneuve boulevard, but hose looking for reasonably / safe longer routes will have to look elsewhere.They needn't look too far, however, and can, in fact, use the new Westmount path as a starting point for an enjoyable sojourn that will provide a bit more exercise than a ride from Greene avenue to Prince Albert on the new bike path.Follow de Maisonneuve out of By RICK KERRIGAN Westmount and, if you're riding in the evening, you'll encounter little traffic.It is not unusual on the section of the street between Decarie and its eventual end at Sherbrooke and West Broadway to have no cars either in front of or behind you for five minutes at a stretch.A good breeze is usually blowing from the west to cool you and keep the air relatively clean.The only problem on the Montreal portion of de Maison- neuve is the constant coverage A DEPENDABLE NAME SINCE 1937 se MONTREAL.w o LOW COST DAILY RENTAL Daily\u2014Weekly\u2014Weekend Specials e LONG TERM LEASING All models\u2014including service, insurance, license, snow tires, replacement car We will purchase your present car.489-4994 (long term) 489-6885 (daily rental) Conveniently located at: 5333 St.James St.W.(at Decarie) We fully maintain our cars during the lease $0 we always have exceptional used cars for sale.See our large display at the above location.: Catherine of some sections of the road by freshly broken glass.Keep and eye out and, if you should ride through one of those sparkling patches, stop and check your tires for lodged pieces of glass.Through Montreal West When you reach Sherbrooke street, turn left (heavier traffic here) and then left again down Elmhurst.Turn right on St.Jacques and continue through Montreal West and descend Avon into Ville St.Pierre where the street becomes St.Jacques again.Care should be taken through this municipality as the street is in as bad shape as Westmount\u2019s Stand there are numerous side streets.Once clear of Ville St.Pierre, you can continue fairly car-free along St.Joseph through Lachine until you come to 6th avenue.Turn left over the bridge and then left on St.Patrick, cycle about 100 yards and there's the Lachine canal bike path ready to whisk you home with the wind at your back.The scenery may not be exactly pastoral, but the backs of the factories and refineries have their own stark beauty.The path is not complete yet and you will be detoured on to roads for very short sections but the signs will bring you back to the path.You can follow the path right down to the harbour or get off at the Charlevoix street bridge.Take the side streets until you reach IN BERMUDA TOURNAMENT: Robert Waish, 16, of 24 Anwoth road, recently competed in the third annual Atlantic International Junior Golf Championships in Bermuda.The local golfer was one of 41 boys who entered the intermediate division (ages 15 to 17), finishing 30th with a 72-hole total of 363.His scores showed consistent improvement, going from 95 the first day to 92, 89 and 87 for the rest of the tournament.A total of 78 boys from Canada, the U.S., Bahamas, England and Bermuda played in the tournament's three divisions.New rules for purchases New regulations in Quebec's Bill 39 will require Westmount city council to approve a resolution approving any city purchases of more than $5,000 but less than $25,000, city officials explained this week, though public tenders will not have to be called for purchases under $25,000.Under previous regulations, formal tenders were required for any anticipated expenditure St.Antoine and thence to Atwater.If you go north on Atwater at about 8 o'clock on an evening when there is an event at the Forum, you will encounter the traffic of crazed sports fans or equally crazed rock music fans.It is not a safe place for a bicycle.An alternate route is up Greene avenue.This route is relatively safe at \u2018any time of day but is particularly enjoyable in the evening or early morning on Saturday or Sunday.It is about 20 kilometres long.because every child has the ¢ right to smile ey over $10,000, so while the limit for tenders is up, the minimum purchase involving council approval has been drastically lowered.City staff will be required to contact various distributors to get simple price \u2018quotations\u2019 within the $5,000 to $25,000 range, then must show the quotes to council.If council decides not to accept the lowest offer, it must seek provincial approval.Council, it is reported, will be passing a resolution involving this regulation on Tuesday.Peel Cycle Centre Professional Cycle Service Now FREE Pick-Up and Delivery Anywhere In Wesimount Phone 937-2896 1832 St.Catherine West {Nour St.Marc) Free 30 Minute Parking The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 - 11 EEE EE, a ot A JOR! iow ARD RAVE A BALL 10% discount until September 231d Squash balls, racquetball, highballs, restaurant and lounge, day care facilities and just plain fun.Add our unique fitness for children.Plus inter-club tournaments, programmes, and our superb social parties, Sunday brunches, mixed round A 3 = facilities\u2014and you have a club like no robins and much, much more.other in town.Before you join (or rejoin) an ordinary 12 squash and racquetball courts, club, you should see the Cavendish Club.indoor & outdoor jogging track, swimming Come and talk C ALL pool, exercise gym, sauna, licenced to us.Call now.4897543 CAVENDISH CLUB 6585 Mackle Road at Cavendish Cote St.Luc.Tel.489-7543 12 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 197 TRANSFERS .Continued from page nine to Mrs.Michael J.Hayes, $1 and cons.($102,200); 346 Elm: Robert Lisser to Robert St- Martin, $88,500 ($50,600); 495 Elm: Mrs.Peter Frederick MacLean Saegert to Mrs.Marvin Rosenhek, $130,000 ($61,700), Land\u2014Forden and Cote St.Antoine: Mrs.Phrixos B.Papachristidis to Prime Development Ltd., $67,500 ($61,400); 38 Forden Crescent: Gerard A.Limoges to Arthur Sanft, $159,000 ($101,800); 338-40 Grosvenor: Hans Mueller to Mr.and Mrs.Badr Farid, $58,000 ($59,650); 382 Grosvenor: estate Henderson Black to Mr.and Mrs.John F.Brennan, $55,000 ($40,500); 458-60 Grosvenor: Mrs.Werner Sykora to Mr.and Mrs.Michael Browne, $105,000 ($50,050), 543-45 Grosvenor: Mrs.Charles Robert Christopher Tayler to Mrs.Isabel Wartelle, $106,000 ($65,250), 647 Grosvenor: Mrs.Walter Creighton Leggat to Richard L.Rochester, $1 and cons.($75,600); 73-5 Hallowell: Line Pujos to Baron Von Braun, $1 and cons.($49,600); 33 Holton: Mrs.Harold William Price to Mrs.Elizabeth Anne Eberts, $125,000 ($84,950); 4% Holton: Mrs.George Charles lan Burgess to Catherine McGarrigle, $89,000 ($59,550), 321 Kensington: Lawrence Weir Davis to Mr.and Mrs.Michael Miller Peterson, $95,000 ($77,700); 432 Lansdowne: John Murray Skelton to 467 Côte St.Antoine highest markup, 182.7% Mrs.Frederick L.Laflamme, $76,000 ($55,550); 448 Lansdowne: Barrie Drummond Birks to Mr.and Mrs.Ramesh Mirchandani, $98,000 ($54,250), 484 Lansdowne: Johannis Adrianus Jasper Meyers to Mr.and Mrs.Robert Ferguson, $87,500 ($53,400); 548 Lansdowne: Ronald Baird Seaman to Gordon Turner, $75,000 ($46,750); 804 Upper Lansdowne: Mr.and Mrs.Harold C.Lehrer to Mr.and Mrs.Jacques Seigneuret, $120,000 ($66,950), 325 Metcalfe: Norman Janelle to Dr.Jelena (Helen) Papich, $1 and cons.Established 1913 James H.Macintyre Ltd.D.Gardner Pres.Phone 482-4924-5 320-A Victoria Ave.Westmount ($49,150); 4400 Montrose: Irving Caruso to Enrico Moscatelli, $215,000 ($100,300); 419 Mount Pleasant: Roger D.Landry to Mrs.Peter Frederick MacLean Saegert, $132,000 ($69,850); 19 Oakland: Hussein A.Enan to Vladimir Kurganshky, $115,000 ($87,300); 33 Prospect: Alexander McKee to David Tremble, $52,500 ($43,200), 29 Renfrew: Mr.and Mrs.Timothy Robert Price to Mr.and Mrs.Paul Alfred Belanger, $112,000 ($75,800); 49 Rosemount: John Francis Brinckman and Penelope Ann Clark to Peter F.Trent, $137,500 ($117,550); 319 Roslyn: Kenneth Whyte McArthur to Duart W.Farquharson, $1 and cons.