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The Westmount examiner
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  • Montreal :Examiner Publishing Company, Limited,1935-2015
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jeudi 16 mai 1985
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[" SECTE SEE KIT ack aa LE Lt TRS tree SEP: ER 4 Making all of Westmount your home Vol.LVII, No.20 Westmount PQ, H3Z 2Y8, Thursday, May 16, 1985 25¢ City appeals to dog owners in scoop-and-bag campaign By LAUREEN SWEENEY \u201cIT'S in the bag.\u201d That\u2019s the slogan under which Westmount dog owners will be encouraged to clean up after their pooches in a special scoop-and-bag campaign to be launched this month.Anyone who doesn\u2019t know what's supposed to be in the bag, needs only to ask a dog owner.The slogan is being promoted vigorously by Alderman Rhoda Vineberg, Westmount\u2019s commissioner of fire, who, one understands, is even hot on preventing fireworks over dogs.\u201cI'm looking forward to a real clean-up,\u201d she says, suggesting public works trucks carry posters bearing the slogan.A budget of $8,700 was allocated for the dog campaign last week by Westmount\u2019s city council in general committee, Mayor Brian Gallery told THE EXAMINER.The campaign will be conducted by the city, the Westmount Dog Owners\u2019 Association and the SPCA.Information blitz It will include an information blitz consisting of a letter sent to all households, the distribution of Continued on page 36 HOLIDAY MONDAY VICTORIA DAY, to be celebrated Monday, brings a general shutdown of stores, banks, offices, schools and other institutions.THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER, Adcomp and Weekly Adservice at 155 Hillside avenue will be closed.Deadlines remain the same for our next issue, but advertisers and other contributors are urged to submit material as early as possible.Jeep shot A Suzuki jeep parked in front of 1120 Greene avenue was hit by an unknown vehicle Tuesday last week, according to police.The culprit was believed to have backed into the jeep sometime between 12 noon and 2:40 pm.we goa FINAL TOUCHES: Painting was one of the many attractions at the annual spring fair of the Westmount Pre-School held Saturday in Westmount Park.Young Shira Lazar was hard at work on her masterpiece while other children indulged in games such as toppling cans with a ball, pin the tail on the donkey, apple dunking, a hockey shoot, and the ever- popular boot chucking (see photo page 26).The pony rides created a long line-up and the baked goods satisfied hungry stornachs.St Catherine | condo project By Capt Eric Neal May 16 to 23 NEXT WEEK'S WEATHER Although mainly sunny this week, nights could be quite cool.Days warm with morning mists or dews.A wide temperature range probable, with some nights down to 0°C, but days up to 25 or 28°C.Quite warm and sultry through the middle of the week.Some risk of evening thundershowers with hail.Morning drizzle in the Laurentians, possibly some freezing rain.Snow flurries in all the north.Improving generally to end the week.Lilac, honeysuckle, chokecherries and wild plum all in flower.Pleasant and quite warm for the weekend but nights cool with risk of frosts.| to take shape A $3-million condominium project is expected to take shape over the next few months on a vacant lot next to the Timmins-Campbell service station on St Catherine street, at the foot of Kensington avenue.Condo 4410 St Catherine Ouest Inc plans to erect a six-storey building on the site, with room for offices on the ground floor and five condominium units on each of five upper floors, according to company spokesman Sylvio .Huneault.The company expects to have the required building permits early next week and is ready to start construction later this month.Continued on page 32 24 EC le ?\u2018 Sh SO ; - SPA + Cas Stuart Robertson eg ds WMA slate y JAMES MILLS ak Robertson is expected to take over from James Wright as president of the Westmount Municipal Association at the organization\u2019s annual meeting May 28.A WMA nominating committee released its report at a meeting of directors Monday in Victoria Hall, naming Mr Robertson and six others as candidates for offices in the organization.Thirteen Westmounters also are proposed as directors for the 1985-86 term.The report, mailed this week to WMA members, must be approved at the annual meeting of the association May 28 at 8 pm in Victoria Hall.Further nominations must be made in writing by 10 members of the association no later than May The report proposes Rolland Bénard, Barbara Drury, Toby Ornstein and David Tait as vice- presidents and Ruth Shine as treasurer.James Wright, who has served as president for two years, is recommended as secretary.Robert Joyce, Jean H.Ouimet, Donald F.Ross and Barbara Wiesenfeld are nominated for directorships, as are current directors Alan Bull, Andy Dodge, Continued on page 39 Greene festival put off Greene avenue merchants | decided Tuesday not to hold a medieval festival in June, breaking a two-year-old \u201ctradition.\u201d Meeting in the Old Post Office, a dozen shopowners agreed that the planning of a festival would take more time than is available.The possibility of holding a festival in the fall was discussed and met with general approval.Merchants hope to organize an outdoor event, on a smaller scale than the festival, to take place on one or more weekends during June.Alderman Peter Duffield attended the meeting briefly, pledging his support for the merchants\u2019 efforts.He said reasonable proposals for street festival activities \u2014 \u201c\u2018done in the proper context\u201d \u2014 were sure to meet with city approval.A number of merchants urged that Greene avenue remain open to traffic during a street festival.\u201cIt doesn\u2019t pay to close the street,\u2019 one merchant said.Another suggested trade on Greene avenue depends on shoppers being able to park conveniently.\u201cYou've bought lunch the last five times.Let's flip for this one.\u201d Stuart Robertson Gubbay | to speak | at meet Aline Gubbay, auther and lecturer, is to be guest speaker at the annual meeting of the Westmount Municipal Association at 8 pm May 28 in Victoria Hall.Members of the West- mount Historical Association are to be invited as special guests to hear Mrs Gubbay speak on \u201cDiscovering Westmount.\u201d Mrs Gubbay is the author of Montreal: The Mountain and The River and the coauthor of Montreal\u2019s Little Mountain: A Portrait of Westmount.Spring cyclist has no wheels A 69-year-old woman living at 3 Westmount Square went to get her bicycle from a common locker area Saturday to find it had been stolen over the winter, policed report.A padlock securing the bike had been cut.The bicycle, last seen by the woman in October, was described as a $200 green five-speed CCM INDEX.Beyond Westmount\u2019s Borders.16-17 Building permits.12 Classified advertising.29-32 Community calendar.2 Editorials/We Say.4 Education.15 Entertainments and eating.16-17 Examining theFiles.5 Fire calls fortheweek.3 Home improvement.10-12 Judy Yelon\u2019s cartoon.5 Official Notice Board.2,26- 2 Our MNA says.\u2026.Our MP says.\u2026.000000 à Professional cards.6 Realty.c.ooovvivienvnnn.8-9 Religious news.14 Social and women's interests.18-25 Sports and recreation FR 34-39 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 Our mayor.BRIAN O'N.GALLERY .says With the advent of summer we are inclined to relax and enjoy the outdoors in our backyards, summer cottages or on a well- earned vacation after a long and sometimes dreary winter.In so doing, we also relax our personal and property security precautions.We have windows and Te doors open or insecure, leave bicycles, lawn mowers, etc.laying about and our vehicles unattended, unlocked or with windows opened \u2014 all of which makes us vulnerable to crime.The safety of citizens, their families and their property is of great concern to, all of the members of this City's Public Security Unit.The Montreal Urban Community Police Department is primarily responsible for crime prevention: however, because of the multiplicity of policemen\u2019s duties and the demands on their time, it is necessary that they receive support and information from the public at large, so as to be more effective in combatting crime.In conjunction with its other duties, the Public Security Unit maintains year-round, twenty-four-a-day patrols to assist and act as eyes and ears for the Police Department, as part of an over-all crime prevention system.To increase the sources of information to the police, it is important that the citizens become more personally involved in the crime prevention system.Crime prevention is not a new idea.In 1829, Sir Robert Peel, the father of modern policing, stated that \u2018the basic mission for which the police exist is to prevent crime and disorder.\u201d Peel went on to specify that this should be carried out with the cooperation and assistance of the public.Crime prevention, according to one commonly accepted definition, is \u2018\u2018the anticipation, recognition and appraisal of a crime risk and the initiation of some action to reduce that risk.\u201d It is to this subject that the City\u2019s Public Security Unit will ad- - dress itself during the upcoming months.In conjunction with the Montreal Urban Community Police Department, the Unit will conduct a crime prevention program to inform members of the public of methods of reducing the risk of crime against their persons and/or property.A portion of the program will be the initiation of a Neighbourhood Watch Program in high-profile crime areas within the community.This Program teaches, among other subjects: 1.the recognition of suspicious persons and/or activities and the procedure to follow when reporting them to the police; 2.the identification marking of personal property; 3.methods of more adequately securing buildings and property; 4.the need to become more aware of anything unusual occurring on a neighbour's property.The Neighbourhood Watch Program also provides a newsletter, to keep citizens informed of the criminal activities in their particular neighbourhood, in order that they may be more aware of unusual occurrences.With the combined co-operation and efforts of the citizens, the Public Security Unit and the Police Department, hopefully it will be possible to reduce crime within our community and better protect our citizens.L'arrivée de la belle saison nous invite à nous détendre et à profiter du beau temps dans nos cours, nos résidences secondaires ou encore à partir en vacances afin d'oublier les rigueurs et les longueurs de l'hiver.Malheureusement, nous sommes portés aussi à oublier de protéger nos personnes et nos biens.Nous laissons des fenêtres et des portes ouvertes ou mal verrouillées, nous ne mettons pas à l'abri bicyclettes et tondeuses, nous négligeons de fermer à clé les portières de nos voitures ou d'en remonter la glace \u2014 en un mot, nous nous mettons à la merci des malfaiteurs.Tous les membres du corps de Sécurité publique de la ville se préoccupent de la sécurité des citoyens de Westmount, de leurs familles et de leurs biens.La prévention du crime relève essentiellement du service de Police de la Communauté urbaine de Montréal; cependant ces agents sont très accaparés par les nombreuses exigences de leurs fonctions et ne disposent pas d'assez de temps pour voir à tout; ils comptent donc sur l\u2019appui de tous les citoyens pour être mieux renseignés.C'est à cette condition qu\u2019ils peuvent lutter efficacement contre le crime.Toute l\u2019année, vingt-quatre heures sur vingt-quatre, le corps de Sécurité publique assure en outre une patrouille destinée à seconder les efforts du service de Police dont il se veut les yeux et les oreilles, activité qui s'inscrit dans un programme d\u2019ensemble de prévention du crime.La prévention du crime n\u2019est pas une invention récente.En 1829, Sir Robert Peel, le père des services de police modernes, déclarait que \u2018\u2018la police a un mandat fondamental, qui justifie son existence, celui de prévenir le crime et le désordre.\u201d Il poursuivait en précisant que l'exécution de ce mandat exigeait la coopération et l\u2019aide du public.Selon une des définitions les plus répandues, la prévention du crime consiste à \u2018anticiper, percevoir et évaluer un risque relié au crime et à faire en sorte de réduire ce risque.\u201d C'est à cette tâche que propose de se consacrer le corps de Sécurité publique de Westmount dans les mois à venir.De concert avec le service de Police de la Communauté urbaine de Montréal, ce corps appliquera un programme de prévention du crime afin de renseigner les citoyens sur les moyens dont ils disposent pour se protéger ainsi que leurs biens.Une partie de ce programme portera sur la surveillance de quartier dans les endroits de la ville les plus exposés au crime.Ce programme enseigne entre autres choses: 1.à déceler la présence de personnes louches et (ou) les activités suspectes; on y apprend aussi comment signaler la présence de ces personnes ou ces activités à la Police; 2.à marquer ses biens personnels pour les identifier; 3.à mieux assurer la sécurité des bâtiments et des biens; 4.