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HomeMy WebLinkAboutNA2011_09_09Ten years later: SABRINA BYRNES / METROLAND AJAX -- David Marquardt, of Ajax, was in New York City Sept. 11, 2001, during the terrorist attack on the World Trade Centre. Expand your social circle. $35/MO.FA B 10 PROMO PLAN The Fab 10 plan from Bell gives you unlimited nationwide calling to 10 lucky friends.1 Plus, you get unlimited local evenings and weekends starting at 6 p.m., unlimited text, picture and video messaging, and more. 2 There’s never been a better time to get on the best network, with the largest high-speed coverage and the fastest speeds across Canada. 3 Available at the followingBell stores: WhitbyWhitby Mall905 725-1212 PickeringPickering Town Centre905 837-1212 AjaxDurham Centre905 683-1212 Offer ends September 30, 2011. Available with compatible devices within network coverage areas available from Bell Mobility where technology permits. Paper bill charge ($2/mo.) applies unless you register for e-bill and cancel your paper bill. 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No, seriously. facebook.com/newsdurham twitter.com/newsdurham Pressrun 50,400 • 28 pages • Optional 3-week delivery $6/$1 newsstand P ICKER I NG News Adver tiserT H E Friday, September 9, 2011 Memories of 9/11 crystal clear for Ajax man REKA SZEKELY rszekely@durhamregion.com AJAX -- An Ajax man who was just blocks from Ground Zero when the World Trade Center was attacked said it’s hard to believe it’s been 10 years since the twin towers were brought down on Sept. 11, 2001. “I know it’s been 10 years, but I still remember seeing it, hearing it, the voices, the sirens,” said David Marquardt. “It’s gone by so fast, but the memories are still there.” At the time, Mr. Marquardt was living in New Jersey and working in Manhattan on a three-year contract for Bell. He was working on POP servers, which store e-mail, when the north tower was hit. “I was seven blocks away but I heard the first impact and I looked out the window I saw every- one pointing and hands over people’s mouths,” he said, adding that people had streamed out of the nearby office buildings to see what was going on. Like everyone else, he didn’t know what was happening and thought that perhaps a tourist plane or a helicopter had crashed into the build- ing. Because he was in the city that never sleeps, Mr. Marquardt always carried a disposable camera. He used it to capture haunting images on that day. See AJAX page 2 DAVID MARQUARDT PHOTO NEW YORK -- Ajax resident David Marquardt was working in Manhattan on Sept. 11, 2001 in a building just seven blocks from the World Trade Center. He took these dramatic photos with a disposable camera of the damage from the terrorist attacks. 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SEPT.11/11 *Ajax Source for Sports will pay the equivalent oftheTax at time of Purchase. See Store for details. HST “I always travelled with it because you’re there and you don’t want to miss anything, but you’re not expecting this.” One photo captures the explosion after the second plane hit, a ball of orange flame sur- rounding the south tower. Mr. Marquardt said he didn’t see the second plane hit as it came from behind the building, but that’s what shook the crowd up. People didn’t know whether it was an explosion or an air- plane, but they knew something was very wrong. “That’s when the screams started and peo- ple knew something was going on.” As the sounds of sirens roared towards the towers, he remained where he was. He said he’s not sure why he didn’t leave. “Just from the awe of it, you’re just frozen, it’s hard to explain really, with the amount of people that were there, you stay there with them,” he said. He said he had the sense that he was witnessing history. “The thing that affected me the most was standing there and hearing the debris fall and later you hear about the people who jumped to their death rather than being burnt. But they’re so small against the build- ing you don’t realize it’s people.” Mr. Marquardt and the people on the street were stunned as the south tower collapsed. “It was just shock, just unbelievable, the sounds of the cracking, it was muffled, so it wasn’t a huge noise echoing.” The wind was blowing in the opposite direction from where he was, so he didn’t get the debris in his direction. The building he was working in was also a listening post for the secret service and CIA, so by then government employees had come onto the street and pushed the crowd further back. They also told them what had happened at the Pentagon. With no public transportation and his car locked in the basement of his building, Mr. Marquardt eventually made his way back to a more distant Bell site. Phones and cell- phones were down, but he was able to