($54,550); 515 Roslyn: Liviu Theodoru to Mr.and Mrs.William Charles Tostevin, $205,000 ($102,450); 702 Upper Roslyn: Mrs.John Graham to Mrs.Wolf Zittman, $200,000 ($108,200); 739 Upper Roslyn: Arthur Sanft to Mrs.Bernard Shapiro, $105,000 ($60,550); 23 Springfield: Marie N.Choquet to Pierre Lefebvre, $72,500 ($60,550); 47 Stayner: Gary Thomas David Allen to Mr.and Mrs.Michael Morrow, $51,000 ($40,450); 449 Strathcona: Donald Franklin Pringle to Frank Long, $114,000 ($70,800); 76 Sunnyside: Mrs.Gordon Howard Eberts to The Royal Institution for the Advancement of Learning, $225,000 ($125,950); 482-4 Victoria: Mrs.Lillian Hildred Hirst to Nancy Whittam, $78,000 ($59,850); 633 Victoria: estate Harry Norman Davis to Mr.and Mrs.Fahmy T.Bichay, $105,000 ($65,750); 24 Willow: Mrs.Timothy C.Powell to Dr.Edward John Hinchey, $115,000 HOME IMPROVEMENT 76 Sunnyside highest price, $225,000 Thieves\u2019 work said \u2018neat\u2019 \u2018Neat\u2019 thieves took a 14-inch color television and other articles valued together at $125 as ($70,450); 25 Winchester: Mrs.Gloria Ruth Wright to Ross McKeown, $64,000 ($44,850), and 344 Wood: Mrs.George Maynard Pelton to Basil Papachristidis, $154,000 ($77,800).RELAX.Have a \u201cHOT TUB\u201d experience.H3P 2T1 You or your whole family together.It\u2019s great fun and extremely relaxing.In a pleasurable whirlpool spa in natural luxury of hot water, which is maintained between 98°F and 105°F.Designed for many years trouble- free, watertight performance.May be installed indoors or out of doors.Immediate delivery.Telephone Mr.Robert Nicholson at 735-4461 for complete details and literature.Eastern Wood Pipe and Tanks Division of Releasall-Target Inc., 1255 Laird Blvd., Town of Mount Royal, Que.Tel: 735-4461 READ THE small PRINT FOR Big As of January 15, 1979 the Government of Quebec's Department of Energy has offered to PAY YOU to install new windows and doors in your single-family home, provided it was built before 1961.This Tax Free \u2018\u2019rebate\u2019\u2019 is part of the department's Home Insulation Program and can be worth up to $500 in cash.This breaks down to $30 for each window {opening} and $50 for each door, plus 50% of the labor costs for installation.The rebate will come to you directly from the Quebec We install Aluminum Siding, Soffit and Fascia, etc.CHISHOLM ALUMINUM © once 1s rhone 364-1890 15 \u2014 Sixth Avenue, Ville St.Pierre Savings?government.We can help you take advantage of this opportunity to improve your home and save on heating bills as a fringe benefit Our windows and doors are made with care \u2014 custom built from the finest materials, and covered by a five- year all-inclusive (parts and labor} guarantee.Give us a call for a professional inspection and estimate.You will be under no obligation and, of course, WE NEVER CHARGE FOR AN ESTIMATE well as $50 in American funds after forcing open the front door of an apartment in a building on Clarke avenue sometime between Aug.17 and 26.Police reported that the bedroom and living room were \u2018\u2018visited\" by the intruders who \u201cwere quite neat\u2019 about their search.EE EE EE EE 4 INTERIOR DECORATOR & DESIGNER (Residential & Commercial) e Professional advice on hourly basis es Selection of materials with complete services.MAN PAUL-EMILE GARNER, WME.514-866-8091 PE EE EE EE EE EE Lu ER EE rar ar.¢ [4 [4 [4 [4 4 [4 LA [4 ¢ [4 LU U [4 [J ¢ LY Insulation + Brickwork Roofing.Masonry Mas\u201d LAMBERT ROOFING AND CHIMNEY SERVICE (1963 Inc.) FREE ESTIMATES 484-0646 dal Eva Sn gon i sic tii or AL NT Manuel Batshaw at Rotary: Youth programs are correcting \u2018primitive\u2019 situation Quebec's Youth Protection Act and the reorganization of institutes for homeless and troubled children in the province are two responses to \u201ca situation which was nothing less than primitive\" no more than five years ago, Manuel Batshaw told the Rotary Club of Westmount last week.Schools, institutions and the courts all were geared toward preventive custody, rather than guidance, of Quebec youth in trouble, he said, to the point where Quebec was \u2018\u2018the most underdeveloped province (or state) in North America, in terms of dealing with children.\u201d Mr.Batshaw, head of the commission which examined Quebec's youth institutions in 1975, gave a brief description of his findings to local Rotarians during last Wednesday's weekly luncheon.He reported that at the time, 5,000 children were in institutes, the largest number per capita in North America, and at least 45 percent of them had \u2018\u2018no reason to be there.\u201d He described the case of one Osew.inc.young girl orphaned in a car crash, who was put in a cubicle with bars on the doors.She apparently had been sent there almost as soon as her parents were killed, despite the fact that \u2018\u2018the institute is the very worst place where a child should be.\u201d Because such children were placed there, institutes got clogged and more dangerous youths were locked up in jails or isolation cells for weeks.\u201cThese things weren't happening in Cambodia,\u201d Dr.Batshaw reminded the Rotarians, \u2018\u2018they were happening right here in Montreal.\u201d Change of emphasis New legislation and reorganization resulting from the Batshaw Commission report have emphasized foster homes, group homes and day treatment centres for most Quebec youth, with institutes available for those who need them for brief periods.The ideal situation, he said, is the youth who stays at home but who can use day treatment or RY Ltd 1d) ® Chair Weaving ® Furniture Repairs 3967 St.Antoine L\u2019Atelier Les Mains Habiles Fine Woodworking/Design & Fabrication Ask for Jules Camirand ® Stripping ® Custom Made Furniture 934-0305/935-3926 BARNARD GENERAL REPAIRS J 5906 Sherbrooke St.W., Tel.: 486-4549 Electrical Appliances \u2014 Window Screens Vacuums \u2014 Frying Pans \u2014 Chandeliers Hours: Mon., Tues., Wed.9 am to 5:30 pm Thurs., Fri.9 am to 6:30 pm Sat., 9 am to noon A ert Le swt eat Kg T IN RENOVATIONS Kitchens e Bathrooms e Playrooms e Balconies All interior and exterior construction CABINET MAKING Richard Biron Tel.: 487-0589 DESIGNS Regd.Ep e 452 944 5 5 502 05 ty rr Tr co.SoA LSS PY TTT TY pere 1 \u20ac 0 ve , \u201ca 434500 6600500 ROCHE 00000 0DO0 1000 EE ne Manuel Batshaw oo The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 - 13 at Rotary, last Wednesday segregated schooling.Westmount's Weredale House, for example, has completely converted from a juvenile boarding centre to a day treatment centre, where youth from neighborhood group homes, foster homes or their own homes can come for specialized schooling and attention.CLEANING Residential & Commercial B.&D.BABI) & DUGGAN Cleaning Contractors Inc.4795 St.Catherine St.W.933-1935 H e\u2019s wearing those New -fangled cheaters Toget a load Of our fine heaters.JOHN WATSON (Quebec) Ltd.W.Hartley Barber, President PLUMBING & HEATING CONTRACTORS DAY AND NIGHT SERVICE Service and Quotations on request 368 VICTORIA AVE.487-1760 Normal schools, also, will be improved by the new youth protection system, Dr.Batshaw suggested.Until now, children with difficulties often didn't do well in school.Teachers would chide them, discouraging them further, until they either dropped out or were kicked out.This, he said, \u2018\u2018just rejects the child further.\u201d Now, teachers are given more responsibility for notifying youth protection authorities as soon as they discern that a child is in trouble, and those who can't cope will be allowed (under certain circumstances) to receive special attention at the day treatment centre.\u201cFor the first time,\u201d Dr.Batshaw said of this and other provisions, \u2018the child is treated as a person.Until now the child had no rights at all.There are far better ways of dealing with children than putting them in Weredale.