à comprendre la nécessité d'être davantage conscients de tout fait inusité se produisant chez le voisin.Le programme de surveillance de quartier prévoit également la publication d\u2019un bulletin trimestriel destiné à renseigner les citoyens sur des activités criminelles constatées dans leur quartier en particulier et à les sensibiliser à des situations suspectes.Si tout le monde y met du sien \u2014 citoyens, corps de Sécurité publique et service de Police \u2014 nous parviendrons à diminuer la criminalité dans notre ville et à mieux protéger ceux qui y vivent.WESTMOUNT \u201d GARDEN DEBRIS AND TREE REMOVAL Residents are advised that garden debris \u2014 grass cuttings and leaves \u2014 should be placed in containers near the household garbage or behind the sidewalk for removal by the City's refuse collectors.Tree cuttings should be bundled and tied securely.Such debris should never be placed on the sidewalk, street, or lane.Residents should be advised that they are responsible for the work of their Contractors and should inform their Contractors of the City's regulations.Material may be delivered free of charge to the Corporation Yard during regular working hours.The City does not have the facilities to dispose of private trees which have been cut down.Therefore, property owners are reminded that their contracts for the removal of trees should include provision for disposal of the trunks and branches.Trees which have been affected by Dutch Elm disease should be destroyed and removed to dump sites to prevent the spread of the disease.Residents, who contravene or permit the contravention of the bylaws governing disposal of garden debris and trees are subject to fines.WESTMOUNT DETRITUS DE JARDIN ET ENLÈVEMENT D'ARBRES Les personnes résidant à Westmount voudront bien prendre note que les détritus de jardin \u2014 herbe coupée et feuilles mortes \u2014 doivent être placées dans des contenants près des poubelles de chaque maison ou à l'arrière du trottoir afin de permettre aux préposés à l'enlèvement des ordures ménagères de les recueillir.Les émondes devront être réunies en fagots bien ficelés.On ne devra en aucun cas placer des détritus sur le trottoir ou dans la rue ou ruelle.ll faut prendre note que les résidants sont responsables du travail de leurs entrepreneurs et devraient par conséquent renseigner ces derniers concernant les règlements municipaux applicables.Les entrepreneurs-jardiniers devront être avisés qu'ils peuvent déposer ces détritus gratuitement au dépôt municipal durant les heures régulières de travail.La Ville de Westmount n'est pas en mesure d'enlever les arbres coupés sur la propriété privée.Les propriétaires devront donc s'assurer que les contrats signés par eux pour faire couper des arbres comportent une disposition prévoyant l'enlèvement du tronc et des branches de l'arbre coupé sur leur terrain.Les arbres attaqués par la maladie de l'orme liège doivent être détruits et transportés à un dépotoir afin d'empêcher la propagation de cette maladie.Les personnes qui contreviennent ou permettent qu'on contrevienne aux dispositions des règlements régissant l'enlèvement des détritus de jardin et des arbres sont passibles d'amendes.WESTMOUNT NOTICE Householders are notified that there will be no garbage collection on: Monday, May 20th, 1985 E.A.McCavour City Engineer WESTMOUNT AVIS \u2018Les résidents sont avisés qu'il n'y aura aucune cueillette des ordures: le lundi 20 mai 1985 E.A.McCavour Ingénieur de la Ville Continued on page 26 WESTMOUNT Calendar The following events are scheduled in Westmount this week: Today OCentaur Theatre benefit: wine tastings, Victoria Hall, 6:00 pm O Westmount High School: Purple and White Review, 8 pm a$ OD Atwater Library: concert of medieval music, 1200 Atwater avenue, 8 pm @ / Friday, May 17 D Westmount Lawn Bowling Club ladies\u2019 branch: meeting, Westmount Park Church, 4695 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, 2 pm + Saturday, May 18 O Westmount Initiative for Peace: rummage and bake sale, Westmount Park Church, 4695 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, 10am-1:30pm wf Tuesday, May 21 0 Pioneer Women\u2019s Organization: nearly new sale, Westmount Park Church, 4695 de Maisonneuve boulevard west, 9:30 am - 3 pm of Wednesday, May 22 D Rotary Club of Westmount: luncheon meeting, Victoria Hall, 12:30 pm wé+ COMING UP D May 24: Temple Emanu-El - Beth Sholom, Tarshis lecture, Rabbi Kenneth I.Segel, 8 pm avs 7] May 25, 26: St Andrew's School benefit, Mr Dressup, Westmount High School auditorium, 11 am, 1 pm, 3:30 pm + $ 022-6689 D May 25: Galerie Art et Style, vernissage, paintings of Colette Boivin, 4875A Sherbrooke street west, 1 pm - Spm Ou 0 May 27: City of Westmount, zoning meeting (St Andrew's School), City Hall, 6:30 pm e D May 27: Westmount Initiative for Peace, meeting, Victoria Hall, 8 pm O May 28: WMA, annual meeting, Victoria Hall, 8 pm ae D May 29: Junior Firefighters\u2019 graduation, Victoria Hall, 7 pm J May 29: City of Westmount, auction of unclaimed objects, arena, 7 pm oy D June 1: City of Westmount, family day, Westmount Park, 10 am - 4 pm; parade, starting at arena 9:45 am a O June 3: City of Westmount, city council, regular monthly meeting, 8 pm me DO June 4: City of Westmount, recreation awards banquet, Victoria Hall = D June 8: Rotary Club of Westmount, bicycle road-eo, Westmount Arena, 9:30 am - 1:30 pm + W Weekly / Monthly m ® Official public meeting / Annual a W Religious / Cultural event \\@ + Forchildren / Sportingevent © @ Formal / Sale 7 @ Nosmoking / Phone for details W \u201cFree / Admission charge $ @Offering / Seeadvertisement Ÿ \u20ac Membersonly / Byinvitation & &\u2014- Members and guests Truck driver gets ticket The driver of a truck which collided with a car last Thursday while backing out of a lane onto Victoria avenue was issued a ticket, police said.No injuries were reported.The accident occurred about 12:36 pm across from 425 Victoria avenue, on the west side just north of Sherbrooke street.The car, which was driving south at the time, sustained more than $500 damage to the front end.No damage was reported to the truck. OPEN A DAILY INTEREST ACCOUNT Monday-Wednesday 9 am-5 pm Thursday, Friday 9 am-6 pm TT NELSON GARAGE inc.SERVING WESTMOUNT SINCE 1928 PROFESSIONAL AUTO REPAIRS Complete Mechanical Repairs Painting ® Towing e Electrical Central Trust 4825 Sherbrooke St.W.* 933-1122 g?The following calls were answered by the Westmount Fire Brigade during the past week: May 7 6:30 pm: 37 Barat, delayed ignition in oil furnace; 10:49 pm: Tupper and Atwater, firebox 126, false alarm; 11:03 pm: 632 Clarke, first responder unit; May 8 12:09 pm: 4045 St Catherine, Alexis Nihon Plaza, sprinkler alarm, possible defective alarm due to renovation work; 4:53 pm: 10 Rosemount, first responder unit; 8:50 pm: 625 Belmont, fire alarm sounding, fumes from delayed ignition on oil furnace; 10:30 pm: 367 Metcalfe, balcony on fire (see story); May 9 1:03 pm: 4560 St Catherine, apt 29, smell of gas from defective stove; 2:59 pm: Lansdowne and de Maison- neuve, firebox 226, false alarm, box accidentally activated by city electrician; 3:42 pm: 5 Hudson, car leaking gas; May 10 12:50 am: 5901 Westminster, CP rail yard, mutual aid to Cote St Luc (see story); May 11 7:52 pm: 338 Metcalfe, fire in house (see story); May 12 11:00 am: 331 Clarke, apt 30, automatic mutual aid from Outremont cancelled at 11:07 am, defective toaster (see story), 3:11 pm: 4342 Westmount, alarm; 11:36 pm: Alexis Nihon Plaza, Cabot Square exit, three garbage cans on fire in Montreal; burglar May 13 8:47 am: 4225 Dorchester, RCMP, alarm sounding (see story); 10:07 am: Front of 25 Ramezay, smell of gas; 12:18 pm: Front of 4350 St Catherine, fire in garbage (see story); 9:28 pm: Front of 342-344 Redfern, smell of gas.May 14 3:19 pm: Alexis Nihon Plaza, false burglar alarm; 9:20 pm: 1055 Greene, parking lot, fire in cabin (see story); May 15 12:08 am: 1500 Atwater, gargage can on fire in Montreal (see story), 12:39 am: Rear of 1375 Greene, garbage on fire (see story).Fire washroom gets repairs Westmount city council voted recently to award Christie Plumbing Ltd the contract for the repair of the men\u2019s washroom in Fire Station No 1.The work will be carried out at a cost of $6,940.Thursday, May 16, 1985 - Body Work Scope Computer 1100 Decarie Bivd.3 Between Sherbrooke & St.Jacques\u2014 Vendôme Metro 481-0155 Arts Westmount president primes Rotary for festival Westmount Rotarians learned about the arts in the city when Edythe Germain, president of Arts Westmount, spoke to the Rotary Club of Westmount\u2019s regular weekly luncheon Wednesday last week at Victoria Hall.Mrs Germain, who was one of the founders of the arts group in 1982, said the main reason behind Edythe Germain the establishment of Arts West.mount was to display the work of numerous artists residing in the city.\u201cIt was to get the artists of Westmount to give Westmount a new image, not as a bedroom community of bankers, but as a varied group, including artists,\u201d said Mrs Germain.Since its founding, Arts West- mount has held three annual arts fairs, with the fourth scheduled to take place Oct 1-6 this year.The first festival cost $9,000 to hold, and this year\u2019s edition is expected to be in the $20,000 price range.Exhibits added According to Mrs Germain, the festival would continue to grow this year, adding more painting exhibits, an architecture display and opera to its regular presentations of visual arts, music, theatre, children\u2019s activities and dance.Much of the activity would take place in Victoria Hall, said Mrs Germain, applauding the renovations being made to the building.\u201cWe wanted them in order to use Victoria Hall as what it should be \u2014 a concert hall,\u201d said Mrs Germain.\u201cThis hall should be used to the hilt.\u201d Anthony'\u2019s Mrs Germain also suggested that the hall should be made more accessible to the disabled by adding an elevator to the structure.The other building with which Mrs Germain has recently been concerned has been Westmount\u2019s railway station.It is due to cease functioning as an active train depot later this spring, when the new Vendôme station platform opens.Offered for $1 Mrs Germain fought a proposal by the station\u2019s owners, Canadian Pacific, to tear down the building.CP then offered to sell the building for $1 on the condition that it be moved to another property.Mrs Germain, and others concerned about the station, disagreed with this option.\u201cOur contention is that the building is not just a station, it\u2019s a site,\u201d said Mrs Germain, explaining that the station's historical value depends on it remaining beside the train tracks.\u201cI think.that for many people, that station has a meaning in their life,\u201d said Mrs Germain, noting the number of West- mounters who might have used the station in past years.For the present time, said Mrs Germain, CP has delayed demolishing the building, Poster contest deadline nears June 15 is the deadline for entries in the Arts Westmount festival poster competition.The winning entry will be used as the festival poster and its creator will win a $250 prize.A second prize of $100 also is offered.Judges are to be professional designers.All entries will be shown in the library during September.Awards will be made at a reception on the opening night of the festival.Forms and rules are available by mail from 333 Metcalfe avenue, Westmount, H3Z 2J2, or at West- mount Public Library.Youth/senior essays: Ten named winners in Rotary Anns\u2019 contest The winners have been selected in the Westmount Rotary Ann youth/senior essay contest.The contest, organized by the wives of members of the Rotary Club of Westmount, was held to encourage local youths to interview an elderly person and to write about his life.\u201cWe were incredibly pleased with the quality of all the essays,\u2019 said Jane Millar, a Rotary Ann and one of the organizers of the contest.\u201cWhether they won or didn't win is not as important.The main thing is that contact was made between the children and the senior citizens.\u201d Other Rotary Anns involved in the contest included Anita Vanderheyden, Margaret Quinlan and Wendy Dodge.The winning entry in the senior category, for students in grades 9 to 11, was written by Pascale Caron, 14, of Villa Ste Marcelline.Virginia Schweitzer, 16, of The Study, came second, and Lauri Bondi, 14, of Villa Maria, was JEWELLERY REPAIRS ADVICE AND ESTIMATES FOR ALL REPAIRS AND RESTORATION: .Arabesque Antique third.In the intermediate category, for students in grades 7 and 8, the winner was Justin Vineberg, 14, of Selwyn House School.Sherry Hamilton, 13, of Villa Maria, was second and Supoorna Chattopadhyay, of Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp'\u2019s School, was third.In the junior category, for children in grades 4 to 6, Bree Arlyn Segel, 11, of ECS, captured first prize.Vivianne Ivanier, 11, of The Study, placed second and Richard Bloomberg, 10, of Roslyn School, was third.An honorable mention went to Ako Kyei Aboagye, 10, of The Study.VARIETY STORE post office » greeting cards and Estate Jewellery 24-HOUR SERVICE Open 8 am to 8 pm WE BUY ALL YOUR OLD COSTUME 50 STINSON BLVD.4500 Cathe So Post Office, 1304 \u20ac plus service TWO BLOCKS EAST OF .ine W.at Abbott The Old Post Office, 1304 Greene 9 Cather: TICKETS bo Tuesday to Saturday, noon to 5:30 to both airports NATIONAL FILM BOARD deciding to convert it to a freight office.\u201cDo they want to have a freight office there forever?\u2019 she asked.\u201cWe want to have the station there forever.\u201d Mrs Germain was introduced by James Quinlan and was thanked by Alan King.The club welcomed visiting Rotarians from New Jersey, North Bay, Montreal and Montreal West.Festival jury meets June 3 Professional artists residing in Westmount who would like to be included in the Victoria Hall art exhibition as part of the 1985 Arts Westmount Festival in October are further reminded of a June 3 meeting of the festival jury.Those who have been represented in the exhibition before automatically will be invited to participate again.Artists new to the exhibition are invited to submit two works in any medium to the jury; one should be the work intended for exhibition.Items should be brought to Victoria Hall between 8 and 9 am June 3.For further information about the exhibition, call Ann McCall, 931-6096 during the evening; 842-6930 during the day.Some of the winners were on hand to receive their prizes at the weekly Rotary luncheon yesterday.The organizers wanted to thank the students who entered, the school staff members involved and the senior citizens who were interviewed by the students.FOR LUMBER AND PLYWOOD FOR HOME AND INDUSTRY ORDER Re Ww DAYS 7:30 AM-5: Ll SATURDAYS 8:30 PM-4 PM Call 748-6161 SHEARER-BOCK RUTHERFORD INC.mi a a ie cu is ae tn rt me tenue 2 to es bh LE od oF SEINE emi ih Fr SRL hal lL SALE RE zn Neb lw a SAS la Jo Deine La lr IN AR hr Ll ee We ba PRNADIAN COMMUNE bi A PERS ASSO ACH NE A amner Meking all of Westmount your heme Published every Thursday by J.W.Sancton & Sons Ltd.155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, PQ H3Z 2Y8 : Editorial, Accounting, Circulation, Display Advertising Departments 932-3157 Classitied Advertising, 8:30 am to 5 pm weekdays to 8:00 pm 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.