send an e-mail home letting his family know he was all right. Over the next six days, Mr. Marquardt con- tinued to work in Manhattan, maintaining Bell’s communication equipment. “I knew things had to be done and by that time I had talked to my family, they knew I was OK.” As he went to his building, he passed by posters and photos of missing people and impromptu memorials set up by families still searching for their loved ones. After the six days, he came back to Ajax, but ended up going back to the United States to finish his contract. He hasn’t been back since 2004. He plans to go at some point to see the memorial. “They’re rebuilding, they’re not hiding, they’re blossoming,” he said of New Yorkers. Mr. Marquardt said the experience has taught him to be more appreciative of life and also that there are bad people out there. The news that Osama Bin Laden was killed was welcome, but he points out that Al Qaeda still exists. Bin Laden’s death doesn’t begin to make up for it, he said. “Not for the amount of people that were lost, he’s one and they were many.” He will mark the anniversary of the attacks simply. “Just a moment of silence, being with my family and saying a prayer.” And he’ll be watching the news reports. “I’m always glued every year in case there’s something I didn’t see and know and it helps with the healing.” Page 6 - Today’s editorial Page 4 - Related Story ‘Durham contingent headed to 9/11 memorial’ Ten-yeaR anniveRSaRy Ajax man captured haunting images of 9/11 AJAX from page 1 DaviD MaRquaRDT PhoTo NEW YORK -- Ajax resident David Marquardt was working in a building just seven blocks from the World Trade Center on Sept. 11, 2001. This photo shows the aftermath of the second plane slamming into the south tower. Ten years haven’t dampened his memory of that day. i know it’s been 10 years, but I still remember seeing it hearing it, the voices, the sirens. 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FREE POOL CLOSING SEMINAR 637 KINGSTON RD.PICKERING 905-839-8399Beside National Sports www.diplomatpools.com8Time ReadersChoiceAward Winner 2006AwardWinner Feel Free to bring a friend Door Prizes All New Pool Owners Invited R.S.V.P. 905-839-8399 Thursday September 15, 2011 at 7:30 pm In Our Showroom Call to reserve a space, seating limited Advertisement Wonderful Wo nderland Day for Herizon House –For the fifth consecutive year,forty- five moms,kids and support workers from Herizon House recently enjoyed a day at Canada’s Wo nderland thanks to support from Jov Financial Solutions,Dynamic Funds, Mackenzie Financial, I A Clarington Investments,National Bank of Canada and Richard Price,Senior Financial Advisor with MGI Financial Inc.Richard,whose office is located in the historic McKay House in Ajax, outfitted the group in T-shirts and provided spending money for the day.Pictured (L-R) are Camille Noel,Crisis Intervention Counsellor,DebbieNemethy,Marketing Manager for Richard Price and Vanessa Fa lcon, Program Manager for Herizon House. PICKERING -- Investigators are appealing to the public as they try to identify two suspects in a series of thefts in Pickering. The men are believed to have been active in Pickering since mid-June, committing 10 thefts at two locations: the Home Depot out- let on Kingston Road, and Loblaws on Liver- pool Road. The thefts follow the same pattern, Durham police said. One suspect -- a white man who stands about six feet tall, weighs 200 pounds and wears a diamond earring -- enters the store, steals a high-priced item and leaves, escaping in a car driven by his accomplice, identified as a black man. In some instances the suspects have out- run officers responding to theft reports, police said. Vehicles used by the suspects are typical- ly reported stolen and later found abandoned, some of them burned. If you have information about the investigation: CALL 905-579-1520, ext. 2506 CRImEstoPPERs: Anonymous tips can be made to Durham police at 1-800-222-8477 Police officers, councillor to march in police officer memorial Moya DIllon mdillon@durhamregion.com DURHAm -- To mark the 10th anniversary of the 9/11 tragedy, a contingency of police officers, both acting and retired, will be travelling to New York to honour the fallen. Pickering Councillor Bill McLean, who retired in 2000 after 31 years with the Toronto Police, was at the first anniversary of the tragedy and will be at the 10th anni- versary memorial on Sunday, Sept. 11. “To see it on your television is something quite different from being there and seeing the magnitude of destruction,” he said of the first anniversary. “It was kind of soul-sucking to see all that destruction for no good reason, you can’t imagine it. I think it’s important to be there to remember all the police officers and emergency personnel who died that day, along