\" Rotarians responded well to the talk, asking several questions of the speaker.Dr.David Flam introduced him to the membership, pointing out that Mr.Batshaw worked with youth in the YMHA for 23 years before becoming executive vice- president of the Allied Jewish Community Services and, now, a director of the Youth Horizons program which includes the Weredale Day Treatment Centre and various group homes.Sidney Becker thanked the speaker.ant he ky a a l 0 or 1.) Better electrical work our current affair! 937-7431 ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR Please call us for industrial, commercial or residential Installations, Modifications, Maintenance and Upkeep.Also for electro-mechanical and industrial electronic Service, Design and Installation of Converting, Packaging and Processing Equipment.IRVINE FIECTRIC INC 1206 Notre Dame St.W.Montreal Home Services Any Type of Cleaning ° Done by Professional Bonded Men AT CA DITt ll o PLASTERING * PAINTING +, WALLPAPERING e Windows®+* Walls® ¢ Floors Deep Steam Carpets 9 Sofas 8 Etc.Free Estimate * Work Guaranteed CYRIL: cite sates eats | wi seoo000 2 secc000 Property Wanted Propriété demandée Property Wanted Small family requiring 4 bedroom house with large rooms.Around $200,000.Call in confidence.JOSEPHINE LANTIER 932-1112 932-0567 Royal Trust BROKER 14 - The Westmount Examiner.Thursday, August 30, 1979 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING cooo000 46 0000000 Help Wanted Personnel demandé ee.Discrimination is unlawful.Positions advertised in these \u2014 PHONE YOUR ADS \u2014 931-7511 10 words $2.00 10 cents each additional word Service Directory: first 10 words $2.50 columns are offered equally to men and women.eooocee |] 0000000 Property for Sale Propriété à Vendre à $ ST.JOVITE/MT.Haut de La Montagne Project (Gray Rock Road) Chalets: 3 bedrooms, living room, fireplace, kitchen.For more information: SKIERS! FOR SALE OR RENT .WINTER MONTHS TREMBLANT REGULAR DEADLINE WEDNESDAY 10:00 A.M.; TOO-LATE-TO-CLASSIFY, 2 P.M.Laval: Denis Trudel .625-9306 Beloeil: George Robinson 464-3443 Laval: Robert Gagnon 661-6374 coccoo 3 coo0000 OPIOPI Country Property for Sale Propriété de campagne à vendre 00.Near Bromont Smell chalet equipped.Large, Beautiful lot.Asking $15,000.Call 481-3380 evenings.ec0000 5 c000000 Country Houses to Let Maison de campagne à louer Vermont Lake Champlain, 55 miles from Montreal, 5 room cottage, fully equipped and furnished, complete bathroom, well and lake water, septic tank, 500 gallons shed 9 x 12 plus tools, lawn furniture, lot 125 x 130, water rights, sell by owner.$30,000 or best offer.1- 802-868-2333 or 488-6777.eooo0.Q c00000 Holiday Resorts Centres de vacance LABOR DAY WEEKEND In Northern Vermont Stay at THE CARINTHIA INN Circa 1870, and an old New England Inn of tradition known for it's good food and lodging.-Travel through covered bridges and miles of scenic country back roads Excellent fishing, hiking bicycling, golf and tennis nearby.Qutdoor swimming pool.Just minutes from JAY PEAK and only 90 minutes from Montreal in: MONTGOMERY Center Vermont, 05471 For reservations call: (802) 326-4541 There is more REAL ESTATE REALTIES PAGES (pages 8 & 9) and on page 3 CROPS 0000000 9 02000000 Holiday Resorts Centres de vacance .e.FLORIDA Luxurious apartment 3%; furnished.Ocean front.Located in Miami.Exclusive (Bal Harbour).Starting November 15th, or can be arranged to suit.Call 844-0395.eoooooo 1400000000 Business Opportunities Occasions d'affaires Funds Available Venture capital, bridge financing facturing, business loans $10,000 to $10,000,000.747-1196 U.S.funds in $100 Mms tranches 8%-92% emission 1/4% contact fee.Information 931-5156.soeceee 200000000 Bachelor Apartments Bachelors A louer Montreal West 34, furnished, heated, electricity paid.Call 483-2028.eeo00e 21 o000000 Apartments to Let Appartements à louer Decarie-NDG Sublet spacious 44.Renovated.coca .+ + Immediate.Call 499-0568,-486- Call 4881126 Adtakers on duty Monday and Tuesday.8 am to 8 pm; Wednesday.Thursday, Friday to 5 pm For best service, eoe0ee 2] e00000 Apartments to Let Appartements à louer N.D.G.Area_ .11/2-21/2-31/2 Newly decorated Apartments Some $130.4915 Walkiey Ave.Call: 935-1151 or 488-2017 Furnished or Unfurnished Charming 3 rooms upstairs suite.Wall-to-wall carpeted with private kitchen and bath.Offering not just an apartment but an uniquely attractive residence on quiet upper Mariowe Avenue.To a mature independent lady.Available October 1st.Call 487- 3881.Le Marquis 12-24-42 Swimming pool, sauna, sundeck and garage.5311 Sherbrooke W.[à Decarie] 488-4481 Open on Saturdays Richelieu Terrasse Atwater Metro 342 42 4488 St.Catherine W.932-9904 Open on Saturdays.Haddon Hall Beautiful older building 2-3 bedrooms, fireproof.Near Atwater metro.2255 Closse 932-6127 (open on Saturday) WEST BROADWAY 5450° 41+ 3'%, 2%, one month free near Concordia campus and Cote St.Luc shopping center.After 3 pm.482-2927* 276-6786.Ville St-Laurent Duplex 2-44 près de Canadair en bonne condition 332-3053.SUBLET 4%, 2 bathrooms, October 1st occupancy.One month free.482-4407 ocoeoo 2900000000 Share Living Quarters Logement à partager s.ce0.»\"0.e.WILLING to share 5 room Westmount apartment with other lady or let room.Kitchen privileges.References exchanged.\".phone your ads early 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 Hillside avenue, Westmount; at The Monitor and St.Laurent News offices, 6525 Somerled avenue at Cavepdish, 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 the Bank of Montreal.Advertising not paid in advance of publication is subject to a 35-cent billing charge.Advance payments without invoice cannot be accepted by banks but may be paid at any of the above newspaper offices.coooo00e 30000000.Rooms to Let Chambre à louer Artist's Studio For rent in lower Westmount.Call 935-6584.esooeoe 36 0000000 Cars for Sale Autos à vendre 65 Olds Starfire Like new, must be seen.Offers.Serious buyers only.270-3179.CAMARO 1976, resprayed, new tires, new muffler, AM-FM cassette, immaculate.Call 334- 3275.eoocecoe 3700000600 Cars Wanted Autos demandées ceoo00.0e0e.ee.ece SCRAP cars wanted for recycling.Competitive prices offered.Free towing.363-6010.ecoesoe 400000.Motorcycles Motocyclettes 0.000.HARLEY Davidson SS-125, 1976 Olympic model, very low mileage, in very good condition.Ideal size for the city.Call Peter at 487-2927 or 481-6169.000000 50) 0000000 Work Wanted Travail demandé eo.CLEANING offices and stores.References available.West end.935-9913.Magician Available for birthdays, receptions, etc.Call Betty 748-9294.PRIVATE chauffeur available.25 years experience, willing to work part-time including weekends.Call 482-1497.eoo0e00o 52000000 Mother's Help Aide maternelle Mother's Helper Carefully selected Au Pair Girl's from France.Call 487-9697.eooo00o 30000000 Domestic Help Wanted Aide domestique demandée a.Housekeeper Capable person wanted for Westmount area.Days only, 2 to 3 times a week, with some cooking.References required.Call 482- 9726 days only, ask for Peter.WEEKENDS off, experienced person for housekeepin ond child care.Live in preferr 0440.o0000OGO 54 0000000 Baby Sitters Wanted Gardiennes demandées sv.Baby-Sitter Wanted Reliable woman, good with children, to care for 2 young schoo! aged children from 2 to 6:30 pm.Working mother, Westmount location, close to metro.Good &r Live-in optional.Reterppces.Call days: 877-8240, evenings 033-7040, + < - tvs eae land of Montreal of The Royal Bank of Canada or iin Baby Sitter Wanted for two children 2 and 5.Twice a week.Preferably in my house.Near Spring Garden School.Call 684-6564.Sales Manager Residential Real Estate The ideal candidate should have the following qualifications: * Real estate experience, preferably at management level.* Successful sales record.* Excellent communications skills in English and French.* Strong self-motivation and drive for achievement.