$12.00 per year: 2 years $22.25: 3 years $31.00.Subscriptions of less than one year: 25 cents per copy plus $2 handling.Twenty-five cents a copy.Outside Canada, additional $20.00 a year.Member of the Canadian Community Newspapers Association, Ontario Community Newspapers Association.Second class mail registration number 1760 4 - Vol.LVII, No.20, Thursday, May 16, 1985 CCNA // VERIFIED [= TIOTW RS TT] PAIQ It's in the bag! COMMENDATION of all, dog owners and citizens without pets alike, is due city officials for the energetic lead being taken in Westmount canine matters.In the past this subject too often has found the city in a defensive and often reactive role.Even the last substantial update of the dog by-law, sponsored by the present mayor when he was the alderman responsible for city services, was marked by dissent.Now the initiative appears to be coming from city hall, with an extensive and appropriately funded campaign planned into early summer to increase the awareness among present and potential dog owners of their responsibilities which go with the privilege of keeping animals in an urban environment.Significant is the fact that the Westmount Dog Owners\u2019 Association, frequently at odds in the past with the city administration in these questions which are of mutual concern, is a partner with city hall in this promotion, as is the SPCA.The city\u2019s new brochure, in fact, encourages any of the estimated 600 dog owners in West- mount not now members to join the local association.Main thrust of the campaign is to be the cleaning up after dogs.It is a distasteful subject for all concerned, and not an inviting prospect for an owner out exercising his or her pet.Yet it is even less inviting for everyone else to find someone else's dog's excrement on one\u2019s lawn or, worse, on sidewalks and park paths where it can be walked in and often unsuspectingly transferred to home and car carpets.Fortunately, there have been fewer incidents of the kind of a few years ago, which sparked much of the controversy, of dogs tearing up gardens or terrorizing small children.The leash provisions in then-Ald Gallery's by-law revisions, which earned him some bitter confrontations at the time, now generally are respected and have earned him gratitude.The extensive publicity about to be launched thus centres quite appropriately around the odious by-product of pet ownership: excrement.Fortunately, most owners already are aware of their duty in this regard and the penalties for failure to \u201cstoop and scoop.\u201d A catchy slogan has been adopted by Westmount: \u201cIt's in the bag.\u201d Dog owners will be able to purchase suitable bags from the city for picking up leavings and depositing them in the garbage.In this last connection, the city might encourage not only dog owners but other potential litterers if there were more wastebaskets around the city.They are few and far between, and some we had now are missing, such as near Westmount High School.If this is acted upon, why not something more attractive and colorful than the old utilitarian wire baskets?The City of Westmount initiative not only is welcome but it is timely.This is the season when we all are more conscious of our clean-up, tidy-up, paint-up urges to make our own properties and the public areas of the community more attractive.Not the least of pleasant surroundings is the presence and enjoyment of pets, our own and others\u2019.That is, provided they are well kept, well trained, well behaved and have owners who care.Cult of the oddball WE were going to keep mum in reaction to a piece featured in the May issue of Montreal Calendar Magazine titled \u201cAnglo Weeklies and the Cult of Personality.\u201d However, blatant misrepresentation of an industry, profession, calling or game which has treated us well deserves response, if only to avoid confusion for our own readers who may have seen the article.First, it isbad journalism \u2014 not because it is about journalism but because it is shot full of errors which would not be tolerated on the staff of any of the newspapers mentioned.We always had thought that magazine writing had an edge in time constraints to allow for adequate research.We know all these newspapers, some of them intimately, and much of their history.There are misstatements about every one of them.The Monitor, whose current pub- lisher-editor is featured on the book\u2019s cover, this week notes \u201cat least 12 factual errors\u201d about his sheet alone.We could increase the count, and add a few concerning both THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER and its sister, Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post.To the extent that all newspaper people who make it in their vocation have to be personalities out of the ordinary, there is a cult; but not peculiar to the so-called Anglo weeklies, of Montreal or anywhere else.We are indeed an odd breed.Slick throwaway magazines seem to hire oddballs, too.New man for WMA's helm CHANGING of the guard at the Westmount Municipal Association always is an important turning point in the life of the community.A new president takes office at the annual meeting on May 28.In recent years this has been of more crucial importance than in the past, when the WMA was a much larger organization and the natural and customary focal point for citizens\u2019 input to municipal matters.The role and pattern of activity largely was established and followed tradition.In addition, the WMA officers of the day frequently became our city councillors.The pattern of WMA activity was vital and in civic terms significant, but changed little from year to year.The community owes Mr James Wright gratitude for his service to the association, the last two years as president.They have not been easy and his successor also will have the same challenge to find a meaningful role for the WMA in a vastly changed municipal atmosphere.Citizens and groups now have ready access direct to city hall, the mayor, the aldermen and the council as a whole.Mr Stuart Robertson, who heads the slate likely to be approved week after next, undoubtedly will bring new ideas to the presidency.That is the great virtue of renewal in offices.Any organization in times of change itself needs change which, when participating membership is down, must come from leadership.For several years now, the WMA has suffered from lack of popular support without which the few individuals, no matter how keen, who keep the wheels turning tend to become little more than a monthly discussion group.Meaningful action which gets official or public attention lacks necessary force and authority without a base of interested followers.Mr Robertson and his prospective colleagues who are to direct the WMA no doubt are aware of this sober truth and will realize a first priority must be to attract new members.The obvious way is to seize upon some prime local issue (sen- Are you out there?WE blame it on the nice weather.Readers would rather be out in their gardens or engaged in other physically and spiritually rewarding pursuits than be indoors writing letters.We generally enjoy a generous flow of comments from readers for publication.We know other readers enjoy them.But, for the second week running, nary a peep.It would be tempting to suggest that all Westmounters see all right with West- mount, with our news coverage and even oureditorials.In this fortnight we haven't had even a nasty phone call about one of our undoubted sins of omission or commission, or about some public figure or perhaps some private figure\u2019s behavior in public.Whether you agree or disagree with something, why not tell us about it?We want to get the \u201cYou Say\u201d heading out again.All we ask of you is to write legibly (typewriter preferred, double-spaced, one side of the sheet, decent margins top and left side), sign your piece, provide your address and, for our possible use, phone number.What you say often is more important than what we say.iors, taxes, the environment, parking or some such) and play it hard, calling public meetings with headliner speakers to bring out new people (or even some of the old-timers who once supported the WMA), sign them up and put them to work studying and recommending.Mundane subjects, pedestrian even if authoritative speakers, and lack of a clear-cut program for the year ahead area sure way to send citizens in the opposite direction in pursuit of other, more promising and stimulating interests and uses for their free time.This newspaper has been critical of the Westmount Municipal Association in recent years only because of either the perception obvious among many that it has lost purpose or because we see missed opportunities for new service to the community.Our files of a decade or more ago show that its once immensely successful program of advisory committees on wide- ranging subjects, all meeting together once a month, provided a dozen or more separate stories of broad interest in the community.What struck us then was that the Westmount community, or that part of it which cared, was a broad overlapping of the readers of THE WESTMOUNT EXAMINER and the substantial membership of the WMA, which was as it should be.After all, a community newspaper and a municipal association should have common cause.We would not suggest that THE EXAMINER has supplanted the WMA.Both are needed, to draw from and support the ideas of the other and together promote a more aware population.We don\u2019t crow in remarking that our circulation has kept on growing while the WMA membership flagged and the ratio is now about 10 to one.If the roles were reversed, we would be seriously worried about the future of our organization, as indeed we are worried about the WMA.Thus we place much hope in Mr Robertson and wish him great success when he takes charge May 28.Hon.Donald J.Johnstun Eyeing the environment ARE economic and environmental concerns in conflict?Many Canadians have become alarmed about the prospect of further budget cuts that reduce our research on environmental problems and prospects.Some others continue to believe there to be a conflict between environmental protection and economic growth, e.g.that the costs of purifying industrial wastes exceed the environmental damage by dumping it into the nearest water.In fact, the snail speed with which we move to purify the waterways surrounding us in Montreal bears painful evidence to environmental priorities.Future generations will have a healthier environmental attitude and will be shocked to learn that in 1985 Montrealers could not even boat on the Lachine Canal, the pollution level being so dangerously high, but we could find the money to cover the Big O.The situation is improving.Around the world there seems to be a growing appreciation that the protection and, indeed, the enhancement of the biosphere not only Continued on next page 1 OFFER my opponents a bargain; if they will stop telling falsehoods about us, I will stop telling the truth about them.\u2014Adlai Stevenson 0 PO Wes tmaum Examiner Srarné» çime ++ Forty-five Years Ago May 16, 1940 \u201cWestmount City Council authorized purchase of a 100-foot aerial ladder fire-reel of the latest type, at a regular meeting on Monday night.The new piece of apparatus will replace the 75-foot ladder machine now in use.The Council also approved plans to modernize existing equipment.The new ladder truck, which is powered by a 240 horsepower motor and is tractor pulled, will be among the most modern piece of fire apparatus in Canada.Its equipment, besides the aerial ladder, includes 300 feet of duralumin ground ladders.The aerial ladder, which will be able to reach the roof of any building in Westmount, is equipped with telephonic communication facilities in order that instructions may be sent with ease from the ground to firemen on the top.\u201d Thiry-five Years Ago May 19, 1950 \u2018The English International soccer team which is touring Canada has been working out at the Westmount Athletic Grounds since Wednesday in preparation for their game against Montreal All-Stars at the Baseball Stadium, Delorimier avenue, tomorrow afternoon.Many complimentary remarks were passed by the visitors on the splendid condition of the turf and the general neatness of the ground.\u201d Twenty-five Years Ago May 20, 1960 \u201cA young driver's courage and skill in steering his runaway gasoline-filled truck backwards down Atwater avenue Monday saved the area from possible explosion and loss of life.Five people were slightly injured and eight cars heavily damaged as the heavy truck, without brakes, ran down the hill backwards from Dorchester boulevard, crossed several street intersections, two railway tracks and ended up against a lamp post on Notre Dame street.The truck's brakes had failed as it climbed the Atwater hill to Dorchester, and it began rolling back.Driver Andre Couarte, 21, of 2050 Lepailleur street, had guided his heavy vehicle with its load of 2,000 gallons of gasoline, as best he could.Shaken and in shock after the accident, he took a taxi home.\u201d Fifteen Years Ago May 21, 1970 \u201cThe Royal Montreal Regiment, West- mount, came second \u2014 behind the Canadian Grenadier Guards \u2014 in a 14-unit Militia competition held at Camp Far- nham.The competition for the Western Quebec District trophy was won by the CGG in 1966 and 1967.It was not held last year.This year, the competition moved away from a Montreal-based armory and included such field subjects as map using, communications, fieldcraft, obstacle courses and the practical aspect of military skills taught at the local armory and during weekend exercises throughout the year.The point spread between the winner and runners-up was not disclosed, but the RMR came close behind the winner and was followed by the Regiment de Maisonneuve.