with all the victims. It’s important to keep their memories alive.” Although Durham Regional Police do not have an official contingent going, several officers will be attending the memorial on their own time, including Gord Fleming, Crime Stoppers co-ordinator. Attendees will be marching with police officers from across the U.S. and Canada on Friday, Sept. 9 in Battery Park during a memorial to honour the 23 members of the New York Police Department who were killed while responding to 9/11. On Satur- day there will be a Tattoo in Central Park, and on Sunday, Sept. 11 they will attend the official memorial gathering in Battery Park. “I think these memorials really show the respect and camaraderie of police officers and the family they have,” Coun. McLean said. “It gives support to each other to know we’re all there in times of need as well as the good times. It also shows that people are not going to be dissuaded by terrorism, that life has to go on. I’m looking forward to being there to show my support and respect.” For more on the memorial check back Monday, when www.durhamregion.com will be speaking with Mr. Fleming. DentalCareforAdults,KidsandGreatBigBabies. • AFull Range of Dental Treatments - Bring the whole family. • Saturday & Evening Appointments - To serve you better. • Flexible Payment Options - Helping you get the treatment you want. • A Relaxing Atmosphere - Virtual vision glasses, stereo headphones to help ensure you have a pleasant visit. We keep our patients smiling by taking the time to understand their needs. 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In some instances (e.g. special purchases, power buys, clearance items, bonus with purchase or seasonal items) quantities may be limited, selection may vary by store and substitutes or rain checks cannot be given.■8.2 H11 All references to regular price are to Home Outfitters’ regular price.All prices in effect Friday, September 9 to Thursday, September, 15 2011, unless otherwise specified. If you find a lower current retail store advertised price on the identical item,bring in the flyer or newspaper ad &we’ll gladly match it!low price guarantee! SAVE $20 SAVE $205999 KITCHENAID 5 SPEED HAND MIXER Reg. 79.99 SAVE $30 39 99 REGENT STREET 540TC 6 PCE SHEET SET Reg. 69.99 bogo FREE *buy one, get one SELECT B E D D I N G ,BATH ,FURNITURE ,LAMPS ,CUSHIONS, DÉCOR,DINNERWARE&DRINK WARE,FOOD &HOME S T O R AGE,KITCHENTOOL S, PERSON ALCARE AND CLEANING TOOLSFROM T H E B A C K 2 DORM C O L LECTION *2nd i t e m m u s t b e o f e q u a l o r l e s s e r value. 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SAVE $50SAVE$10 0 99 99 KITCHENAID 7 CUP FOOD PROCESSOR Reg. 149.99 19 999 KITCHENAID CLASSIC STAND MIXER Reg. 299.99 SAVE $309999 KITCHENAID 4 SPEED BLENDER Reg. 129.99 SAVE 50 % Each7999 KITCHENAID12 CUP COFFEEMAKER OR2 SLICE TOASTER Reg. 99.99 each Councillor calls leasing of tower site a sign of things to come Moya Dillon mdillon@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- Several new cell towers could be going up in Pickering as providers struggle to com- plete coverage in the area. At a planning and development committee meet- ing on Sept. 6 councillors voted on proposals for four new wireless towers in Pickering, including Wind Mobile sites at 3735 Sideline 16 and 2465 Brock Rd., a Public Mobile tower between Hwy. 7 and Hwy. 407 and a proposed “stealth tower” that would serve Rogers customers at St. Paul’s on the Hill Church at 882 Kingston Rd. The Rogers tower would be erected under a lease agreement with the church, and due to its proxim- ity to Kingston Road and Sheppard Avenue will be designed as a stealth tower, with an enclosed base and a shroud at the top to hide antenna equipment. The shroud will bear a cross insignia related to the nearby church. “This tower is interest- ing because it’s designed to include a symbol representing the church being there,” said Councillor Jennifer O’Connell. “Hypothetically speak- ing, what would stop a busi- ness from having a cellphone tower on their property and putting up a big sign to adver- tise on top of it? Could our sign bylaws even touch it consid- ering towers are approved by Industry Canada? Going for- ward does this not set a precedent for businesses to bypass our sign bylaw?” Neil Carroll, director of planning and develop- ment for Pickering, agreed with Coun. O’Connell that city bylaws would likely not apply to signage placed on cellphone towers, but noted there is already a similar tower in place at the Durham Regional Police station at Brock and Kingston roads. “I see the police as an institution and church as an institution, so I see it as dissimilar from a cor- porate business or something used to sell products, but the possibility of opening up that interest is there,” he