* Leadership capabilities and good judgement.Frank À.Norman & Co.Ltd.1255 Laird Boulevard, Suite 240 Town of Mount Royal H3P 2T1 Registered Nurses required for West End nursing home Full time night shift 11 p.m.to 7 a.m.Part time, weekends all shifts WE REQUIRE: \u2014 ability to relate to older patients \u2014 references and experience WE OFFER: \u2014 good working conditions, pleasant atmosphere \u2014 government salary scales Please call Mrs.Brennan 489-8190 Permanent Evening Receptionist required for the Westmount Family \"Y\u201d e General office duties * Hours 5 pm to 10 pm Monday to Friday Requirements: e Bilingual * Typing + Some office experience Position to commence September 10th Please apply in writing to: \u2014\u2014 Office Manager YMCA 4585 Sherbrooke St.W.Westmount, PQ H3Z LE9 \u2026 | cy 4 Building Trades/Les métie HALL ROOFING Reg\u2019d One of the most reliable firms in the westend ALL TYPES QF ROOFING Tar and Gravel ¢ Asphalt Shingles ¢ Brick Pointing Cement Work ¢ Chimneys Repaired\u2014Rebuilt Blown-In Fiberglass Insulation Attic Inspection FOR FREE INSPECTION BY PROFESSIONALS Qrre, ut ) 739-4348 NS W os & & = ritten Guarantee æ The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 - 15 un \u2019 TEE NO SW SES SCN rs de la construction o Brickwork * Walls Painted * Painting of Brickwork COMPLETE SERVICE Monkland Roofing & Maintenance Established 1950 TAKE ADVANTAGE OF OUR PROPERTY MAINTENANCE SERVICE ALL TYPES OF BRICK & STONE REPAIRS ¢ Cement Foundations ¢ Complete Shingle and Roof Service e Full Chimney Service 5690 Monkland Avenue Brick Walls e Stonework e Foundations e Cement work BELGRAVE ROOFING INC Specialists in all types of roofing Tar & Gravel \u2014 Shingle Roofs e Complete Metal Shop Blown-in Insulation Fully Licensed Contractor Masonry Slate Roofs Pointing Chimneys All Work Guaranteed \u2014 Free Estimates \u2014 Terms \u2014 Fully Insured and Bonded Construction License No.1672-1235 Consumers Vendors\u2019 Permit 108-389 481-8634 488-3466 * Fireplaces new, repairs ¢ Brick repairs e Aqua-Check waterproofing 488-6572 (24-Hour Service) Slate Roofs Brick Work Cement work Shingle roofs Caulking * Stone work Chimney and tuck pointing No job too big or too small Fully insured ¢ Work guaranteed e Terms eo Fully licensed Call now for free estimate elcir MAINTENANCE CO EXPERT PAINTER @ Fur cquirreo Specializing in BENJAMIN MOORE, CiL and SICO PAINTS, * Wallpapering (shop at home) s Free estimates » Clean work Call Andy, he's so handy 486-4615 Gyproc * Plaster ¢ Stucco ¢ Ceramic and Acoustic Tiles » Suspended ceilin * Metal division, etc.Free ora estimate.Call A.Jubinville, 767- 4902 and 767-1773.PR Building Service.Painting, peinture interior, exterior; plaster repair réparations: window washing lavage vitre; carpenter menuisier.524-9909.N.D.G.HANDYMAN Painting » Wallpapering Wallpaper removal Cyproc Timber balconies Sash cords ¢ New glass Weatherstripping Curtain tracks Cutting and planing of doors CALL ANDY, HE'S SO HANDY 486-4615 HOME RENOVATIONS We Specialize in Fast Service FREE ESTIMATES « Carpentry of all kinds e Painting e Plastering Interior-Exterior e Cement work \u2018e Wallpapering ¢ Sanding \u2018es Steaming Cleaning \u2018e Kitchens e Basements \u2018e Laundry rooms * Baconies All work guaranteed 482-2601 Monday.Tuesday.Wednesday.9 a.m.to 6 p.m.Thursday.Friday, 9 a.m.to 9 p.m.Saturday, 9 a.m.to 5 p.m.\u2014\u2014\u2014\u2014ettmhermieneninnite BRICK WORK SPECIALIST ¢ Shingle roofs e Brick work e Chimneys repaired and rebuilt e Tuck pointing e Brick and stone © Foundations and basement repairs o Silicone waterproofing Don't Delay Call Today Gordon's Home Repairs 932-5262 BUILDING MAINTENANCE REG'D.+ roofing All types of roofing * Brick Point ing Brick & cement work ° painting carpe\u201d ° ARC insulation FREE ESTIMATES All work guaranteed 481-5890 6100 Monkland Ave.Suite 2 WESTMOUNT Specialist In Plastering Plastering: Repairs of all kinds.We remove wallpaper with steam.Work Victor Home Repairs WE BUILD & REPAIR: e Leaky roofs e Chimneys and fireplaces * Brick, stone and cement work of all kinds e Attic insulation FREE ESTIMATE WRITTEN GUARANTEE 935-7907 WeDoltFor You Carpentry, repairs.Custom-built furniture.Low rates.Call Jean Pierre 933-8760.A.M.J.CAMPBELL MOVING & STORAGE PACKING & STORAGE One of the lowest prices * FREE BASIC INSURANCE * FREE ESTIMATES Local\u2014Long Distance e Weekly runs to Ontario 486-7347 684-0037 Evenings Only Ask for Neil or Tim Snook's Transfer Van Lines (A tradition in moving for over 50 years) \u201cTHE PROFESSIONALS WHO CARE\u201d Packing & storage anywhere e Reliable + Fully insured Free Estimates 842-4071 842-2371 Most reasonable rates | MOVING Experienced.Low rates.No travel time.Insured.Free estimates.Call Don 81-1919 after 6 pm.1-226- 169.GENERAL carpentry work, basement, offices, etc.Call atter 5 pm, 688-7501 or 337-0741.\u2026 Household Services.Réparations et entretien à domicile MR.FIX-IT SERVICENTER Repairs on all electrical appliances Furniture, household articles, glassware, chinaware, etc.\u201cWe repair anything except a broken heart!\u201d 4662 Decarie Blvd 484-8332 Moving All jobs taken, lowest rates, good service, 3 trucks available.Call Billy 457-2063, 457-3297.ABLE to move anything anytime.Free estimate.Peter 937-9491.Personal Servioes 3 Services personnels SIMPSONS PIANO SERVICE We can now offer you a complete repair, tuning and adjust: ment service plus estimates, etc., for all kinds of pianos, including concert and automatic pianos.For information phone: 842-3241 local 250 Also available: reconditioned upright and grand pianos at reasonable prices.UPHOLSTERING = Living room sets = Kitchen sets FREE ESTIMATE FAST SERVICE 254-2737 Quality furniture refinishing.Dining room suites.Bedroom suites.Kitchen sets chairs.Cabinets.Sun- guaranteed.Call: - L-1| f'dry wood items.Call Mr.elietier.Heavens.487-1853 days, 659-9440 or 659-1576 473-0278 evenings.after 6 p.m.\u2014 va.REPARATIONS, installations à Painting domicile d'appareils électro- and ménagères, So uses sécheuses .cuisinières.rures.Montréal et Home Repairs banlieu, 687-0627.HOUSE Carpenters with Shop.call 277-1707 Repairs, ~_Finishin Cabinets, or 270-6468 Furniture epairs.Call 486-4583, Estimates without obligation AUBAINE; rembourrage, set de References salon, cuisine, estimation gratuite.Service rapide, 254-2737.ALTERATIONS In my home Expert guaranteed work BETTER PRICES THAN ANY TAILOR OR SHOP References Available Call for appointment: MRS.VALDEZ 933-3244 Piano Instruction For all levels all ages from experienced pianist with master of music degree.Trained at the Juilliard School New York; France; England; McGill University.Côte Des Neiges area.731-7236.Catering Leisure dining in the privacy of ur own home.Intimate dinners, unches and parties.842-6964.Piano Lessons ARCT.student with teaching experience now acceptin students, beginner to grade 3.Ca 989-1187. 16 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, August 30, 1979 coeso00 720000000 Auctions 0000000 46 0000000 Encans Wanted Personnel demandé 00.000.000 toepse000008 BILINGUAL SECRETARY Walsh Auctioneers of Westmount Piano Lessons Professor Warsaw Conservatory.Bepinners and Advanced pupils.Call 844-8096 after 6 pm.BASSOON and oboe lessons, given by bilingual professional teacher with CEGEP and University affiliations.733-2260.Westmount Area Piano instruction.Beginners and advanced by qualified and experienced teacher.McGill graduate.931-4855.00000.53000000 Domestic Help Wanted Aide domestique demandée Housekeeper Baby-Sitter To help part-time working mother\u2019 of 3 girls, (6, 4,2), live-in, warm family.Generous time off.932- 8062.seccoee HG e00ccee Domestic Work Wanted Travail domestique demandé Super Special Housekeeper Available Surrogate mom with perfect Westmount High School daughter available for downtown Westmount.Live-in.Immediately.Write to: Box 842, c/o Publi Hebdo - Weekly Adservice, 155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, P.Q.H3Z 2Y8.voec000 D/\u2019c000000 Baby Sitters Available Gardiennes disponibles eo.RELIABLE woman available in my home, lunch times, after school and professional days.Children 8 to 10 preferred.Hot lunch provided.Roslyn School area.932- 9900 after 7 pm.Baby-Sitter Available Reliable mother.my home daily, N.D.G.