\u201d Five Years Ago May 15, 1980 \u201cA massive turnout at the polls is expected Tuesday from the 15,370 West- mounters eligible to vote in the referendum on sovereignty-association.Polls will be open from 9 am to 7 pm at seven locations in the city.A total of 38,368 persons are on the voters\u2019 list for all of the provincial riding of Westmount and will vote at 18 locations.Westmount returning officer Jon Bradley also expects a relatively large number of voters will take advantage of advance polling tomorrow and Saturday between 2 and 10 pm.\u201d The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 - 5 NEIGHBORHOOD WATCH COMES 10 WESTMOUNT our M.N.A.: Richard D.French | says.= À A brutal turn THERE is a joke making the rounds of the PQ caucus.A group of MNAs in Montreal must get from Montreal to Quebec City in an hour and a half.They approach a taxi driver, who tells them it's absolutely impossible to make a two-and-a-half-hour journey in an hour and a half.Much too dangerous.They insist.They cajole, they threaten, they invoke reasons of state, they offer a large amount of money.Finally, the reluctant cabbie accepts and, driving at 125 mph all the way, succeeds in getting them to the National Assembly in the time required.They give him his money, and a hundred- dollar tip.Rushing up the stairs of parliament beside them, he asks if they wouldn\u2019t like to engage his services to return to Montreal: \u201cAre you kidding?We're never riding with you again.You drive like a maniac!\u201d This, say the Péquistes, is a fable which perfectly represents the population's attitude toward the PQ.After seeking its salvation in the PQ, it has turned on the party brutally.The moral is a trifle self-serving, however.If the population has turned on the PQ with a kind of unanimity, it is at least partly because of the PQ\u2019s own messianic complex, its chronic self- identification with the destiny of French- speaking Quebecers.The Parti Québécois tried to occupy all of the political space in Quebec and to define its opponents and their supporters as non-Quebecers.It is hardly surprising that such tactics mean that a reversal of public opinion, when it comes, cuts deeper and wider than normal.The PQ\u2019s self-pity wasn\u2019t matched by much tolerance when it was riding a wave of popularity between 1974 and 1982.Storage least of problem An editorial in the Town of Mount Royal Weekly Post RESIDENTS of Pointe Claire are up in arms over plans to store cancer-causing PCBs at a company near a residential area.That's not surprising.Particularly as the plans come in the wake of the PCB spill in northwestern Ontario, people a OUR MP.Continued from previous page is compatible with, it is essential to economic development and the ever- increasing well being of humankind.Acid rain, the safe disposal of nuclear waste and the protection of the ozone layer are examples of international environmental issues.While reinforced efforts by Canada at the international level in such areas are critical, our concern must also become better focussed on what we do at home.Failure to adopt sound conservation measures to restock resources is an obvious environmental issue with severe economic implications.Take our forestry sector as an obvious and tragic example.It alone accounts for one job in 10 in Canada.It supports about 28 percent of our more than 400 single- industry communities.Canada\u2019s timber supply is in serious difficulty brought about by a failure to replant cut areas.With proper conservation measures (meaning $300- to $500-million annually), the Canadian Forestry Service estimated in 1981 that our allowable cut could increase by 40 percent; that we would find additional export sales of $12 billion and at the same time create 75,000 to 100,000 new jobs.There is the perfect marriage between the conserver society, environmental protection and economic development.But we will not get the job done until we all agree upon how the costs are to be shared.ed.Given a choice, anyone would choose not to live beside a pile of PCBs.But we believe an important point in this whole issue has been forgotten, one that bears remembering by people not just in Pointe Claire but here in the Town of Mount Royal and elsewhere.The point is that PCBs and other dangerous material are much more dangerous and much more likely to be spilled or released when they are in motion rather than when they are in static storage.In our modern society we have chosen to manufacture all manner of lethal chemicals for some useful purpose.We live with them \u2014 and in many cases rely on them \u2014 every day of our lives.If that was not the case, we wouldn\u2019t have made them in the first place.To serve us, those dangerous materials must be manufactured, transported and used.When we are finished with them, we must dispose of them.If we can\u2019t dispose of them, as in the case of PCBs, we must store them.We haven't any figures, but it seems to us that dangerous products are more likely to cause damage during any other phase of their lives than the last: storage.We haven't heard of major disasters at storage sites but we've sure had our share in transportation and usage, as in Mississauga five years ago and last month in Kenora.Why is it we don\u2019t seem concerned that manufacturing firms can keep all manner of toxic substances on hand \u2014 in a permanent if rotating storage if you will \u2014 but we scream if the firm's sole job is to store them?Why do we not mind PCBs stored nearby in a working transformer yet don\u2019t want them stored nearby in a non-working transformer?Why do we not mind all manner of deadly materials passing through our community on accident-prone trucks and trains yet object to them being left safely in a supervised storage tank?mney, 6 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 Westmount hires consultant to review personnel procedures Westmount will hire an outside consulting firm to conduct an internal re-evaluation and study of the city's personnel policies and procedures, it was announced at Monday night's city council meeting last week.Approval was given to hire the consulting firm of William M.Mercer at a cost of up to $12,000 to conduct the study.Two other firms, Price Waterhouse and Hay Associates.also had submitted quotes.The lowest was accepted.\u201cIt was 15 years since we last TODD & DURSO NOTAIRES \u2014 NOTARIES CONSEILLERS JURIDIQUES \u2014 TITLE ATTORNEYS 4635 Sherbrooke St.W., Westmount H3Z 1G2 931-2531 J.E.Todd A.F.Durso V.Casoria 486-3680 Labreche, Meury, Cimon NOTAIRES * NOTARIES 6575 Somerled, Suite 4 Montreal H4V 1T1 Me Albert Labréche, BA, LLL Me Guy Meury, BA, LLL Me Gail Cimon, BComm, BCL, DDN 486-1211 B.Berman, B.A.B.Ph.L.Ph.Pharmacist/Pharmacien 486-7373 FREE DELIVERY 5008 Sherbrooke St.West corner Claremont Monday to Friday 8 am to 7:30 pm * Saturday 8 am to 6 pm Weigel, Duong & Kliger AVOCATS\u2014ADVOCATES wm.Melvin Weigel My Tram Duong Lillian Kliger Château Maisonneuve 4999 St.Catherine St.W., Suite 555 Westmount H3Z 1T3 483-6107 sized businesses.CPS DATA LTD 245 Victoria Avenue Westmount H3Z 2M6 For over fifteen years providing manual record- keeping and computerized data processing services, including payroll for small and medium- Call Mrs.Doreen Wilcox at 937-4661 \u2014 te By LAUREEN SWEENEY had a consultant in to review our personnel procedures,\" Alderman Peter Duffield told the public council meeting.\u201cWe thought it was high time we gave the city management the benefit of up-do-date expertise.\u201d Basic evaluation Ald Duffield, chairman of the council's personnel committee, described the study as a basic evaluation, to review present procedures and recommend modifications.Among the various areas to be studied are replacement practices, as well as policies governing salaries, benefits, retirement and severance.James Wright, president of the Westmount Municipal Association, asked Ald Duffield what was the city\u2019s policy regarding personnel.\u2018\u2018Essentially, we hire staff without regard to race or creed,\u201d he replied.John Johnston, a director of the WMA and a hospital administrator, questioned the need to spend money on an outside consultant, when up-to-date informa- PROMOTED SERGEANT: West- mount's Public Security Unit has a new sergeant.He is John Everatt, 34, promoted to fill the vacancy left by the recent appointment of Richard McEnroe to the rank of lieutenant.Sgt Everatt, who joined the unit at its inception five years ago, is secretary-treasurer of the association representing West- mount public safety officers.The promotion, made official Friday, was effective April 30.Rooming house is to become a condominium City council at its Monday night meeting last week approved the redivision of property at 4160 Dorchester boulevard to permit the conversion of a rooming house into condominiums.The action led Ramzi Ferahian to ask if residents of the rooming house had been informed of the conversion.Frank Davis, the city\u2019s director general, said he would find out and inform Mr Ferahian.The citizen also wanted to know what steps were taken by the city to inform tenants of apartments being converted to condominiums.He was told that conversion of apartments is a provincial matter.tion on personnel matters was readily available, he said.\u201cIf you have a good personnel manager, he should know how to get this information,\u201d Mr Johnston said.Collective agreements He added that many of the city\u2019s 350 employees had wages governed by collective agreements.Ald Duffield said he personally was in favor of having outside appraisals from time to time.He explained that there was maybe a misconception that most organizations had personnel departments to do the hiring.In fact, he said, personnel departments might conduct searches or even initial screening if requested, but the final choice should rest with the manager of the specific department.\u201cIf I were a department head, 1 would not want a personnel manager hiring for me,\u201d he stated.He later told THE EXAMINER that it was up to department heads \u201cto insist\u201d on having the final choice unless they wanted to delegate responsibility to the personnel office.Cigaret butt on balcony ignites $1,500 fire A fire in an upper rear wooden balcony caused an estimated $1,500 damage Wednesday night last week after it was ignited by smokers\u2019 materials accidentally left on the porch, fire officials report.The fire, discovered in a three- storey home at 367 Metcalfe avenue about 10:30 pm, was contained to the balcony.Heavy smoke entered the house, however, as well as the adjoining home at civic number 365.Police said the fire broke out after a youth had put out a cigaret on a wooden railing described as nearly rotten.Beams charred Firemen reported the support beams had been charred.The fire brigade was called to the adjoining house at 365 Met- calfe about 10:30 pm when efforts to put out the fire on the balcony using a dry chemical extinguisher proved unsuccessful, fire officials said.The aerial ladder was raised to the roof and the fire was quelled using a 1%-inch hose.A section of the bathroom ceiling was opened to check for extension of the fire, but none was found.An opening also was made in the ceiling at civic number 365, owing to a heavy concentration of smoke, fire officials said.A similar fire broke out Oct 23, 1984 under a second-storey rear balcony of a home at 363 Redfern avenue, also believed caused by smokers\u2019 material (see story Oct 25).Green light for project at Lansdowne The green light was given to a proposed three-storey condominium development on the southwest corner of Sherbrooke street and Lansdowne avenue by Westmount city council at its meeting Monday night last week.Approval was given to redivi- sion of lots at 394-396 Lansdowne avenue for co-owners of the property listed as R.Calder Spence and Jiri (Georges) Syrovatka.Alderman Peter Trent told the meeting the cadastral operation paved the way for the construction of the condominiums.The proposed structure would include eight multi-level units with interior stairs, city officials explained.The plan was described as \u2018\u2018sort of a new approach\u2019 in Westmount.Officials still are dealing with preliminary plans, according to Bruce St Louis, director of services.Electrical switch fails, crumbs ignite in toaster Cords on electric appliances such as toasters should always be unplugged when not in use, fire officials advise.This precaution assures that power will not flow into the appliance in the event the control switch fails.Such an incident occurred here Sunday when a possible faulty control switch on a toaster resulted in crumbs burning and filling an apartment with \u2018\u2018a fair amount of smoke,\u201d fire officials said.The incident occurred about 11 am when Westmount firemen were called to the building at 331 Clarke avenue.Mutual aid firefighters from Outremont were called automatically but cancelled seven minutes later when the cause of the problem was determined.Plate removed A licence plate was reported stolen off a car parked inside at 4000 de Maisonneuve boulevard overnight Tuesday-Wednesday last week, police report.It belonged to a resident of the building, the Plaza Tower apartments.The toaster was reported to have operated without being turned on and residents were advised to have the appliance repaired.Highway land compensation is approved Westmount city council has agreed to accept a $25,000 settlement regarding the expropriation of Selby street property by Quebec in 1965 and 1970 for construction of the Trans Canada Highway.Approval was given at the city council meeting Monday last week.Also accepted was $2,500 compensation for experts\u2019 costs to which interest and judicial costs are to be added.Alderman Phillip Aspinall said the settlement represented the other part of an earlier proposal accepted Feb 5 for some $700,000 compensation for other land for the highway.0 Westmount real estate: Few March sales make for slow first quarter A drop in the number of West- mount residential property sales registered during March contributed to the slowest first quarter here in three years.The sales of 16 one- and two- family dwellings were registered in March, bringing the first quarter total to 53.In 1984, 59 properties were transferred during