said. “Certainly when this application comes before council you have an opportunity to send a very strong message if you see it as going off on that tangent. Council can make the comment that we object, or deny approval.” Coun. O’Connell was also concerned at the small number of residents who were notified, while Coun. Bill McLean expressed disapproval that the public notification was published in a paper that is not delivered to homes. Councillors approved an amended motion requesting that the applicant expand the notifica- tion area to include more residents and republish the notice in the Pickering News Advertiser. Coun. McLean also questioned the Wind Mobile towers, asking whether the proposed 40-foot towers would replace temporary towers that have prompt- ed concerns in residential areas such as Liverpool Road and Bushmill Street. David Hahn, a representative of Turris Sites Inc., which is overseeing the project, said it is hard to know how coverage will expand from one tower site to another, and that the proposed tower in Side- City New cell tower raises concerns in Pickering line 16 would replace a temporary one located at the site now. “My understanding is this will replace just the existing 15-metre pole, but it likely won’t remove any because there are no adjacent towers, it will just replace and improve cov- erage for the area,” Mr. Hahn explained. “There’s no standard answer when it come to coverage because it’s very dependent on topography and density, every site is different.” James Kennedy, a representative for Wind and Public Mobile, was on hand to address the issue of replacing con- tentious towers. He told the committee that two larger tow- ers are planned to replace coverage for the smaller tower at Bushmill Street. Applications for the two new sites are in now. The committee approved reports on all the proposed tow- ers stating that city council had no objection to the pro- posed sites. The applications will come before council at an upcoming regular council meeting for final approval. jENNIfER O’CONNEll Parking Paying property tax doesn’t exempt you from bylaws To the editor: Re: ‘Safety issue or cash grab?’, letter to the editor, durhamregion.com, Aug. 18, 2011. If the letter writer’s brother, as she said ”... pulled his car over the sidewalk onto my driveway”, he was parked partially on the sidewalk and impeding pedestrian traffic. Learn the lesson and get familiar with the bylaws of this city to avoid further fines. Property taxes have nothing to do with obeying the law. Elizabeth de Verneuil Pickering Feedback Too many complainers To the editor: Enough already from the chronic com- plainers and protesters who are against everything from the new incinerator to new reactor building, to a new ethanol plant, etc., in Durham Region. It’s not like the incinerator is simply a huge open bonfire pit that will continu- ally burn everything that is tossed in, pro- ducing a constant, toxic cloud that will hover over Durham Region until the end of time. Similarly, nuclear reactors aren’t huge cylinders of radioactive material with open doors that spew radioactive mate- rial. What happened in Japan was due to geographical and meteorological issues that we will not experience in this part of the world, period. Expert engineers, past and present, design these facilities with the most advanced design and ultimate safeguards in place and continuously monitor simi- lar projects, learning and upgrading safe- ty and operational procedures and imple- menting new technologies. The incinerator will use thousands of tons of garbage and produce electric demands for thousands of homes as well as create new jobs for the area. The same goes for OPG and its new build. Years of safe, clean energy for thousands will be produced as will years of construc- tion and ultimately operational jobs, add- ing to a much-needed local economy. Ditto for the ethanol plant. Funny how there is a distinct lack of ongoing protests or demonstrations at GM, Gerdau, or Durham Region’s numer- ous odorous water treatment plants. Perhaps the protesters should see the positives that come from these initiatives instead of the traditional opposition due to ignorance. Let’s hope these people aren’t hypocrit- ical enough to attend protest rallies only to line up for the jobs that will be offered later. S.J. Gordon Oshawa durham TransiT Kind bus driver eased the strain To the editor: A lot of times, bus drivers are portrayed as maniacal, self-centred and rude. I would like to say that I recently saw anoth- er side. I was walking home from the Oshawa Centre Sept. 3 with my two-year-old son and my six month old, carried in a sling. It was really hot. The driver of Bus 402 at 11:35 a.m. stopped and asked where I was headed. I told him not far and he said I could