-Decarie.488-5936.cooo000 5900000000 For Sale\u2014Clothing & Furs À vendre\u2014vêtements et fourrures +e6.0.e.CANADIAN mink, white, size 8, paid $1000, 4 years old, selling price $450.Call 489-2901.BRAMKSOME Hall blazer and kilt.Lady's 10-12.Worn 1 year.Call 739-6557.A 500 @ « Used Fur Coats Reconditioned @ kinds@p from $49.to $999.A Grizzly Fur 152 Prince Arthur E.843-4000 We Buy & Sell LJ ceoco0e 6) o000000 For Sale\u2014Dining Room Furniture A vendre\u2014salle à manger 0000000000 00000n00000000 NINE piece carved wainut dinin room set.Approximately 60 rs old.In excellent condition.|| 487-6694 DINING room set; 12 pisse.mahogany, in con n, $800, Co) 251 To coe000e 65 0000000 Sales Ventes Garage Sale Saturday.School supplies, pet supplies, bicycles, sehold items, etc.4 Westmount + Avenue, 10-am- 4 pm.\u2014Salary negotiable.To work in Westmount property management firm.\u2014Candidate must have both languages.For more information call: 932-3174 00000 6) 000000 Sales Ventes Garage Sale Low Low Prices Moving this week, clearing out good clothes and many other articles.Sat., Sept.1st, 12 to 4 pm, 27 Willow Ave, Westmount.Moving Sale End tables, coffee table, sofa, double and single beds, bureaus, mirrors, small desk, draperies, bedspreads, humidifier, air- conditioner, sewing machine, bicycles and exercycle, golf-pro carts, garden tools and furniture.Miscellaneous.119 Kenaston Avenue, T.M.R.September 1st and 2nd, 10am - 5 pm.000.6660000000 For Sale\u2014General A vendre\u2014général se.TYPEWRITERS RENTALS 1 month $10 8 months $25 ELECTRICS 1 month $20 3 months $50 Rent with option to purchase also SALES & REPAIRS RIBBONS D.K.OFFICE ENTERPRISES Days 695-5704 Eves 695-4709 Vente de Garage Vendredi, 31 août, samedi ler septembre de 10 à 5 pm, 375 Grensell coin Sinclair.Accessoires et meubles de bébé en très bonnes conditions.341-6617.cooooeou GG o0c00000 For Sale\u2014General A vendre\u2014général WESTMOUNT 45 Aberdeen Ave.Art Nouveau Furniture Pair round tables; green silk sofa; breakfront; carved chairs; bronze lamps; Hi-Fi; high quality bedroom set, twin beds; Dresden lamps; many other items; including GARAGE SALE.DINING room set, toasted walnut, table, 6 chairs, buffet, china cabinet; kitchen table, 4 chairs; man's desk with chair; braided rug, painted dresser; portable clothes dryer; wooden kitchen table, 2 chairs; bookshelves, 8 feet.Call 842-1667 evenings only.DRYER, custom, R.C.A, excellent condition.Sacrifice price.Selling due to moving Call 989-1516.AUTOMATIC RCA washer, five cycles, two speeds; RCA dryer, three cycles.Both in working order.$250.both.Call 932-1939.Firewood seasoned hardwood delivered 5.Call and leave message.484-8194.Moving All household effects.Call 482- 0474.MASTER bedroom; lamps; armchair; indian rug; desk; Toro lower; chairs; coffee set.Call 486-1684.END tables, 2, coffee table, French Provincial, with marble tops.Call 483-2163.Diamond Brooch Antique crescent shaped 2.2 carat.Value $2200.Price negotiable.No dealers.Call 288-7763.LIT double ancien en érable, fini ciré; $80.Appeler 931-7744.FIREPLACE WOOD $35.cord.484-9688 BABY crib and mattress, playpen, Swing, walker, crib sheets.Call 489-2692.eooe00 (70000000 Musical Instruments Instruments de musique 00000 oC ROSOOIRIOIOOISICROGTSE UPRIGHT piano, very good condition, $1,150.Call 695-6662.GRAND piano, good condition ce 3800.Private.932-7879, 695- PIANO excellent condition, around $950.Call 695-6662.ooooee GB 0000000 Antiques Antiquités 0e.OAK court cupboard 17th century, museum quality.$6000 evaluation.Inquiries welcome.Call 486-9032, 343-7399.SALE ENDING LABOUR DAY Must clear some inventory to make room for shipments now arriving.JUST RECEIVED ASSORTMENT e Ormolu, e Brass Frames, Large Satsuma Jardinière, + Cloisomne pieces e Imari, e Kutani and Chinese Decorator Items e Vases, * Planters, e Silver, etc.\u2014 ROSALEE HELLER Antiques 5125 Decarie Blvd.481-3595 sale Will be presenting a special three day, three session September 11th, 12th, 13th Featuring exceptional antique furnishings, works of art b, renowned European and Canadian artists, oriental rugs, gold, silver and diamond jewellry; porcelain, china and antique firearms.Watch next week's Examiner for more details.cooocee GB oco0000 Antiques Antiquités PERSIAN & ORIENTAL RUG INVESTMENT AUCTION WEDNEDSDAY Sept.5th SALE: 8 p.m.Preview from 7 p.m.Ramada Inn 1005 Guy St.Montreal GUARANTEED: * All rugs are hand made * Pay much less than retail * BRING ROOM MEASUREMENTS P.J.Elvin & Co.4721 Van Horne Suite No.6 Tel: 286-9663 Parking Paid with Any Purchase Dide-Awap Antiques WE WISH TO PURCHASE: \u2014 Fine antiques \u2014 Silver \u2014 Furniture \u2014 Doulton figurines 481-9059 69 Westminster North Open Monday-Friday 10 a.m.-6 p.m.MONKLAND ART GALLERY will purchase very important DUTCH AND CANADIAN PAINTINGS AND WATERCOLORS PLUS OTHERS Please call 486-2913 cocco0e 7300006000 Educational Educatif .60.%50000en0.0e000ee0a0e EXPERIENCED Quebec qualified graduate Mathematics teacher.Tutors students attending high school and prestigious independent schools.Algebra, Geometry, all levels and functions.Lessons at pupil's residence if required.David 737-1393.RADIO-TV ANNOUNCER TRAINING Keep your job and learn in spare time.You could be on the air in five months.News, sports, DJ, program host.TV commercials.For your FREE radio-TV announcing booklet phone anytime: 844-2784 NATIONAL INSTITUTE OF BROADCASTING cooo000 7400000000 Personals Personnel OOOO SCPOOOIPOISOIROIRERNESD THANKS to Blessed Virgin Mother nd St.Jude.Favours received.eccocoe 7760000000 Wanted On demande Oriental Rugs Wanted Used Gregory's Any size, any condition Highest prices \u2018paid Days: 932-4277 Eves: 484-5305 PIANO wanted.Will pay cash.Cail 272-8285, 274-5934.ARARAT RUGS Will Purchase Used Oriental Rugs Any size.Any condition.Highest prices paid.288-1218.DALSE House, a non profit rehabilitation center requests wooden furniture to strip and refinish as part of it's day program.Will pick up.Please call 488-6885 or 488-3378.WANTED older style dining room, also carpets and paintin 627-5385.& BUFFET wanted to match pear- wood table and light walnut chairs.482-4519.PIANO wanted by handicapped senior citizen 489-2361.eooeooe 78000000 Domestic Pets Animaux Eves.: 484-1604 Affectionate Young Cat Looking for a home.Declawed, neutered, relaxed and playful, he's a per- fect pet.Call 489-0313 PEN SES ê TT ie UE WALKING THE CAT: It's not often these days that one finds a woman dressed in her finery taking the cat for a walk, so when an Examiner photographer spotted these two on Strathcona avenue last Thursday morning, out came the camera.The cat, in fact, is Christine Gustavison, 428 Strathcona, and her mistress is sister Sheila.Adult courses range over wide spectrum If you're an adult who thinks the back-to-school season is just for youngsters, think again.Many courses are offered in the Montreal area for adult students, on almost any subject imaginable.Besides those offered by school boards, CEGEPs and universities, there are other more specialized courses that will be of interest to many Westmounters.Older Westmounters who are contemplating retirement, for instance, may be interested in the pre-retirement planning program being presented for the 14th time this fall by the Retirement Centre at Marianopolis College, 3880 Côte des Neiges road.The nine weekly classes start Sept.24 and will touch on as many topics as possible which will be of interest to those soon to retire.Such topics include financial planning, estate planning, creatve use of leisure time,the Quebec Pension Plan and physical and emotional problems in retirement.Further information on the pre- KITTENS 6 weeks old, brother and sister, need loving home.Adult woman preferred.Call 932-4719.YOUNG female cat, tabby, 4 months, free to good home.932- 9900.FREE; 2 puppies half long haired edachshund, half scottie, 843- HALF Samoyed puppies for sale.