the first quarter; 64 in 1983.Price statistics for March also are lower than for the previous year.March prices averaged just 12.5 percent more than MUC valuations for the 16 properties; the average markup in March 1984 registrations was 15.2 percent.The average markup in February transfers was 25 percent.33-35 Bruce Lowest price, $90,000 Prices, however, have been fluctuating irregularly for several months.A typical Westmount dwelling, valued at $178,445, might have been sold for $200,751 had the sale been registered in March.EXAMINER statistics show the same house might have been sold at prices ranging between $181,676 (November 1984) and $248,374 (September 1984) at different times in the previous 12 months.Reflects houses The seemingly low markup for March may be more a reflection of the houses involved in the transfers than market conditions.The highest declared price in the March transfers was $280,000 \u2014 the lowest in 12 months.The absence of higher-priced properties, for which accurate assessments of market value appear more difficult for the MUC to make, may have some influence in the relatively low average markup from valuation.The lowest price in the transfers was paid for a home on Bruce avenue: $90,000.An Arlington avenue home recorded the greatest markdown from valuation: 16.0 percent.A house at 570 Lansdowne avenue was sold for 66 percent more than its $132,500 valuation at $220,000, the highest markup in the March transfers.A number of other properties are included in the transfers, including a condominium unit in OL os Highest markup, 66 percent By JAMES MILLS the building at the corner of Sherbrooke street and Clarke avenue and a building classed as a room- .ing house on St Catherine street.Sold as a group Three adjacent apartment buildings on Grosvenor avenue were sold as a group.A vacant lot on de Maisonneuve boulevard, near Elm avenue, comprising 1,728 square feet, also was transferred.A large, modern apartment building at the corner of Metcalfe avenue and Sherbrooke street was sold for $2.5 million, the largest single transfer registered during March.An office building and a commercial building, both on Sherbrooke street, also were sold.Details of the March transfers follow: 25 Arlington: Maciej (Matthew) Krzyczkowski to Mr and Mrs Serge Lacroix, sale price $123,288 (1985 MUC valuation $146,700); 33-35 Bruce: Beatrice Assiz Rubenis (De Vreeze) to Kenneth Mann and William Hampton, $90,000 ($88,500), a two-family dwelling; 41 Burton: Patrick Brennan to Jane Poulson (Halpenny), $116,000 ($89,700); 399 Clarke, No 103: Mr and Mrs Paul Eissenvenn to Sheila Lubin (Mackay), $45,000 ($47,500), a condominium unit; 415 Clarke: Barbara Sacks to Roy Donald Brown, $1 and considerations, ($226,300); Continued on next page The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 4150 Sherbrooke Office building sold for $900,000 \u201cTHE SHUTTLE\" Montreal - Quebec City.Seven flights a day, Monday to Friday.More flights than any other airline.\u201cTHE POWER PLAY\u201d Montreal - Boston.Two non-stop flights a day during the week, and one on Sunday, connect you with more than 70 cities in the U.S.A.All flights are eligible for frequent flier bonuses under our Fare Deal Plan.\u201cTHE SPECIAL\u201d Quebec City - Toronto.Only S212* makes this the lowest roundtrip fare of its kind, offered by any airline on the route.These flights are also eligible under our Fare Deal Plan, for discounts and bonuses.*Tariff applies only on roundtrip flights completed within a 48 hour period.\u201cTHE INTERCITY\" Montreal - Toronto.The perfect flight schedule for business people.These flights are also eligible for our Fare Deal Plan, frequent flier programme.\u201cTHE FARE DEAL Where frequent fliers win a'fare\u201ddeal with the Quebecair Fare Deal Plan.This is the best (and easiest!) programme of progressive discounts and bonuses offered by any airline.\u201cTHE JET-SEPT\u201d Montreal - Sept-lles.Two flights a day, every day of the week.More flights than any other airline.\u201cTHE SHUTTLE\u2019, \u201cTHE POWER PLAY\u2019, \u201cTHE SPECIAL\u2019, \u201cTHE INTERCITY\", \u201cTHE FARE DEAL PLAN\" and \u201cTHE JET-SEPT\", just some of the services that make Quebecair your best choice for business travel.= QUEBECAIR Flying your way NOR ality jy bs tee 8 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 Continued from previous page de Maisonneuve (lot): Eness Corp Ltd to Alex Ajzenberg;, $12,500 ($31,700), a vacant lot of 1,728 square feet; 31 Forden: Mr and Mrs Peter Gordon Jones to Bruno Arnould and Elinore Richardson, $280,000 ($229,400); 390 Grosvenor: Felix Roue Dou Dou Boicel to Gemma Matthey, $1 CONDOMINIUM 4410 RUE STE-CATHERINE O.is I EL UN net LL D ENJOY THE GOOD LIFE\u2014 YOU'VE EARNED IT! Ideal for the quiet, gracious lifestyle, the 4110 has all the modern conveniences of condominium living.Wonderfully located near complete shopping and service facilities, the 4410 provides complete residential comfort for those who simply want to take life a little easier.Included in the superb design of the 4110 are the following convenient features: ® minutes away from the Atwater and all kitchens equipped with dishwashers Vendôme metro stations and disposers * regular bus service stopping right at ® individually controlled heating and air the front door conditioning © interior parking ® all electric conveniences and built with energy conservation in mond ¢ individual laundry room with connec- ® pre-wiring for cable television tions for washer and dryer me PROMANAC:: 933-3646 ESP BROKER 9-9 Monday to Thursday * 1 to 4 pm Saturday and Sunday ® large balconies * floor covering: carpet and tile and considerations ($110,100); 435-7-9 Grosvenor: Gestion Mariotti Inc to 138782 Canada Inc, $700,000 (total valuation $597,000), three apartment buildings; 81 Holton: George Albert Duthie to Maurizio Favretto, $125,000 ($121,600); 570 Lansdowne: Mr and Mrs Kenneth Porter to Mr and Mrs Richard P.Carson, $220,000 ($132,500); 439 Mount Pleasant: Robert Lisser to Michelle Marchand (Millaire), $177,500 ($154,300); 621 Murray Hill: Mabel Ross (Gray) to John Edward Johnson and Sharon Kristine Vance, $145,000 ($171,300); 64 Rosemount Crescent: Compagnie de Fiducie Canada Permanent to Karen Couvillon, $175,000 ($171,000); 595 Roslyn: Mr and Mrs Stephen Hart Myers to Helaine B.Ellen (Kliger), $1 and considerations ($155,000); 4546-48 St Catherine: Paul A.Brault to Charles Allan Slater and Irene Rosenberg, $132,250 ($158,600), a building classed as a rooming house; 4150 Sherbrooke: Martin J.and Lorne Stanley Lubotta, Joseph Bernard Lubotta estate and David Jack to Placements Sylean Ltée and Immeubles Mongeve Inc, $900,000 ($863,000), an office building; 31 Forden Highest declared price, $280,000 4444 Sherbrooke: Peter and Bernard Dale to Jean Sylvère (Les Immeubles 5 Étoiles Enrg), $2,500,000 ($2,069,500), an apartment building; 4470 Sherbrooke: Mabel Mary Roberts (Louttit) to Bissera Doneff (Anderson), $1 and considerations ($99,700), a commer- Secure your insurance investment In the event of a fire or burglary in your home, will you remember everything you own and can you prove you owned it?Videotape your possessions A complete video inventory record offers the security of a detailed visual list of every item in your home.The Video Proof professionals you can trust ° recommended by insurance brokers; * bonded and insured; e complete confidentiality: only one video record is prepared and remains with you directly after filming, for you to store in a safe place.Assure a fast and fair settlement.Fees from $70 Call for free estimate: v 933-3522 4 - - .\u2026.A ame sae mma, i 4 mms apoE mA Nr em we.mm 1 nom on ge ed 435-37-39 Grosvenor Apartments sold for $700,000 MARCH STATISTICS Following is a summary of the sales of one- and two-family dwellings in Westmount registered during March: Total sales: 16 (down 4 from February) Total price: $2,785,788 Total valuation: $2,476,100 Average price: $192,938 Average price compared to average valuation: 12.5 percent higher Average price based on typical valuation®*: $200,751 Average price compared to average valuation (adjusted**): 11.5 percent higher Average price based on typical valuation* (adjusted**): $2198,966 *The typical valuation for all one- and two-family dwellings in Westmount is $178,445, according to averages of the 1985 valuation roll.**Figures are adjusted by removing the unusual sales.Those with the highest and lowest prices are excluded, as are those with the greatest percentage difference between price and valuation.cial building; 4480 Sherbrooke: John Vincelli to Emil Sadaka, $150,000 ($136,200); 449 Strathcona: Frank Long and Gloria Belliveau to Katherine McKay (Dillon), $162,000 ($177,300); 106 Sunnyside: Elinore Jean Richardson to Mr and Mrs Frederick Naimer, $1 and considerations.($288,500); 417 Victoria: George Sachewsky to Mr and Mrs William Lloyd Davis, $125,000 ($77,700).4444 Sherbrooke Apartment block sold for $2.5 million Nord restores streets, walks Westmount city council voted recently to award Les Entreprises Nord Construction (1962) Inc a contract for sidewalk restoration and street cuts.The work will be carried out at a cost of $138,220.Other bids tendered for the work came from Les Pavages North State Inc, for $167,650, and Construction Palanca Inc, for $183,535.ANDY DODGE, enr.real estate consultant specializing in Westmount tax valuation appeals 930 de Courcelle, Montreal CRRE TS IUT TETF FICHE SUSEARNUESR VE EUESSTOETIAUURÉ EE UU: ~ mr Se a OO = mme re = Three fires break out in garbage Westmount firefighters were called out overnight Tuesday- Wednesday to extinguish three trash can fires which broke out separately, fire officials report.Arson was suspected in the first The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 - WINDOW \u201c77 WASHING \u20ac HOMES e OFFICES / MONTREAL WINDOW CLEANING 3 8 1 = =» 281-1589 1904-1985 Serving Westmount for 81 years LES, LE Tred Pe No et STAMP SHOW: The stamp club of the Children\u2019s Department of the Westmount Public Library held its annual stamp show Saturday at the library.Among others displaying their collections were, from left, Romesh Vadivel, Neelanthi Vadivel and Scott Bakar.brought Quebec provincial police to the scene.The second outbreak occurred about 12:08 am when a fire was reported in a can on Atwater avenue outside Alexis Nihon Plaza.It turned out to be located in Montreal.PROPERTY WANTED UP TO $250,000 & Montréal Trust WE'LL WORK HARD FOR YOU The Westmount crews were call- For a special buyer.A detached 41330 Greene Avenue ® Cd EERE UPPER WESTMOUNT Detached Residence and Coach House AUGUST OCCUPANCY Quality 5-bedroom home on quiet residential street.Large finished basement with separate entrance.Two- car garage.Detached fully renovated coach house, Acorn fireplace in the living/dining room, beautiful view.Separate outdoor parking.IMPECCABLE\u2014MOVE RIGHT IN! For exclusive showing call Joyce Faughnan 483-6191 e 933-6781 house or bungalow with large rooms but not too many.Near transportation.Please call in confidence: Alice Kennedy, 935-9046, 934-1818.Montreal Trust Brokers ROYAL Le incident at 9:20 pm which set an ed out again at 12:39 am for gar- attendant\u2019s cabin on fire in the bage smouldering at the rear of provincially-operated parkinglot 1375 Greene.The fire was at 1055 Greene avenue.Damage discovered and extingushed by a was estimated at $400.It also public safety officer.69 BEAUBIEN 22a GLORIEUX NOC7 ARCHITECTES & INGENIEUR BUILDING CONSULTANTS Commercial Industrial, Institutionnal, Residential PAGE ROYAL LePAGE = 464 SAINT-JEAN : MONTRÉAL QUEBEC - H2Y 2S} - 514 282-1057 John Aled .oii iia 933-9184 Pauline Bates .c.0000eevanenn, 932-2224 Jane Allan 000000000000 000 a 0000 932-7589 EdithBerman .c.ives 935-4205 So G I EN ABINET- ; Barbara Besner .0000000 000006 937-6448 Francoise Bibaud .cc00.482-1143 Diane Bujold .2402.0000000 00 au 00 Nicole Boyd .2005000000 0000000 488-4696 MAKER Nori L.Churchill-Smith Dulcie Carnell.002020000000e 0000 0e 933-5336 - : 2 \u2019 Joann Colby .ccciiannnn Shirley Cohen .002000000 00000000 932-9832 Julia Daniels .vue Rita Anne Conn .00000000 000000 937-4452 Helen Forbes .Audrey Culver 44.200000 su nue 0 844-9410 Brien Foster .Georgette Drummond .482-4053 INTRODUCING Marina L.J.Giuliani .Micheline Dupont Aubrey Kinsman .Holly Haber .NEW SHOWROOM Eva Klein .0000500 00000 ana c une Lois Hollinger .Valerie Kyle .2000000 0000000 Pat Homa .\u2026.000n 0 cena nc ce seven % ESTABLISHED 1955 Josephine Lantier .4000000 J.J.Jacobs .220.2 2e sea seen ee .Joan McCallum .ccoovvunnnens 935-8154 Irma Kerner .0.0000000 000000 sale discount on all Brian McGuigan .02.200000000000 Haagen Kierulf .2.022000000 Joan McGuigan .contin.Eda Kistler .c.0v.n., SANDERSON FABRICS an, eee ue as esse ac 1e 00000 ça, Labreque D AR .rigitte Meagher .20200000 00000000 ernice McKee .2020000 50000 0s 00005 until end of March Jean Murray .000050 00000000 Olga Maxwell .000000000000000 Marie Anna Myers Constance Marie Moisan .486-5395 24e .Debbie Newton .Reg Morden .