get on for a couple minutes. We talked a bit and he was nice and personable. I am grateful that he stopped as I went farther than I had intended on my walk. I would like to thank him again for his kindness. I am just sorry I didn’t get his name but I am sure he knows who he is. Jason Kerkvliet Oshawa & A Metroland Media Group Ltd. Publication Tim Whittaker - Publisher Joanne Burghardt - Editor-in-Chief Mike Johnston - Managing Editor Duncan Fletcher - Director of Advertising Eddie Kolodziejcak - Classified Advertising Manager Abe Fakhourie - Distribution Manager Lillian Hook - Office Manager Cheryl Haines - Composing Manager News/Sales 905-683-5110 Fax 905-683-7363 Classifieds 905-683-0707 Distribution 905-683-5117 130 Commercial Ave., Ajax ON L1S 2H5. Publications Mail Sales Agreement Number 40052657 Member: Ontario Press Council, OCNA, CCNA, SNA. All content copyright We Think... email responses to newsroom@durhamregion.com Editorial Opinions News Advertiser • September 9, 20116 AP durhamregion.come-mail letters to newsroom@durhamregion.com / max. 200 words / letter writers are obliged to back up their statements with verifiable facts / please include your full first and last name, city of residence & daytime phone number / letters that do not appear in print may be published @ durhamregion.com Rebuilding in the years following 9/11 terrorist attacks The spectre of two towers disappearing, smoke and dust chasing those fleeing in blind panic on the ground below as each successive floor collapsed. The terrifying images of two planes deliberately piloted into the World Trade Center buildings. The trapped office workers. The falling people. The loss of nearly 3,000 innocent souls. All of this etched into our collective con- sciousness, still fresh and strong enough to provoke emotion: anger, despair, hopeless- ness. As the 10th anniversary of the terrorist attacks on 9/11 loom, we must respectful- ly acknowledge the loss, remind our neigh- bours to the south that we are indeed in this together, and continue the effort to reclaim our sense of security that existed pre-9/11. Osama bin Laden is dead, his murder- ous organization in disarray. But the ongo- ing international effort to confront terror- ism must continue, take new forms and recruit diverse voices to engage in the glob- al debate. The violent, skewed interpretation of Islam -- followed peacefully by 1.5 billion members of the faith around the world -- has literally been hijacked by a core of fundamentalists, loosely connected kill- ers who cite the words of the Qur’an even as they massacre fellow Muslims. In fact, as Pickering Islamic Centre outreach director Javed Akbar noted in a guest column pub- lished earlier this week, untold thousands of Muslims have been killed in conflicts on the other side of the world, more human collateral born of 9/11. We must reject religious fundamentalism in all its forms. We must allow the moder- ate voices of Islam a greater opportunity to raise awareness of the faith. We must come together here at home, acknowledge the success of Canada’s strength in diversity, and work to shed the stereotypes that have been established. It’s true that 9/11 changed the world. It awakened us to the black hatred that exists, directed at societies justifiably proud of their democratic heritage and institutions, personal liberties and religious freedom. It galvanized us to take action, to confront terrorists on their own soil and take serious measures to ensure security at home. We must remain vigilant in the meantime to ensure that safety and security of citizens here at home. We must continue inter-faith dialogue, find common ground, educate one another. There is no moral equivalent to justify the attacks of 9/11. There is no faith that cred- ibly condones the slaughter of innocents. But neither is there any achievement, any victory in demonizing an entire religion because of the actions of a few. durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 20117 AP 16 6 ver the past 16 years,the Rouge Valley Ajax and Pickering Mayors’ Charity Golf Classic has raised well over $2 million for the Rouge Valley Health System Foundation. The procee ds from this year’s tournament,b eing held on September 13 at the Deer Creek Golf & B anquet Facility, support the Rouge Valley Ajax and Pickering “Image is Everything”campaign,a fundraising effort for the first MRI machine at your local community hospital. 