$15.932-4599.coooooe BOovec000 Found Trouvé eee.00.FOUND white young male cat, between Westmount, Côte des Neiges, 489-4238.cooveoo 2506000000 Flats & Duplexes Wanted Duplexes Demandés 0000.WANTED flat or house for month of September or until after Christmas.Call 844-4174.eoovoo0 57 0000000 Baby Sitters Available Gardiennes disponibles +000.| will house sit, responsible, reference.844-4174.0000000 64 0000000 For Sale\u2014Sport Equipment A vendre\u2014articles de sports 006000020000 e0 SET of Weider weights plus extras.sac condition, $75.Call 488- seeseee GG eso0000 For Sale \u2014General A vendre\u2014général LARGE couch and dining room ' table with 8 chairs.Other items.) , .Cal 844:4179.12.220001 4 retirement course is available by calling the Retirement Centre, 931-8792, ext.264.Whether of retirement age or not, all Westmounters are subject to stress of one form or another.À course being offered this fall by the CLSC Métro-Peel Centre (formerly the Mental Hygiene Institute) is titled \u2018\u2019Coping with stress\u2019\u2019 and is designed to help people improve the effectiveness of their skills for living in the face of stress.Like other programs offered by the centre's family life education service, the course is free and can be taken in the day or evening.Information is available by calling 844-8435.Westmounters can also improve how they feel by taking, and applying the information learned, a nutrition course at the Montreal Diet Dispensary.The six-session course covers various nutrition topics and will be held in both the afternoon and evening, beginning Tuesday, Oct.2, while a French course will begin Thursday, Oct.4.The nutrition courses are part of the 1979 celebrations marking the Montreal Diet Dispensary's 100th year of service to Montrealers.Further information is available by calling 453-8217, 637-6179 or 341- 4990.FINAL SERVICE SUNDAY: Dr.Phyllis Smyth, minister of Dominion-Douglas Church, will perform her last service at the local United church Sunday.prior to her departure to take up a position as assistant professor of New Testament in the Faculty of Theology at the University of Winnipeg.No replacement has yet been named for Dr.Smyth and guest preachers will conduct services in coming weeks.Sunday's service is also the last in the summer series of joint services held by, Westmount's three Uriited churches.AR vi Statistics Canada reports only two housing starts in West- mount last year, whereas the local permits department records three single-family dwellings and the Rotary- sponsored senior citizens\u2019 residence, containing about 125 dwelling units, as having been started during 1978.The StatCan information comes in a pamphlet listing, by municipality and region, the number of housing starts in Canada for the first six months this year compared to last year.SE, A) The Westmount Examiner, iii StatCan, city differ on housing According to their information, there were no dwelling units started in 10 Montreal island municipalities, only one each in Roxboro, Ste.Geneviève and Verdun, \u2018and two in Westmount.Westmount and Roxboro also report one start each in the first half of 1979.The city permits department reports starts last year for two attached dwellings at 500 Mountain avenue and 4315 Montrose avenue, a single unit at 63 Belvedere road and the residence at the corner of Lans- Thursday, Aygust 30, 1979- 17 downe avenue and Sherbrooke street.This year\u2019s start was at 460 Clarke avenue.More houses are now in final planning stages, including seven on Prince Albert avenue, two on The Boulevard and another on Oakland avenue south of Shorncliffe avenue.The land at the corner of Victoria avenue and de Maison- neuve boulevard has been cleared for construction of a six- storey apartment building, but there is no sign that will start immediately CHURCH SERVICES AT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST SHAAR Westmount HASHOMAYIM 11 am Church 390 Lansdowne Avenue at Sherbrooke Street Lesson Sermon Subject This Sunday: CHRIST JESUS Golden Text: John 3:17: For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world; but that the world through him might be saved.Wednesday, 8:00 pm, Testimony Meeting Public Reading Room In the Church Edifice: Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday, 1 to 4 pm, Wednesday 6:30 to 7:45 pm All are Welcome 11 am Sunday School BAPTIST 11:00 am WESTMOUNT BAPTIST CHURCH Sherbrooke Street West at Roslyn Avenue Nearest Downtown Baptist Church Minister: Rev.Allan Griffin, BD Director of Music: Jeff Joudrey, B.Mus.September 2 \u201cThe Wonderful Love of God\u201d Midweek Service: Wednesday, 8:00 pm Visitors Always Welcome UNITED THE UNITED CHURCHES OF WESTMOUNT Dominion-Douglas x St.Andrew's Westmount Park JOINT SUMMER WORSHIP Sunday, September 2, 11:00 am Dominion-Douglas Church Roslyn Avenue, at The Boulvard Sermon: \u2018Fighting Dragons\u201d Dr.Phyllis Smyth Crib Corner Social Hour Following Organist and Choir Director: Ted McLearon, ARCCO 450 Kensington Rabbi Wilfred Shuchat Cantor Joseph Gross Assistant Cantor Herman Muller Sabbath Services Sabbath Eve, 6:30 pm in the Chapel.Sabbath Day, 9:00 am in the Chapel.Sabbath Twilight, 7:35 pm.Daily Services Morning Services: Sunday, Sept.2, 8:30 am; Monday Sept.3, Labour Day, 8:45 am; Tuesday-Friday, Sept.4-7, 7:30 am.Evening Services: Sunday-Thursday, Sept.2-6, 7:30 pm.ANGLICAN ST.MATTHIAS\u2019 Cote St.Antoine Road at Church Hill Archdeacon J.N.Doidge The Rev'd.Barry Clarke Trinity XII Summer Schedule 8:00 am Holy Eucharist 10:30 am Holy Eucharist Sermon: The Rector Stephen A.Crisp, ARCO Organist and Choirmaster ST.STEPHEN'S Dorchester and Atwater The Rev'd.R.G.Guinness September 2 10:30 am Morning Prayer Welcome to All CHURCH OF THE ADVENT Corner of Wood and de Maisonneuve, Westmount The Rev'd Eric Dungan, M.A, Trinity XII 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 Chor: Rafael de Castro, Dip.Cons.Mus.PRESBYTERIAN STANLEY PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH Webster Hall 4695 de Maisonneuve Blvd.W.Rev.Scarth Macdonnell Sunday Service 9:30 am Visitors Welcome Cm w Ltt erETYTTEE EY LILLIAN UNIVERSAL TRAVELLERS INTERNATIONAL Agency 482-2388 youll always come back HEMBLING 345 Victoria Avenue 482-9101 Coming Events A NEARLY NEW SALE Sponsored by Pioneer Women's Organization, Eilat Omna Group, will take place on Wednesday, Sept.5,1979,9:00 am - 10:00 pm, at Beth Hamedrash Hagodol, 4605 Mackenzie St.(corner Lavoie).Merchandise for entire family.Bargains.Admission free.a3 CAN CANCER BE BEATEN ® YOU BET 18 - Thursday, August 30, 1979 Late respondents asked to return questionnaires One more appeal is going out to selected survey respondents to return their three-page questionnaires, so that The Examiner\u2019s Andy Dodge can begin tallying up as complete a set of responses as possible to his summer-long study.As of yesterday, a majority of completed questionnaires had been collected from each of Westmount's seven census tracts, though only nine of 17 have come back from the area north of The Boulevard, eight of 13 from the area between Côte St.Antoine road and The Boulevard west of King George Park, and only seven of 11 from the area south of St.Catherine street.Overall, the summer-long survey has brought 83 responses from readers so far, making up 72 percent of the 115 which have been either administered by Mr.Dodge or left at homes for readers to com- fall fashions Want a new look?Update your wardrobe?For at-home apointment call Need that certain dress for a special occasion?Have your personal fashion co-ordinator do it all for you.are here! denyse dubois/935-8439 | Monday to Friday after 6:30 pm except Thursdays Why not take advantage of our unique your mail, etc.Kathy MacCulloch Domicare \u2026 WESTMOUNT, P.Q.Going on holidays?Away for the weekend?your plants, feed your indoor pets, check your home and pick up or forward For information please call 833-5191 house-minding service?Let us water Mary Payson HAUTE COUTURE Jean-Paul S65 OLAS CHAPEAU Pessard 481-2430 plete themselves.