- 937-7061 * refinishing * upholstering * antique Aurore R.Ouellette .845-1012 Harey Quart .ee 483-3388 .aul Lien, - ona LL se sa ea me 84-82 restoration ® interior decorating Yvette Perras .0000080000e00s 342-5937 Joan Samuecls .120202000 00e 000000 933-2446 ; \u2018ri : Mehdi A.Salehi .200000 00000000 935-5011 Ted Schaner .240.0000000 0000000 849-5458 ° remodelling and repairing ® caning and Gerda Sples .iii 3335273 Rosanne Simard .487-7115 i ® Di inishi e Georgette Strous.0000000000000 934-1655 Hennie Sternklar .0402200000000 487-0812 releathering piano refinishing custom Mary Ann Turner .000.0 765-0331 made residential, reproduction and Chinese furniture, slipcovers, draperies and vertical blinds ® excellent selection of fabrics, wall and floor coverings James R.Quinlan r.r1.Manager Paul Robert s.a.r.r.1 c.r.s.Manager 4145 Sherbrooke St.W.1367 Greene Avenue 932-1112 935-8541 ROYAL LePAGE ALSO CUSTOM-BUILT OFFICE FURNITURE, SEATING AND INTERIORS ESTIMATES AND SHOP-AT-HOME SERVICE For Sale FOR SALE 1230 Beaulac Real Estate Services Ltd.Ces] ee FACING PLACE VERTU, ACROSS FROM THE BAY Broker 935-8541 DEDICATED TO SERVE YOU BETTER 331-1698.932-4444 - ay \u2014 -_ - RTS a ES TS SE 10 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 LAMBERT ROOFING & CHIMNEY SERVICE INC.RESIDENTIAL \u2014 COMMERCIAL \u2014 26 YEARS SERVING THE WEST END \u2014 FREE ESTIMATES \u2014 WORK GUARANTEED We offer quality work at reasonable prices: ALL TYPES INSULATION [J BRICKWORK [ BASEMENTS 5790 St.James W.WATERPROOFING OR BRICKWORK = 484-0646 C658 APPROVED QUEBEC 378 GALLERIES REPAIRED HOME IMPROVEMENT K.Cohen | COMPLETE = RESIDENTIAL oc 2 & COMMERCIAL \"ANSE + RENOVATION @D SERVICES From conception to design 7 to construction to finishing to clean-up Our specialty is High quality premium custom cabinets for kitchens, dens, bedrooms REFERENCES AVAILABLE UPON REQUEST (SERVING MONTREALERS FOR OVER 12 YEARS CALL NO Philip N À 3 ar, NN - wed IE] is à warning Worth repeating Are you sure of { { { Your water heating?i ! / | / | { JOHN WATSON (Quebec) Limited PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS 24-HOUR SERVICE 366 Victoria Avenue, | Suite 7 ; OEY | rer ; LC CHRISTIE PLUMBING 484-4987 LIMITED A 484-2330 Complete is A 98 Westminster N.0 AST-ERFICIENT CARPETS * WALLS AND CEILINGS Montreal West FLOORS * WINDOWS * CHESTERFIELDS RESIDENTIAL PAINTING e AIR DUCTS HOME IMPROVEMENTS COMMERCIAL PLAYROOMS ¢ KITCHEN * EXTENSIONS INDUSTRIAL CARPENTRY DONE ON FENCES AND GALLERIES BATHROOMS * BALCONIES, NEW OR REPAIRED 24-HOUR SERVICE ALSO BRICK REPAIR ROOFING, CEMENT WORK AND PAINTING i.A COMPLETE SERVICE FOR 484-2010 B abij & Duggan CARPETS: CLEANING 5331A Sherbrooke W.WALLS: WASHING AND PAINTING .CLEANING CONTRACTORS INC.[i00ms: Sami vamATHAN: 4253 St.Catherine St.W., Suite 3 INSURANCE CLAIMS 933 1 935 SMOKE AND WATER DAMAGE = Come visit our showroom and see wallpaper and FREE ESTIMATES vertical and horizontal blinds ray ee [TTT TTT TI) REPAIRS, PARTS & SERVICE \\ Largest selection of gas barbecues and accessories \u2014 Assembled, tested and _ demonstrated with expert advice.WE SELL & FILL _ i R \\ OPEN SUNDAY TANKS a > WARREN HALE LTÉE Millions of children desperately Ua ELECTRICIANS need basic food.shelter, i hooling and health care.hdd SERVICES | | COMMERCIAL * INDUSTRIAL * RESIDENTIAL Your help js necded vision of Lasko Industries Ltd.n our onation ay.fbr os ELECTRIC HEATING _ Send your donation today RP PTIT CT: 17 A EU Co) AU 93 2-0926 CARE Canada 1312 Bank St.Ottawa _K1S 5H7 Mans notnetxetl 312 anale oy ans axahinitnz own QBEL 21 6 shat To senias Oy hulaesat! an The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 - 11 Increase the value of your property with our cleaning system.we clean aged, weather- beaten brick, stone and concrete that can steal from dd WE SPECIALIZE IN THE CLEANING OF the value of your home.BERR give a new lustre WORK OF SPIDER to your home with WEBBING.our system.try us.HELPS PREVENT FLASH RUSTING VIA CORROSION INHIBIT IN: \\_ ORS.ED ECOLOGICALLY |iX® CONTAINS NO PHOSPHATES OR CAUSTIC vi SODA.\u2018 A Fy + aluminum_ sidin requires preventive maintenence on an annual basis LAVAGE À LA PRESSION INDUSTRIEL INC INDUSTRIAL PRESSURE WASHING Ha 1862 Wellington St., Suite 200, Montreal, Quebec H3K 1W1 Better electrical work our current affair! | Contact us for heating conversions, security lighting, alarm systems, residential and commercial electrical repairs, modifications and new installations.BREMER ELECTRIQUE « ELECTRICAL CONTRACTOR 1206 Notre-Dame W.C AMPU S PAI NTER S I i ; I : REG'D cisentele: | YOUR HOUSE PAINTING SPECIALISTS, OUR OFFICE HAS MOVED UPSTAIRS THE ONES THAT GUARANTEE THEIR WORK James H.Macintyre FULLY INSURED \u2014 COMPETITIVE RATES Plumbing Lid.Greg J.Loyd 937-5661 wr D.Gardner, President \u201cff \u2014\u2014 PLUMBING AND HEATING CONTRACTORS ESTABLISHED 1913 ing _ NOW AT 24 Mr.SERVICE 320 Victoria, Suite 103 482-4924/5 asso RAINBOW VISION PROFESSIONALIZED STUDENT WINDOW CLEANING Book your date now 937-5661 SINCE 1976 > MINTZER CONSTRUCTION REGD.RENOVATIONS CONTRACTOR/CARPENTER FREE WRITTEN ESTIMATES 845-9453 BILL MINTZER Ma ory ae RE i \u2018 12 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 Occupancy Permits The following occupancy permits were issued at Westmount city hall during the past three weeks: April 25 Westmount Square, suites C22/C23: Lily Simon Inc/Boutique Quinto, retailer; Westmount Square, suite C44: Missoni de la Galeria, retail; 1362 Greene: Maison du Dauphin (121694 Canada Ltd), outdoor terrace; May 3 4030 Dorchester: Mr Parsons, rooming house (until April 30, 1986); May 9 4999 St Catherine, suite 502: Joffe, Pennee, Gagné and Silverstone, storage, binding of files and archives; 4999 St Catherine: Reynolds and Anderson Ltd, insurance brokers administration office; 4998 de Maisonneuve, third floor: Joffe, Pennee, Gagné and Silverstone, étude d'avocats; 4832 Sherbrooke, second floor: Van Horne & Roberge en Vrac, retail sales/cards and flowers; 4917 Sherbrooke: Courageous, retail ladies' wear; 4156A St Catherine, ground floor: Boutique Signature, division de City Imports Ltée; 4022 St Catherine: Restaurant La Brochetterie Vietnamienne, restaurant; 4485 Sherbrooke, suite 1: Dr Michel Grignon, psychiatrist; 4485 Sherbrooke, suite 2; Rhoda Cohen, psychotherapist; 4485 Sherbrooke, suite 3: Dr Sid Per zow, psychiatry; 4150 St Catherine, suite 330: The Standard Life Assurance Co, sales/administration office; 4150 St Catherine, suite 480: Corporation des Propriétaires Immobiliers du Québec Inc, non-profit association; 4150 St Catherine, suite 490: André Gingras & Associés Inc/Gingras Savoie Inc.HOME _IMPROVEMENT VACUUM REPAIR RESIDENTIAL & COMMERCIAL From bags to small repairs to complete overhaul FREE PICKUP AND DELIVERY UNTIL MAY 22 Katie's Vacuum Repair 4616 Decarie Blvd.485-1653 ATTENTION HOMEOWNERS \u2014 RENOVATION SALE Experts in home energy conservation and home renovations.Take advantage of all government grants available.Call us to find out if you qualify! More sprinklers for library The Westmount Public Library will install an additional sprinkler system to ensure that the entire building is equipped in case of fire.At its regular May meeting last week, city council awarded the contract for supply and installation of the system to Roberts Fire Protection Ltd.The work will be done at a cost of $13,431.The only other bid submitted for the contract came from Grin- nell Fire Protection Systems Company Ltd, for $13,460.The new system will be installed in the south extension of the library, which includes the children\u2019s department and some of the library's book stacks.The main part of the library already is equipped with a sprinkler system.Lignbec wins line painting Lignbec Inc has been chosen to carry out a portion of the annual street line painting this year in Westmount.City council voted recently to award the company the contract for the work, which includes labor and materials, to be carried out for a price of $5,406.17.The only other tender submitted for the work came from Les Signalisations R.G.Inc for $5,516.50.NES LES OUVERTURES Metal Door ¢ hand-made leaded windows * key lock IDEAL.DOORS WINDOWS RENOVATION SPECIALISTS SINCE 1977 Spruce up your home.- PEACH TREE $ * model 707 * pre-mounted ax and installation * wood frame included CEDAR BOW WINDOW with 2 openings, 8 feet X 5 feet Enhance your home by installing magnificent bow windows.Substantial savings *495 LES OUVERTURES IDE/IL'Y WINDOWS DOORS CHOICES OF MATERIALS TO SATISFY THE MOST DISCRIMINATING TASTES WINDOWS FOR ALL STYLES OF HOMES HEAD OFFICE LY 325 Chemin Gascon 5757 Monday-Wednesday Terrebonne (Lachenaie) LT LE CE Exit r le-Cati hursday and Friday Auto [Fd east Ci TTT 8:30t0 9 471-9146 735-9283 Saturday 9 to noon QUALITY FIRST Renovating your home is a good Why buy a new home when you can renovate for so much less?Siding ® Aluminum Doors and Windows ® Vents * Insulation ® Dual Energy ® Air Sealing ® U.F.F.l.Removal ® Home Renovations ® Heat Pumps investment.The following building permits were issued at Westmount city hall during the past week: May 7 4154B St Catherine: for R.H.Dawson Inc by Enseignes Viktor Inc to erect a sign, $3,618; 3510 de Maisonneuve: for Alexis Nihon Quebec) Inc by V.K.Mason Inc, lobby, May 8 746 Upper Lansdowne: for Mr M.Nadler by Levine Bros Inc to convert furnace and hot water tank to gas, $4,000; 820 Upper Belmont: for L.G.Pathy by James Griffin and Son Inc, water entrance, $800; ; 17 Edgehill: for Mr R.Abrahamson by the owner, alterations to bathroom, $2,000; 433 Victoria: for Robert Weiss by Savino Fence to erect a fence, $2,600; 4006 Montrose: for Robert and Jane Levis by the owners to erect a fence, May 13 724 Lexington: for D.T.Shaw Holding Co by the owner, alterations, $32,000; Lexington work gets approval -City council recently approved alterations that will be carried out at 724 Lexington avenue.The alterations to the dwelling, which is owned by the D.T.Shaw Holding Company Ltd, are to accommodate separate living quarters in what is a semidetached structure.The ground floor garages will be transformed into a garage and a living area, and bedrooms will be added to the second floor of the structure.A four-hour fire-rated block wall will be constructed to provide fire separation from 722 Lexington.The city building permit for the work lists the cost at approximately $32,000.215 Redfern: for Reader\u2019s Digest by the owner, alterations, $35,000; 171 Metcalfe: for Reader's Digest by the owner, alterations, $10,000; 65 Hillside: for 129337 Canada Inc by Central Plumbing and Electrical to convert furnace to gas, $2,900; 4911 Sherbrooke: for Mr B.Dorfman by Central Plumbing and Electrical, to install two Bunsen burners, $400; 17 Edgehill: for Mr Abrahamson by Levine Bros Inc to install seven plumbing fixtures, $6,000; 560 Claremont: for Carl Ravinsky by Levine Bros Inc to install six plumbing fixtures, $3,000; 466 Roslyn: for Victor Eichenwald by Levine Bros Inc to install 10 plumbing fixtures, $8,000.IN BAGS Ul | THE MODERN SOLUTION Modugno soil delivered in bags allows you to receive the exact amount required for your particular needs, no more waste.Rain or shine your soil is protected by a poly bag which allows you to use it at your own convenience, no more mess.No more backaches from your shovel and wheelbarrow.All you do is open the bag.it's clean and simple.ORDER NOW! THE MODERN WAY > 450 DELIVERY INCLUDED M Lu i TN | Cote Vertu, St.bu MODUGND) L e , PETER TR TE et \u2018} oo oo - x - dou notninxst UO CTE Sas Cr ulated sa TE Ed if shel VIIa FV) atehinins aval oe The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 - 13 Alexis Nihon technical workers set up picket lines Technical services workers at the Alexis Nihon complex were picketing the site this week, after being locked out of their jobs May The 10 workers in the complex's technical services department are members of the Fédération des Travailleurs du Québec.They have been responsible for matters such as heating, ventilation, plumbing and basic repairs in the Alexis Nihon Plaza and office tower and in the Plaza Towers apartment building.Negotiations over a new contract apparently have broken down between the workers and the complex\u2019s owners, Alexis Nihon (Quebec) Inc.The workers\u2019 last contract expired April 30.Officials at Alexis Nihon said the workers were locked out because they had walked off the job.\u2018Walked off\u2019 \u201cWe were negotiating and I guess they came to a disagreement and they walked off and we locked them out,\u201d Claude Amann, vice-president (marketing and public relations) for Alexis Nihon, told THE EXAMINER Tuesday.Mr Amann said he believed that new negotiations might be starting.\u201cWhat I know is that our man in charge of the file is presently with our lawyers and, I guess, is with the union,\u201d he said.The workers, who say they earn between $20,000 and $30,000 annually, requested a four-percent pay raise.They want an increase in the number of sick days beyond the present six, better working conditions and greater wage parity between employees.\u201cWe're being reasonable,\u201d said picketing worker Brian Byers, claiming that \u201cever since the new management took over, they're not talking.\u201d Workers interviewed at the site Monday said the company\u2019s offers for a settlement ignored most of the demands made by the workers.\u201cThey didn't offer nothing and the union walked,\u201d said worker Réjean Bibeaud.a.a A 1e = PR fo.4 SCOMM SCOMM CHEAT 327 Ja ! cMOu ; = \u2018 CMOU ctr hep y ey 1 QCK-0U - tk \u2014 NIHON S IGNS: Réjean Bibeaud, Pierre Aubin and Brian Byers were three of the 10 technical services workers who picketed this week at their place of work, the Alexis Nihon complex.The workers were locked out last week.Company officials say it was because the workers walked off the job.The workers say the company would not negotiate.By ROB SOUTHCOTT Mr Amann could not confirm specifics regarding the negotiations and would say only that it was \u2018\u2018very hard to say how far apart we are.\u201d Picketers said three managers currently are running the complex\u2019s technical services.They claimed that the department was understaffed before the dispute.They said that its decreased size means technical services to residential and commercial tenants in the structure would be neglected.\u2018Right now, they (Alexis Nihon) are running the buildings inadequately,\u201d said Mr Byers.\u201cThere\u2019s no tenant service and certain regulations are not being met.\u201d Although he noted that management was carrying out technical services, Mr Amann denied that the complex was being poorly serviced.\u201cIt\u2019s people from the organization who do the job,\" he said.\u201cWhy wouldn't the job be done if the job has to be done?\u201d Should be changed Mr Byers regarded the structure\u2019s ventilation system as an example of poor maintenance.He said that its filters, specially with extensive construction going on at the complex, should be changed every one or two months.Mr Byers said workers were permitted to change the filters only every four or five months.\u201cThat's people's health up there and they (Alexis Nihon) don't seem to care,\u201d he said.The workers also claimed that the lock-out could help Alexis Nihon to trim the size of the technical services department and make it non-union.