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DATE: OCTOBER 4,2011 TIME: 9AM TO 5PM VENUE: AJAX CONVENTION CENTRE INDIVIDUAL TICKETS $225TABLES OF 10$1,999 PROCEEDS SUPPORT THE HOPE CENTRE OF LEARNING AT OSHAWA COMMUNITY HEALTH CENTRE Contact PaulaCarterat pcarter@ochc.caor905-431-2163toreserveyourticketstodayorforsponsorinformation! Proposal would include office space and retail Moya Dillon mdillon@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- A new proposal in Pickering would see the construction of office, retail and restau- rant space in a large building complete with ban- quet facilities. The project proposes an 8,028-square-metre building at the northwest corner of Brock Road and Dersan Street. The building would be acces- sible from Dersan Street and have underground as well as surface parking. Although the proposal is in its early stages, Vishnu Sookar, a representa- tive for the applicant, said if all goes according to plan the project could get off the ground within a year and a half. “I think we have proposed a beautiful building for the entrance of Duffin Heights and a building that would be very fitting of the commercial lines of Duffin Heights,” Mr. Sookar said during a pub- lic planning information meeting on Sept. 6. “Underground parking is something we fully intend on doing, as well as surface parking, in order to meet the requirements as laid out in a previous parking study.” Councillor Bill McLean was enthusiastic about the plan. “I think this is an impressive looking building, and I hope it comes to fruition,” he said, before questioning whether any soil testing had been done onsite. Mr. Sookar assured him that testing had been done and no problems were found. Councillor Kevin Pickles also praised the plans, but questioned whether there is any possibility for a shared parking agreement with the nearby Devi Mandir Hindu Cultural Centre. “Representatives from the temple have not approached my client on that yet, but if the time comes I’m sure my client would be willing to work with the temple,” Mr. Sookar said. “People would be able to access the parking off Dersan Road and then walk across to the temple.” Staff will be reviewing the application and com- piling a report with recommendations for coun- cil. Staff concerns include the alignment of the project with development plans for the Duffin Heights area. “The Duffin Heights development plan identi- fies the Brock and Dersan Road intersection as a focal point,” said Marg Wouters, manager, devel- opment review and urban design for Pickering. “This requires the creation of prominent images through the use of appropriate building heights, massing, architectural features and landscap- ing.” A full report will come back to council for approval at a future meeting. DeveloPMent New banquet hall facility planned for Pickering breaking news 24/7 >> durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 20119 AP CASH In Yo urOld a n d Broken GOLD CASH In Yo urOld a n d Broken GOLD WE WILL PURCHASE ITEMS SUCH AS: CHAINS • EARRINGS • RINGS • BRACELETS • MEDALLIONS • DENTAL GOLD • BROOCHES • DIAMONDS • EMERALDS • RUBIES • BROKEN GOLD/SILVER/PLATINUM • CLASS RINGS • GOLD CHARMS • SILVER FRI • SAT • SUN SEPTEMBER 16, 17, 18 • 10AM-7PM Ajax Cash Converters 95 Bayly Street W. (Bayly & Monarch) 905-683-2212 (NOT CHEQUES LIKE MANY COMPETITO RS!) CHECK WITH US BEFORE YO U SELL! We Pay on the SPOT!!CASHCASH WE BEAT ALL QUOTES! MANY O T H E R IN-STORE SPECIALS3DAYS ONLY!! DURHAM -- The AIDS Committee of Dur- ham Region hosts its annual AIDS Walk for Life on Sept. 24. The event starts with registration at 9:30 a.m. and the walk gets underway at 10:30 a.m., leaving from Oshawa City Hall and wrapping up at Lakeview Park. Along the route walkers will have a chance to participate in activities to remember people lost to HIV/AIDS and learn more about the disease. The Walk for Life is a national event to raise funds and awareness in the fight against HIV/AIDS, which affects more than 65,000 Canadians. This September more than 130 communities across Canada will be holding walks to support their local AIDS services organizations. All proceeds from the Durham walk will go to support HIV education programs and support services offered by the AIDS Com- mittee of Durham Region. To register or donate online: visit aidsdurham.com/aidswalk fundraiser Annual Durham AIDS Walk for Life hits the trail Sept. 24 durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201110 AP Look for our flyer in today’s paper! Only in selected areas. See in store for complete details. WORK BETWEEN PLAY. Enrol in our Tax Training School,the most comprehensive tax training program in Canada, and start a career that lets you live life your way. As one of our tax professionals you could enjoy the benefits of seasonal full or part-time work and flexible hours. Classes start September 10th Flexible hours. We’re hiring. Register online at hrblock.ca or call 1-877-32BLOCK (322-5625) Enrolment restrictions may apply. Enrolment in, or completion of, the H&R Block Tax Training School is neither an offer nor a guarantee of employment.This course is not intended