\u201cI\u2019ve found that most readers have a genuine interest in their community,\u201d Mr.Dodge commented yesterday.'\u2018That\u2019s to be expected, I suppose, since they subscribe to The Examiner in the first place.The survey gives them a chance to speak their minds about city services and community institutions more freely than they might other- wise\u2014though overall, I'd say most of them are pretty happy with Westmount.\u201d Those who still have questionnaires are being asked to spend about one half-hour to fill it out and return it in the pre-addressed, pre-stamped envelope provided.If they have lost the questionnaire, would like the survey picked up or would like to discuss it with Mr.Dodge, they can phone him at 932-3157.Holocaust memorial dedication Sept.16 The work of a committee chaired by Westmounter Steven Cummings, 4 Summit Circle, will come to fruition Sunday, Sept.16, with\" the official opening of the Holocaust Memorial in Cummings House, 5151 Côte St.Catherine road.The memorial will be Canada's first to one of the most tragic chapters in Jewish history, the 12-year period under Nazism in which 6 million Jews, one third of the world's total, were slain.Mr.Cummings chaired the Allied Jewish Community AJCS annual on Sept.10 The 61st annual meeting of Allied Jewish Community Services of Greater Montreal will be held Monday, Sept.10, at Cummings House, 5151 Côte St.Catherine road.Guest speaker at the meeting will be Rabbi Dr.Gunther Plaut of Toronto, national president of the Canadian Jewish Congress and rabbi emeritus of Holy Blossom Temple in Toronto.AJCS is the central planning, co-ordinating and fund-raising body for 18 constituent member organizations providing health, welfare, educational and cultural services in greater Montreal.Current president is Hillel Becker.T.L.C.Round the clock nursing care in Westmount home for retired ladies.Please call Mrs.Laporte at 933-8770 Crown Trust 4825 Sherbrooke St.W.Banking Services With Convenient Hours æ 842-8366 + IN MEMORIAM: À color photograph by Westmounter Dr.Neil Chapman, left, will be hung in the oncology department of the Queen Elizabeth Hospital in honor of the late Peggy Austin for her volunteer work at the hospital over à seven year period during which she was also a cancer patient at the hospital.Mrs.Austin worked with the volunteer committee and spent time talking with and comforting other cancer patients.Staff, doctors and patients donated to buy the photo which was accepted by Mrs.Austin's physician, Dr.Joan Zidulka, while her widower, Albert Austin, looked on.Services committee which brought the memorial centre into being after space for it was set aside when Cummings House, headquarters of AJCS and eight of its member agencies, was constructed in 1972.There are thousands of \u2018holocaust families\u201d in the Montreal area, families in which parents or grandparents were incarcerated in Nazi concentration camps.A number of survivors served on the planning committee and others helped the committee's collection of memorabilia for the exhibits.The memorial centre, which will be open to the public, has three elements: a permanent display, a temporary exhibit area and a room set aside for contemplation and meditation.Janet Blatter, formerly art archivist with the Yivo Institute of New York, undertook the design and research aspects of the memorial and has been named curator of the centre.The memorial dedication ceremony will be held at 4 pm Sunday, Sept.16.Guest speaker will be Dr.Emil Fackenheim, professor of philosophy at the University of Toronto and a distinguished holocaust scholar.FLOWERS Westmount Florist Delivery anywhere open Thursday and Friday until 8 p.m.360 Victoria Ave.(West side, just south of Sherbrooke street) Use your ==; Chargex or Master Charge 488-9121 Official Passport photos Portraits Reunions, etc.Cibachrome Camera repair B & W Lab - Fast service e Free Towing If you are unfortunate enough to have an accident.8imply drive or have your car towed to DARMO\u2019S and we\u2019ll do ALL the rest: * Dealing with insurance, etc.Unoonditional Guarantee on Work DARMO AUTO INC.Westmount's Auto Body Specialists 81 Sqmervills Avenue , , , [EERE RRA] « «486-0788 ¢ Free Estimate Beyond A random sampler of things to see or do Westmount's in the bigger city surrounding us \u2018Wanted: talented singers, musicians For every professional musician on the Island of Montreal there must be hundreds of amateurs singing in the shower or on their way to work or diligently practicing scales on clarinet in attics and basements.This latter activity is the bane of family peace as scales, no matter how well played, drive the captive listener crazy after the first half hour, or less.Worst of all is the musician who runs beautifully up a scale and plays all but the last note.The listener's mind demands that the pattern be completed and is completely distracted until the scale is finished.If the musician is only practicing his fingering for a portion of the scale, the listener risks mental imbalance and possibly an assault charge.If you know a talented singer or instrumentalist and you love to hear them perform but hate to hear them practice, you can tell them about a couple of opportunities to vent their talent.The Concordia Orchestra is looking for experienced musicians for all instruments for the coming season.Auditions will be held from 9:00 am on Saturday, Sept.8, in Room RF-201 of the Loyola campus, 7141 Sherbrooke street west.Call 482-0320 ext.614 for an appointment.Singers will have an opportunity to audition for the St.Laurent Operatic Society Sept.5, 10, 12 and 17 evenings in the St.Laurent YMCA.This year's production will be Gilbert and Sullivan's \u2018The Pirates of Penzance\u201d and will be performed next March.For more information or an appointment call 331-3287 or 683-2842.Good luck.\u2018Balconville\u2019 returns - to Centaur Theatre David Fennario\u2019s \u2018\u2018Balcon- ville\u201d will be returning to the Centaur Theatre for a month- long run Sept.4 to 30.Many will want to see the play again, but if you missed it last time around be sure to catch it this time.After playing in Montreal HEIN [38 IRATE TaN SALE by RICK KERRIGAN the show will move to Toronto Borders and Ottawa for similar runs.A national tour is a possibility for next year.Centaur curtain time is 8:30 pm Tuesday to Saturday, 7:30 pm Sunday with matinées Saturday at 2:30 and Wednesday at 1:30.Art exhibits in Montreal, Ottawa The Galerie Libre, 2100 Crescent, will be showing the recent paintings of Jean-Jacque Tremblay Sept.5 to 29.The artist was born in 1926 but only devoted himself to painting in the early '70s.He was previously an illustrator.His first exhibition was in 1976.At the National Gallery in Ottawa, the landscapes of Daniel Fowler (1810-94) are being exhibited until Sept.23.The show will include 85 watercolors and drawings of landscapes done in England, Europe and Canada.Most of the Canadian work was done around his home on Amherst Island near Kingston, Ont.Recycle papers and bottles Saturday, Sept.1, is the day to get rid of all the newspapers and non-returnable bottles that have been piling up in your house.The Montreal Community Recyclers\u2019 Collective is holding a recycling day throughout the city and the closest depot for Westmounters is at the N.D.G.YMCA, 4335 Hampton avenue, or at the Steinberg\u2019s parcel pick-up on the northeast corner of Sherbrooke and Cavendish.Papers should be