\u201cThey want to get rid of a few guys,\u201d said Mr Bibeaud.\u201cThey're willing to spend $35 million in renovations and they want to cut our staff in half,\u201d said Mr Byers.Although Mr Amann could not confirm it, the workers said a conciliation hearing had been set for May 27.If no earlier settlement is reached, the workers plan to continue picketing the site daily, between 7:30 am and 4:30 pm.LET US OFFER YOU THE PERSONAL APPROACH: A Le Permanent, we offer a wide range of financial services to meet your needs.w investment management/administration = estate and will planning w tax services w personally managed RSP and RIF Please contact our account executive 861-8855 GB le Permanent Canada Permanent Trust Company 600 Dorchester West, Montreal H3B 2N6 1326 Greene Avenue, Westmount James C.Heward So many ways to make money make money.CENTRAL CHOICE DAILY INTEREST CHEQUING ACCOUNT Over 55?Get a V4 % Bonus on Daily interest at a rate comparable to what you geton daily balances of $1,000 plus with 0 Short Term Deposits.That\u2019s what the VIP Plan.0 Central Choice offers every day Keep records the way you want, | your balance is $5,000 plus.passbook or statement, with Get preferred rates and free optional returned cheque service.chequing when your balance is Get the only account you need.$1,000 plus.Still earn interest Central Choice.whatever your balance.T Central Trust Montreal \u2014 1130 Sherbrooke St.W.Tel.842-8362 Westmount \u2014 4825 Sherbrooke St.W.Tel.933-1122 57 branches across Canada Member: Canada Deposit Insurance Corporation A y\u2014 ee HT EE 14 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, L'Église Saint-Léon retrouve Dans les projets de restauration de l\u2019église Saint-Léon, il y en avait un qui n'était pas une priorité mais qui était prévu dans le plan d'ensemble: nettoyer et ravaler la façade et le beffroi de l\u2019église Saint-Léon.Ce projet avait été laissé dans les doissiers puisque les fonds ne permettaient pas sa réalisation.Grâce à la générosité d\u2019un membre de la communauté, qui avait entendu parler du projet et y tenait beaucoup, ce travail de restauration sera exécuté dans les prochaines semaines.Il y a bien les désagréments d'un chantier pour quelques semaines \u2014 il faut de la patience pour supporter les échafaudages, les résultats en valent la peine! On retrouvera donc l\u2019éclat de la pierre, le relief de l'architecture et la beauté du monument.Les paroissiens de Saint-Léon qui ont toujours été fiers de leur temple, May 16, 1985 sont en droit de se réjouir que la maison du Seigneur, leur lieu de rassemblement, ait retrouvé sa lumière et retrouve maintenant tout son éclat.Quelques autres paroissiens s\u2019affairent à donner aussi à l'entourage de l'église un jardin qui fera le plaisir de tous ceux qui fréquentent l'église paroissiale.D'autres travaux s\u2019imposent et sont prévues par les administrateurs de la paroisse; ils vous seront communiqués dans les prochaines semaines.Confirmations Dimanche, à la célébration de 11h15, une cinquantaine d\u2019enfants seront confirmés dans la foi de leur baptême.En demandant ce sacrement, ils s'engagent à découvrir les exigences de l\u2019Evangile et à vivre comme les membres d\u2019un même corps.AR V\\ Ÿ St.Andrew and St Paul Sherbrooke Street West at Bishop PRESBYTERIAN SUNDAY AT 11 AM Sermon: MAYDAY! MAYDAY! The Minister J.S.S.Armour, Minister & Church School, Nursery and Créche Wayne Riddell, Director of Music Ray Drennan, Assistant AT THE CHURCH OF YOUR CHOICE son éclat L'engagement qu'ils prennent implique d'être des témoins mais ils ne sauraient le devenir sans le soutien des autres membres de la communauté.C'est à tous les adultes engagés et donc aux parents, aux parrains, qu\u2019il importe de les soutenir et même de les conduire.Le sociologue Lévis Strauss affirme que dans l'éducation, il y a des contraintes nécessaires.Puisse l'Esprit animer d\u2019un feu nouveau les églises chrétiennes de Westmount dans une nouvelle Pentecôte! Service held for Dr Griffith known for anesthesia work A memorial service was held Saturday at First Baptist Church in Montreal for Dr Harold Randall Griffith, OC, MM, MD, FRCP (C), FFARCS, 4998 de Maison- neuve boulevard, who died Tuesday last week.A world leader in the field of anesthesia, Dr Griffith, 90, was affiliated with the Queen Elizabeth Hospital, formerly the Montreal Homeopathic Hospital, for over 40 years.In 1942, as anesthetist-in-chief of the Montreal Homeopathic, Dr Griffith pioneered the use of curare as a muscle relaxant.The Baptist Church to host young American visitors Forty young people with their advisors will visit Montreal this weekend, as guests of the congregation of Westmount Baptist Church, from Central Baptist Church, Hartford, Conn.The group will be led by Rev Angelique Walker-Smith.The trip represents the culmination of youth activities and fund-raising in order to make possible the visit to Canada.This hands-across-the-border project comes about as a result of the fact that Dr Bob Roberts, executive minister of the Baptist Shavuot study lasts all night The Congregation Shaar Hashomayim project for 20- to 40-year-old singles plans an all- night Torah teach-in May 25 marking the festival of Shavuot, the holiday which commemorates the revelation of the Torah.The program is scheduled to begin at 11:15 pm.Featured speakers include university professors, rabbis and Jewish thinkers.Refreshments are to be served throughout the night.Morning services are planned for the crack of dawn.For more information, call 937-9471.Churches of Connecticut, is the son of Rev Elgar Roberts, former associate pastor of Westmount Baptist.The young people will participate in the morning service and Rev Walker-Smith will preach.At the 7 pm evening service, the fourth film in the documentary series \u201cYeshua,\u201d entitled \u2018\u2018The Bread of Sacrifice,\u201d will be shown.This episode shows Jesus, as His life draws to its tragic close, beginning to prepare His followers with reference to the coming sacrifice.The disciples have great difficulty accepting such an image, as it recalls the human sacrifices of the Old Testament by which people in the promised land once sought to appease their bloodthirsty gods.We see archeological evidence for the practice of human sacrifice in caves beneath the North African city of Carthage, but draw nearer to the meaning of Christ's sacrifice in the poignant story of Abraham's willingness to kill his beloved son Isaac in obedience to the apparent will of God.The segment ends with Jesus\u2019 deliberate entry into a Jerusalem now rife with suspicion of Him and His teachings.ANGLICAN SYNAGOGUE CONGREGATION CHURCH OF SHAAR THE ADVENT HASHOMAYIM Corner of Wood and de Maisonneuve, Westmount The Rev'd Eric Dungan, M.A.SUNDAY AFTER ASCENSION 8:00 am The Holy Eucharist 10:30 am The Sung Eucharist (Church School and Nursery) Holy Eucharist during the week: 9:30 am Wednesday 12:10 pm Thursday, May 16 Organist: Martha Hagen 450 Kensington Avenue Sabbath Services Sabbath Eve: 6:45 pm in the chapel.Sabbath Day: 8:40 am in the main sanctuary.Sabbath Twilight: 7:20 pm.Daily Services Moming Services: Sun., May 19, 8:45 am; Mon., May 20, Victoria Day, 8:45 am; Tues., May 21, Rosh Chodesh Sivan, 7:15 am; Wed.-Fri., May 22-24, 7:30 am.Evening Services: Sun.-Thurs., May 19-23, 8:30 pm.UNITED WESTMOUNT PARK CHURCH Lansdowne Avenue and de Maisonneuve Blvd.The Rev.J.E.Munson, BA, BD, M.Div.Sixth Sunday After Easter Sunday, May 19 11 am: Morning Service Sermon: This Goodly Heritage IV.Methodism Social Hour Crib Corner Sunday School Andrew Bourne, ARCT, Organist and Choirmaster ALL ARE WELCOME St.Andrew\u2019s-Dominion Douglas United Church The Boulevard at Lansdowne\u2014486-1165 BUSES 66 and 124 STOP AT DOOR Sunday, May 19 11:00 am: Sermon: A Covering, A Name, A Character, and a Notice to the Devil.Guest Preacher: the Rev.Barry Goodwin Minister: The Rev.Alexander J.Farquhar Organist and Choir Director: Margaret de Castro, M.Mus.CRIB CORNER * SUNDAY SCHOOL COFFEE HOUR FOLLOWING WORSHIP ALL ARE WELCOME HHH FCO Sunday, May 19 8:00 am Holy Eucharist 10:30 am Sung Eucharist Preacher: The Rev.C.Cobb Church School and Nursery Wednesday 10:00 am Holy Eucharist 8:00 pm Holy Eucharist 8:30 pm Bible Study ST.MATTHIAS\u2019 CHURCH 131 Côte St Antoine, Westmount \u2014 933-4295 Rector: Lt.Col.The Rev.R.S.Wood, C.D., L.Th.Deacon Assistant: The Rev.Cedric Cobb Honorary Assistant: The Rev.Murray Magor Organist and Choirmaster: Stephen A.Crisp, ARCO fl ml IEEE EERO REPEAT ANGLICAN drug has been used as a poison by South American Indians.Dr Griffith's report on the clinical use of the drug became a classic in medical history, being used by doctors throughout the world.Dr Griffith was the son of Dr Alexander Griffith, founder of the Montreal Homeopathic and its Dr Harold Randall Griffith medical superintendent.The younger Dr Griffith succeeded his father in 1935 and remained as medical superintendent of the hospital until his retirement in 1965.Besides his work with curaré, Dr Griffith, in 1943, established Canada\u2019s first post-operative recovery room in the hospital.A native of Montreal, Dr Griffith attended Montreal High School and McGill University.Dr Griffith was the first president of the World Federation of Societies of Anesthesiologists, and president of the Canadian Anesthetics Society from 1943 to 1946.He was a lecturer in anesthesia at McGill and was chairman of the university's department of anesthesia from 1951 to 1957.Dr Griffith was awarded the Hickman Medal of the Royal Society of Medicine for his work in the field of anesthesia.He served overseas during World War I and was awarded the Military Medal at Vimy Ridge in 1917.In 1974, Dr Griffith was made an officer of the Order of Canada.Dr Griffith is survived by his wife, Linda, two daughters, Linda Mary (Mrs Alan Jacobson) and Barbara (Mrs David B.Clark), five grandsons and a great- granddaughter.United Church welcomes guests The congregation of St Andrew's - Dominion-Douglas United Church plans to welcome Rev Barry Goodwin and Roger Snelling to its 11 am service on Sunday.Barry Goodwin, who will be guest preacher, currently is minister of Glen Cairn United Church in Kanata, Ont.Previously, he served for five years in an outreach ministry in Kingston, Ont.Recently, Mr Goodwin completed a study program at Queen's University in the area of pastoral care.He acts as a consultant to churches in transition periods, as he and Mr Snelling did in the recent amalgamation of St Andrew's and Dominion-Douglas churches.Roger Snelling graduated in engineering from Queen's University and currently is employed in the field of marketing with a large Montreal company.He attends Beaconsfield United Church where he has served on many committees, particularly in the area of Christian education. CREATIVE WINNER: Lisa Pasold, 419 Roslyn avenue, recently won first prize for the Quebec region in the annual creative writing contest sponsored by Le Permanent finance company.Miss Pasold, a grade 11 student at Trafalgar School, was one of 147 Quebec students who entered the competition, which is in its 18th year.For her winning entry, titled Fragments, she was awarded $500 and a certificate.A plaque was presented to the school.WHS chairman G.Beal Kish to step down The school committee of West- mount High School lost some current members but gained five new ones at the committee's annual general meeting Monday.The committee has yet to decide on a person to replace outgoing chairman Georgi Beal Kish, who will become secretary.Her successor as chairman is expected to be chosen at the committee's June meeting.Other committee officers for next year include Arthur Rideout, who will be vice-chairman and regional parents\u2019 committee representative, and Ann Green- shields, who will continue as treasurer.The committee's new members include Krishnaiyan Thulasiraman, Richard Lock, Georgina Howick, Elizabeth Ward and Mr J.St John.Continuing as members will be Sam Horn, Nilda Hillgartner, Nancy Morris, Brian Demaine, Patrick Benjamin, Mary Hooper and Julie Pound.This brings the total membership to 15 parents and two staff representatives: principal Gary Thompson and teacher representative Ken Cooke.The committee still could add as many as eight more parent members.The committee\u2019s next meeting will be held June 10 at 7 pm at WHS.McAuslan named to Dawson post Peter McAuslan has been appointed secretary general of Dawson College, it was announe- ed recently.Mr McAuslan, assistant academic dean and registrar of the college for the past 10 years, will assume responsibility for several dossiers, including public relations, special projects, archives and the application of Bills 65 and 3.He will continue to act as registrar until a replacement is named.The Westmount Examiner, SINGING FOR SENIORS: Students from Westmount Park School entertained the residents of Manoir Westmount last Wednesday with a performance of their musical production called \u201cHo Ho Horatio.\u201d The students also presented the piece at the school's annual concert the previous Thursday, Foote Ste Rita de Gascia GARDERIE * ÉCOLE D'ÉTÉ Cours de rattrapage: français et mathématiques Cours d'initiation aux ordinateurs Commençant le juillet 1985 Pour informations appelez 342-6076 Anne-Marie Garcia-Lopez, Directrice 5925 Décarie, Montréal Registration now on for September 1985 ballet classique ballet classique 849-8681 Children and teenagers 6 and over Virginia Cuke-Seeley Dance Centre is affiliated with l'École Supérieure de Danse du Québec.Located in the building of Les Grands Ballets Canadiens 4816 Rivard Street, Montreal (Maison de la Danse) METRO LAURIER SU RIULES ME PIES 16 SUNS ON 2 + week.Dogs to be kept from Park school grounds By ROB SOUTHCOTT Members of the school committee at Westmount Park School expect their wish to have dogs barred from the field facing the school will be granted.At a school committee meeting Tuesday, chairman Barbara Trigger said that Westmount officials had assured her that the city\u2019s bylaw regarding dogs would be amended to keep dogs off the field year-round.