for, nor open to any persons who are either currently employed by or seeking employment with any professional tax preparation company or organization other than H&R Block. © 2011 H&R Block Canada, Inc. Learn EnglishCallToday 1-866-550-5462 Just three of eight councillors present at meeting Keith GilliGan kgilligan@durhamregion.com DURHAM -- Most members of Durham’s works committee weren’t on hand Wednes- day as two Claremont residents outlined their concerns about traffic in the hamlet. Jim Doyle, the president of the Claremont Community Association, and Betty Hutton outlined issues with the volume of traffic and the speed motorists are travelling through the community. However, with only three of the eight com- mittee members present, no action could be taken, such as asking staff to look into the res- idents’ concerns. It was the committee’s first meeting after the summer recess. Scugog Mayor Chuck Mercier, Pickering Councillor Bill McLean and Uxbridge Coun- cillor Jack Ballinger were at the meeting. Whitby Mayor Pat Perkins attended the meet- ing for about 20 minutes, but had to leave to attend a funeral. Not present were Oshawa councillors Nest- er Pidwerbecki and Tito-Dante Marimpietri, Ajax Councillor Colleen Jordan and Region- al Chairman Roger Anderson. No explana- tion was given during the meeting for their absences. “Our big concern is over the traffic, particu- larly the volume and speed,” Mr. Doyle said. About 6,000 vehicles travel westbound through the hamlet each day and 4,500 travel eastbound, he added. “A lot are in a hurry.” When Durham Regional Police pull over speeding motorists, some are travelling at 90 km/h. Flashing signs were installed last week, but “now, we need more help. We need Clare- mont designated a community safety zone. We feel it would have a positive impact,” Mr. Doyle stated. With a community safety zone, any fine imposed for a traffic infraction would be higher. “We’re trying to change people’s behaviour. People need to know and under- stand the expectations of them,” Mr. Doyle said. “We need feedback on how well they’re meeting expectations.” Mayor Perkins asked if the community association was involved in the Road Watch program. “It’s a remarkable initiative the community can take ownership of the issue.” Speed boards are also helpful, she noted, as a driver’s speed is flashed on the board while passing. Mr. Doyle said the association would like the hamlet designated a CSZ first. Ms. Hutton said a CSZ was recommended by the Durham Regional Police. “We need a permanent, 24-hour solution,” Ms. Hutton added. Susan Siopis, the Region’s director of trans- portation and field services, said safety zones have been done elsewhere, but the “effective- ness dwindled” over time. The Region will check with other municipalities, she added. “We haven’t written them off.” reGion Claremont traffic woes fall on missing ears our big concern is over the traffic, particularly the volume and speed. Jim Doyle, president, Claremont Community Association durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201111 AP WHITBY SHOWROOM905-576-7600 310-HEAT (310-4328) DIAGNOSTIC SERVICE C A L L $49 *reg.$99 limited t i m e o f f e r with t h i s a d OrDo Not Pay Till2012* OAC *Call for details while quantities last. .COM G Government Rebates Are Back Up To $199000 Central AirConditioner orFurnace From $100* per day turn to the experts ® JUST LISTED SIGN # 194948 $369,900 1100 Begley Street, Unit 1Pickering416-662-5642 CORRECTION NOTICE We apologize for any inconveniencethis may have caused. WALMART For our flyer effective Sept. 2 - 8/11. Page 3:The photos of the Huggies items are not correct. They should be Huggies Pullups or Goodnites Mega Packs.Page 15:The description for the HP printer is not correct.It should be: HP 1000 Single Function Printer, #30050744.Page 17:The description for the Blackberry is not correct. It should be: TELUS Blackberry Torch 9810. A message from Durham Tourism Kerri King This time of year, locally grown food is bounteous. It’s incredible what our farm- ers are growing and raising here in Durham Region. To celebrate the fall harvest, Durham Tourism is excited to present an exciting new culi- nary festival called Savour the Season. From Sept. 9 to 18, Savour the Season gives you the opportu- nity to eat local food at 29 casu- al and fine-dining restaurants located across Durham Region. Chefs at these restaurants have paired up with Durham Region farmers and producers to cre- ate mouth-watering dishes pre- pared using local meat, cheese, fruits, vegetables and even maple syrup. As an added bonus, restaurants are offering these multi-course lunch and dinner menus at a spe- cial fixed price ( l u n c h e s start at $15 and dinners at $20). Tour- ism and agricul- ture are two of our