bundled in six-inch stacks and tied with cord.Remove all color and glossy sections.Bottles should be A COMPLETE BOOK SEARCH SERVICE New * Old + Hard-to- Find * Rare * Out- of-Print.Mas vour want hist or call CHAPMAN'S BOOK SERVICE .Box 263, Westmount, P.Q.H3Z 2172 932.8621 -_-_ SPECIAL CANADA__\u2014 PIANO $1690°° Limited Quantity Organs starting at $695.00 including bench Just arrived HEINTZMAN GRAND PIANOS New and used Harpsichords Arriving Soon Before you buy any piano or organ see:- HEINTZMAN ' Rockiand Shopping Centre 739-3817 rinsed out and metal and plastic caps removed.Place them in cardboard boxes.The depots are open 9:00 am to 2:00 pm.Help for new Concordia students Concordia University rookies might want to take advantage of the New Students Advisory Council, operating until Sept.17 at various times but concurrently in Room 601 of the Hall Building, 1455 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, and the Campus Centre of the Loyola campus, 7141 Sherbrooke west.For more information call 482-0320 ext.346.Group encourages basement Bertoluccis The Montreal Movie Makers is a non-profit group of advanced amateur movie makers and they'll make you more proficient with your camera and take you beyond movies of junior\u2019s first steps.They will - teach you how to use your film making for community service and they encourage the achievement of high standards for competition in amateur film festivals around the world.The group's open meeting for the coming season will be held at the National Film Board, Theatre Three, 3155 Côte de Liesse, on Wednesday, Sept.5, at 8:00 pm.On Sept.9 the group will be holding a film rally wherein participants are instructed to certain locations and then film a scene of their choice there.The film is then edited into a final product.Sounds like quite a challenge.For more information on the group call 729-3138 after 6:00 pm.Give.THE HEART FUND The Westmount Examihef, Thursday,\u201d August \"30,\" 1979 n 19.\u201cKonrad Art Shop e Framed prints e Custom framing e Needlepoint stretching e Lamination e Quality at lower prices \\, 6430 Victoria Ave.© 731-1452 Paintings Wanted We would like to buy Canadian and European paintings of quality.KASTEL GALLERY Selected paintings by Canadian and European artists S.I.A.F.inc SOCIÉTÉ D'IMPORTATION D'ANTIQUITÉS FRANÇAISES (yor A Arrivage direct de France # Fauteuils: Henri ll, Louis XV, Louis XVI, Voltaires, armoires, buffets, commodes, vitrines, secrétaires, tables de fermes, chaises, bureaux, meubles en pin.430 rue St-Pierre - Montréal - Tél.: 842-5975 (Métro: Victoria et Place d'Armes) Ouvert tous les jours de 10h30 à 17h30 - jeudi de 10h30 à 20h LA BROCANTE \u2026 François Chano 5552 MONKLAND WE WISH TO PURCHASE \u2014 BRONZE \u2014 CHINESE ART - \u2014 CLOISONÉ »\u2014 FINE PORCELAINE \u2014 ART GLASS - SEEN 20 - Thursday, August 30, 1979 Garbage pickup times may change in contract area Private contractors will be starting next week to collect citizens\u2019 refuse in the entire area of Westmount north of Côte St.Antoine road and Sherbrooke street, beginning a new contract which includes, for the first time, homes between Côte road and The Boulevard west of King George Park and between Sherbrooke street-Côte road and Montrose avenue east of the park.Citizens in those areas are urged to get their garbage out by 7 am on pickup days, at least for the next several weeks, until they learn what sort of schedule the garbage crews are working under.Pickup days will remain the same as they are now, though next week, because of the Labor Day holiday, those whose garbage normally is picked up on Monday should have their garbage out on Tuesday morning, and Tuesday pickup areas will be covered on Wednesday.The contractors will still honor the traditional custom of picking up garbage at the rear of houses; the only thing which might change is the hour of collection.By law, citizens are not allowed to leave uncovered garbage outside the home overnight.mar \u201cst EN ER Pt | dAursda cnn \u201c OF VERMONT ee ce.PUB and RESTAURA Highgate Commons Shopping Center ST.ALBAN'S, VERMONT (802) 524-6516 Sunday Brunch Sunday Lobster Feast 11:30 am - 3 pm 5 pm - 10 pm Only 10 miles from the border \u2014 Gasoline available, including Sundays Sa ES S kik LY hg RY LTD.ANTIQUE Show and Sale 15 Dealers Thursday's OF VERMONT RESTAURANT & PUB St.Albans Vermont Friday, August 31st, 10 am to 10 pm Saturday, September 1st, 10 am to 5 pm (802) 524-6516 a - a+ = Road work slowed by rain Rain has slowed down the work on St.Catherine street, preventing contract crews for various utilities and the city from doing their work on schedule.St.Catherine between Greene and Clarke avenues will not be ready to be rebuilt by this weekend, city officials now say, thanks to rain last Friday, Monday and yesterday\u2014though it is hoped the sidewalks can be finished by next week.The city is going out of its way to accommodate the RCMP headquarters garage and Roger Automobile Ltd., so that access by auto will be possible for all but a minimal period, if it must be cut off at all.The same holds true for the Timmins-Campbell Garage, POM Bakery and city yards later in September.Work is expected to begin on sidewalks on Sunnyside avenue between Bellevue and Upper Bellevue avenues next week, and the street will be torn up for reconstruction the following week, according to the city schedule, but again this depends upon the weather.Two crashes injure two Two persons were injured in traffic accidents in Westmount on Tuesday last week.A 48-year-old Pointe Claire man was taken to the Reddy Memorial Hospital after receiving injuries to his head and chest when his 1973 Ford collided with a 1976 Volkswagen at the intersection of Grosvenor avenue and The Boulevard at 6:35 am.The Volkswagen was travelling west on The Boulevard and the Ford was going north on Grosvenor when they collided causing damages of more than $500 to the Volkswagen and between $250 and $500 to the Ford.Each driver claimed that the traffic light facing him at the intersection was green.A 37-year-old Montreal man was taken to the Montreal General Hospital for treatment of injuries to his right shoulder and left leg after his 1979 Dodge hit a Fiat driven by a 43-year- old Montreal woman at the intersection of Sherbrooke street and Elm avenue at 10 am.The Fiat, which was travelling north on Elm, had stopped at the stop sign at Sherbrooke and was continuing across when it collided with the Dbdge, which was going west on Sherbrooke.Uncivil An emergency spare wheel and tire worth $65 was taken from a 1978 Honda Civic parked at Clandeboye avenue and Dorchester boulevard sometime during the night on Friday.The near window of the car had heen forced open.933-1155 @ Crown Trust is now paying IL EC er 1S Investment Certificates LAR LM Pi (8's || nt term investment For your convenience, after Labor Day we will revert to our usual hours, 9:00 am to 5:00 pm, Monday to Friday, and 10:00 am until 1 pm on Saturdays.Crown Trust Your friendly service company 4825 Sherbrooke St.West near Victoria Telephone: 842-8366 100% - TAX WRITE-OFF FOR CANADIAN FILM INDUSTRY INVESTMENTS Canadian film producer proposes to raise capital for four (4) feature films as follows: By giving a determined amount of registered building lots, plus shares or determined amount of interest in production.Plus will disburse 50% of net profits as dividends.Well known Ottawa law firm will handle details.Résumé offered to serious parties only.514-931-5156 or BOX 543 STATION A Montreal, Quebec H3C 2T6 Jo all out cuslomers ts proud to announce We ate now fully licensed .the missing link to an already relaxing atmosphere./ \u201c I 1 1359 Greene Ave.Come waned see us per 7 days « wwe 932-7777 HARMACIS H.GOLDENBERG .4451 St.Catherine Street West at Metcalfe 8:30 a.m.- 9 p.m.Daily 8:30 a.m.- 6 p.m.Saturday mc "]
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