\u201cThen the problem for them will be enforcing the by-law,\u201d said Mrs Trigger.City officials had promised the by-law would be amended by September, she said.\u201cI think the answer is to keep at Trigger bids WPS farewell Barbara Trigger, chairman of the school committee at West- mount Park School for the past two years, bade the committee farewell at its annual general meeting Tuesday.Mrs Trigger, who will no longer have children attending the school next year, will be succeeded as chairman by committee member Sandra Guinness.Valerie Aitken, a past chairman of the committee, has agreed to assist Mrs Guinness and act as vice-chairman.Virginia Kerr, a new committee member, will take over as the committee's representative to the regional parents\u2019 committee, although the position likely will be shared with other WPS committee members.The position of secretary also will be shared among members next year.Expected new members of the committee will include Ruth Gelinas and Auldeith Johnson.Continuing as members will be Mary Dyer, Allen Fenichel, Wendy Lloyd-Smith and Eileen Willett.Also on the committee will be WPS principal Richard Jack and teacher representative Mary Horne.Glasses found Eyeglasses were found last Thursday at Redfern avenue and Sherbrooke street by a local resident.They were taken to local MUC police station 23.POL EO LLL Le EE ee LR Ee them and don't let them forget this,\u201d added Mrs Trigger, who is leaving the school committee this year.Discussed safety The committee also discussed the safety of children while they are on school property.Parents suggested that greater care be paid by teachers and bus drivers to children wandering around the bus zone beside the school.They also noted that staff should continue to discourage 1985 - 15 May 16, children from leaving the school grounds without permission at lunch hour.Virginia Kerr suggested that Westmount public works be requested to keep its sidewalk plows away from the school when children are arriving or departing.In other matters, committee member Sandra Guinness noted that parent volunteers had succeeded in keeping the school\u2019s library open this year, although WPS had no full-time librarian.She explained that 14 parents had contributed time to shelving and covering books and organizing the library.\u201cI think the librarian has appreciated this service tremendously,\u201d said Mrs Guinness.She added that she hoped teachers in the school would encourage students to make even greater use of the library.[ tile andy AN ADVENTURE FOR BOYS 7 T0 15 YEARS 61 ST SEASON NOMININGUE 120 miles north of Montreal « Ottanr.A PERFECT WATERFRONT beach.\u2014 «safe ig Eling - water games - AN OLD TRADITION OF HIGH QUALITY om Call MiniMénage today ete ES 364-3149 W = AND PER NEW GENERATION WITH A DEMANDE 50 486-4770 be OL EERE on = WE buy mink, raccoon, wolf coats.= ox A a Grizzly Fur, 288-9959.PACKING & STORAGE + LOCAL & LONG DISTANCE | MuiiMenagel) EB soma FTE \u2014 REASONABLE RATES\u2014FREE ESTIMATES Attention! 4 164B Ronald Drive [= dienne noyer tendre, pores et côtés 63 1 4824 Ladies, are you planning on a ttle = MONTREAL WEST Eo Acree a 24095), > aay and wou tke an nonest, pe om reliable, most congenial female com- M AC of J.L L J) LY! =} 488-0134 > LLovps Stereo, Queen size boxer: Personal Services panion (practical nurse)?Permanent or part-time.Write to Box 781, c/o Weekly Adservice, 155 Hillside Avenue, Westmount, Que., H3Z DOMESTIC BUREAU Use our health care CASH & CARRY CASH & CARRY 488-3083 8 to 10 pm.WIRE cat or dog carrier, 14 x 16, as new, $35.Call 933-4087.| | .2Y8.SALES = TL.: .\"COMO\" potters\u2019 kick-wheel, | Services personnels Water Wi service for nursing VENTES 65 (manual).\"Reasonable.Call TT __ \u2014 BeWater\\Wise and child care 731-5014.FIXTURE.brass oak and glass, con: \u2014_\u2014 ee temporary style.medium size for m- ' 484-5142 NEW TIRES ainine area.481.6465.CUSTOM TYPING Tega es | Déménagement et transport MUSICAL SERVICE | Demise irort | \u2014 BARGAIN 2.67 IBM Selectric.Cor- rE 59 Michelin, OEMs respondence, finan- NEED SOMETHING VETEMENTS 8 FOURRURES Pirelli, Goodrich T/A i PIANG BABY cial statements, legal.a MOVE D?Uniroyal GRAND Call 482-7349 Clock repair \u2014 Reliable.insured and IM PORTS Goodyear a Clock restoration vers rei LADIES WEAR WITH FLAIR 364-3611 Price $10,000.sell or 45.500.Gan ; \u2014 Safe, inexpensive storage - i ,000., 500.FRENCH lady, with maturity, very Clock parts \u2014 Empty boxes available FOR ALL OCCASIONS only after 7 pm.844-8096.Poe a ou of ce Grandfather clock 0 Moy, references, would offer company, x! e - French lessons or light Services to Pickup and delivery a + , LIKE NEW 3 GARAGE SALE ANTIQUES 68 single person, few hours daily, in ex- .Qo ©., change for comfortable and very Free estimates & ° SELS ANTIQUITÉS quiet accommodations.524-4892.your clock is no longer Di Moving from large house, Saturday DINING room, elegant 10-piece Ed- aning?Get a and Sunday, May 18th, 19th, 10 to di 1, $400.483-2302 functioning?We can 4, 5607 Randall, near Fleet, Côte St Wardian set, mass : install a quartz = 2 VIP LOOK Luc.Household goods.Wonderful = movement for under yO WW & and SAVE at opportunity for buyers.%, & 15.00.\u201c, © LA BOUTIQUE GT.CLOCKHOUSE INC 7 friend 0% FANTASQUE GARAGE SALE _ Your bequest ve ' Call Gary Cooper: 2080 C \u2018 Saturday, May 18, 11 to 3 pm.Lane will help, Red Cross 920 McEachran Outremont 7 57 rescen between Irving and Lewis Avenue.2 SUS el - 2A 1% 7 æ ,sF VA VY = ' households.Clothing, toys, lamps, its humanitarian work.274- 1383 337 5 288 3655 books, household articles and ry lu 32 - The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 ANTIQUES ANTIQUITES em 08 ANTIQUE B.G.CASH FOR YOUR Antique & costume jewellery.furniture.brass, bronze, prints, china.Also complete estates.We do house calls of all kinds 5879 Sherbrooke W.486-6100 ANTIQUE SHOW AND SALE COTE ST.LUC MALL 7155 Cote St.Luc THURS.FRI.SAT.MAY 16TH.\u201417TH.\u201418TH.BALZAC PROMOTIONS KARL'S BRIC-A-BRAC BARGAINS Large variety of knick-knacks, antiques, furniture.e BUY & SELL + We organize your Estate or Garage Sale Dependable, Reliable, Honest.346B Victoria Ave.Westmount 484-4882 WE PAY TOP PRICES FOR Old Jewellery, Gold, Silver, Paintings, lcart Prints, Oriental Rugs, Clocks, Doultons, Fine Furniture Also Complete Estates GUY ANTIQUES 2325 Guy St.935-3600 342-2500 We Do House Calls FAITES DU NOUVEAU ANTIQUITES PEDNAULT OUVRE MAINTENANT LE DIMANCHE DE 1H À 5H.ESCOMPTE DE 15% SUR TOUT EN MAGASIN RESTORATION DE MEUBLES ET LAMPES 1047 ST DENIS 843-5471 GUIDES EARN BADGES: Fire safety badges earned by Westmount Girl Driverless car smashes garage Extensive damage resulted Wednesday last week when a parked car crashed through a garage at the rear of property on de Maisonneuve boulevard near Prince Albert avenue, police report.The car had been parked in the driveway on a steep incline and the mishap was believed to have occurred when either the brakes or the transmission malfunctioned.The accident caused an estimated $7,000 damage to the car, a BMW, the garage door and an interior concrete wall.Police said the wife of the car\u2019s owner had brought the car home about 4:30 pm.At 6:10 pm, she heard a noise from the garäge and noticed the damage.Renfrew raid Guides of the 66th Montreal Company, St Matthias\u2019 Church, were presented Thursday by Fire Chief William Timmons, badge tester.He also awarded special Fiprecan badges from the Canadian Association of Fire Greene entry yields jewelry Chiefs, the first time these have been presented in Westmount.From left are, front row: Sarah Shenker, Tina Scherz, Caroline Guay, Tamsin Lyle, Natalie Wee and Christine Wee.Rear row: Kate Dowie, Allison Quinn, Jennifer Lewis, Roukouchi Boicel, Catherine Bourgouin, Tamara Jones and Sarah Elkin.Others were awarded in absentia to: Suzanne Leduc, France Bourgouin, Debbie Hin- chey and Emily Francis.Chief Timmons, Sarah Ayton, A home on Greene avenue near Prospect street was broken into Saturday afternoon, police report.Stolen were two video cassettes and a handbag contain- FRENCH COURSES FOR YOUNGSTERS AND ADULTS EDUCATIONAL EDUCATIF ing $100 cash.SUMMER IN FRANCE OR IN MONTREAL Someone broke into a house on Renfrew avenue last Thursday and took $1,500 worth of jewelry and cash from the home, police report.Entry was gained by breaking a window in a side door causing $30 damage sometime between 8:55 and 10:55 am.Bedrooms were searched.CONDO.Continued from page one Sidney Becker, the company\u2019s man in charge of construction, says work is expected to take eight to nine months, although rapid sale of units in the building could speed construction.The approximately 16,000-square-foot lot has been vacant since the Quinlan Apartments were demolished in 1977.CENTRE LINGUISTIQUE BOUCHEREAU INC.WANTED Onoewwoe DEMANDE 214, rue Saint-Sacrement Montréal, Québec H2Y 1W8 (514) 842-3847 THRILLERS?MYSTERIES?SE EDUCATIONAL EDUCATIF J] TAI CHI EXERCISE Beginners class starting Monday evenings, 7:30 -9:30 pm, for relaxation and good health.Cali Mr.Wong, 482-4038 evenings.JUNE exam-tutoring \u2014 study skills, literature, French, math, chemistry.Remedial program.July, August.One-to-one Tutoring Group, 935-8565.\u2014 7 \u201cDIMENSIONS OF SPIRIT & SPACE\u201d WITH ANDRIJAH PUHARICH, M.D.: discoverer of Uri Geller and the Brazilian \u2018psychic surgeon\" Arigo.editor of The Iceland Papers.WILLIAM GEORGE MEEK: Author of From Seance to Science; Healing & The Healing Process, pioneer in uitra- dimensional research, inventor of the '\u2018Spiricom Machine,\u201d an adventure in \u201cElectronic Mediumship.\u201d IAN CURRIE: Leading spokesman for the cumulative Psi evidence for survival of bodily death, and author of You Can Not Die.JESS STEARN: Best-selling author of Edgar Cayce: The Sleeping Prophet; The Psychic Lives of Taylor Caldwell; Yoga, Youth, & Rein: carnation; Soul-Mates, etc.May 17-19-1985 The Maritime Hotel (cor.Guy St.& Dorchester W.Montreal INFO.: S.S.F.937-8359 1974 Maisonneuve W.2; BOOKKEEPING SERVICES COMPLETE BOOKKEEPING SERVICES DONE BY PROFESSIONAL PRIVATE PRACTITIONER.e Reasonable rates.Please call at office: 738-4469 Ask for PAUL Agence de Rencontre vous AIMEZ DANSER, SOR- IR, DIALOGUER, VOYAGER.RENCONTRE POUR BUT AMICAL OU SERIEUX.INSCRIPTIONS GRATUITES POUR FEMMES MARIÉES OU LIBRES.COUPLES BIENVENUE.COM PREHENSION-CADEAUX 725-4094 13 4 20 HRS if you are no longer thrilled or mystified by your hardcover books and want to sell them Please call me Wilfrid M.de Freitas clairvoyant, etc.6484 Victoria, Suite 300.Plamondon Metro station.Info: 738- 1138 GETTING MARRIED Flute and guitar music for ceremony and reception.Call S.Eliiott, 489-5271.Thank you So very much for finding our budgie bird.F.Z.WANTED nDewwoe DEMANDE DEMANDE acheter, à acheter, remise à jardin en bois, et gazebo.482-4909.935-9581 Eves/Weekends PSYCHIC WANTED: FAIR OLD ORIENTAL Saturday, May 18th, 2 to 10 RUGS pm.All in fun.Palmistry, any size or condition palm prints, psychic artist, Ararat Rug tarot cards, crystal ball, 288-1218 DOMESTIC = = 18 ANIMAUX DOMESTIQUES KENNEL REG'D Free pickup and delivery Grooming & Bathing Boarding for your pets Daily rates: Dogs large $7., Med.$6., Small $5, Cats $4.air conditioned.Vet on call 24 hrs.457-5051 BEAUTIFUL CKC registered boxer, 18 months old, for stud service.Call Miss Esther, 488-8784.RARE Chinese Sharpei puppies for sale, 3 beige, 2 black, $1,500.486-2060.PURE Labrador, 7 months, vaccinated, $100.254-2730.ee EE = rpm pr è Police question suspicious man À suspicious person was questioned by police Saturday following a complaint to public safety officers at 5:17 pm by ani elderly woman living on Blenheim avenue, officials said.The woman reported seeing the man go to number 104 Blenheim and then to civic number 116 where he tried pulling at the front door and then bent over as if trying to unlock it.Public safety officers reported the man proceeded east along a lane to St Catherine street where he crossed to Park Place, stopping at a bench in Westmount Park.MUC police responded and found three screwdrivers in the man's pocket, public safety officers said.He was apparently not charged with any offense.Fork lift hits car at worksite A fork lift working on the new Alexis Nihon tower collided with a car on de Maisonneuve boulevard Tuesday last week causing more than $500 damage to the car's windshield and roof, police report.Two traffic tickets were issued when the construction vehicle was found not to have any licence plates or proof of insurance, police said.The mishap occurred about 10 am when the fork lift was apparently being used to pick up concrete blocks from a truck.Police said the lift had backed up horizontally across the street with the fork raised.An approaching car attempted to pass in front of it, but was hit by the fork.Hit pedestrian, driver leaves A 63-year-old Montreal man became the victim of a hit-and- run accident Monday last week outside 370 Victoria avenue, police report.The pedestrian was struck in the right leg by a car which turned suddenly into the garage entrance about 5 pm.As the victim attempted to talk to the driver, the car was apparently backed out onto the street and driven away.It was described as a blue 1977 Aspen.The injured man did not want to go to hospital, police said.More damage on Rosemount Two incidents of damage in the apartment building at 10 Rose- mount avenue were reported to police Sunday.There have been numerous reports of problems at this address, police officials said.(See story March 28.) The latest reports included a total of $500 damage to a workshop as well as to the baseboard of the garage door and one of the door brackets.Merchant loses full briefcase A briefcase containing credit cards and $1,000 cash was stolen Saturday from the rear office of a shop on Sherbrooke street between Victoria avenue and Prince Albert, police said.The store owner reported hearing noise at the rear about 3 pm while occupied with customers.The thief was believed to have entered through a rear door, which was closed but not locked.The Westmount Examiner, Thursday, May 16, 1985 - 33 (> a> a A A AE A A A Al A a A >
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