region’s biggest economic drivers. When you dine at a Durham Region restaurant, you are supporting local busi- ness. When res- tau- rants buy their prod- uct from Dur- ham Region farmers and producers, this further stimulates the econo- my. Savour the Season is helping to close the gap between farm- ers and chefs, creating relation- ships and opportunities for res- taurants to serve local food all year round. What a great way to support the local economy while enjoy- ing a savoury seasonal meal. I’m looking forward to butter- nut squash soup, scrumptious apple crumble and specially prepared entrees featuring local beef, chicken and lamb. If your mouth is already water- ing, visit www.durhamsavour- theseason.ca (http://www.dur- hamsavourtheseason.ca/) to find out more about Savour the Season. You can sort restaurants by area municipality, view full menus, and learn about the farm-fresh products being used. Then, make your reservation directly with the participating restaurant of your choice. For more culinary adventure ideas in Durham Region, fol- low Durham Tourism on Twit- ter at @DurhamTourism or visit us at www.durhamtourism.ca (http://www.durhamtourism. ca/). Kerri King is manager of Durham Tourism. OSHAWA going on now at ANNIVERSARY SALE! Not valid on floor model clearance. Credit equal to the value of the HST. 900 Champlain Ave., Oshawa 905-723-4561 Hours: Mon.•Tu es.•We d. 10-6, Thurs.• Fri. 10-9, Sat. 10-6, Sun.11-5 www.furnituregalleries.ca PLUS PAY NO HST UP TO 50% OFF Tourism Savour the Season with delicious food in Durham durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201112 P Get To The Airport Safely, On Schedule And In Style With Durham’s Largest Limo Service LUX-LIMO.COM 1-800-606-5007 PICKERINGTOPEARSON (private ride) PICKERINGTOPEARSON (private ride) $65$65 LEAVINGONALEAVINGONA JETPLANE?JETPLANE? Fall 2011 Visittheshow to see Durham’sWedding Professionals Sunday,September 18, 2011 11am - 5pm •Ajax Convention Centre For vendor information or more details : contact Laurie McCaig at 905-683-5110 or email lmccaig@durhamregion.com AJAX PICKERING NEWS ADVERTISER Click,Print& SAVE go online www.durhamweddingsource.com today and save on your ticket price.Online ticket coupons only $4.00 each. Wa nt to know what’s happening in Pickering? Check We dnesday’s paper each week for complete details BE INFORMED! durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201113 P LimitedtimeoffersavailablefromTo yotaFinancialServices.◆CashIncentivesareavailableonanew2011CamryV6/2011MatrixAWD,XRS/2011CorollaLE,Sport,XRS/2011Tu ndra4x4CrewMax/2011VenzaFWDandarecomprisedofCustomerIncentiveandCashCustomerIncentive.$1,500/$1,000/$500/$2,000/$500CustomerIncentiveisvalidonallTo yotaretaildeliverywhenleased,financedorpurchasedfromanOntarioTo yotadealership.$3,500/$3,000/$2,500/$4,000/$3,500CashCustomerIncentiveisvalidonretaildeliveryforallToyotaretailcustomersexceptcustomerswholeaseorpurchasefinancethroughToyotaFinancialServicesataspecialrateofinterestofferedbyToyotaaspartofalowrateinterestprogram.Advertisedleaseandfinanceratesarespecialrates.Offervalidtoretailcustomers(excludingfleetsales)whenpurchasedfromanOntarioToyotadealership.CashCustomerIncentivetakesplaceattimeofdeliveryandwillapply after taxes have been charged on the full amount of negotiated price.Vehicles receiving cash incentives must be purchased,registered and delivered between September 1 and 30,2011. ▼Cash Customer Incentive of $3,000 is valid on retail delivery of a new 2011 RAV4 4WD Limited for all To yota retail customers except customers who lease or purchase finance through Toyota Financial Services at a special rate of interest offered by To yota as part of a low rate interest program.Advertised lease and finance rates are special rates.Offer valid to retail customers (excluding fleet sales) when purchased from an Ontario Toyota dealership.Cash Customer Incentive takes place at time of delivery and will apply after taxes have been charged on the full amount of negotiated price.Vehicles receiving cash customer incentives must be purchased,registered and delivered between September 1 and 30, 2011. *Toyota Financial Services will match the customer’s down payment or trade equity on 2011 Tundra and Ta coma models up to $1000, when customer finances/leases through TFS, on approved credit.TFS matched contribution will be applied as non-cash credit to the amount being financed/leased.The customer must provide their own down payment. Offers valid on retail delivery ofnew unregistered 2011 Tundra and Tacoma models when financed/leased, registered and delivered between September 1 and September 30, 2011.All rights are reserved. Dealer may sell/lease for less. Offers are valid between September 1 and 30, 2011 andare subject to change without notice. Please see your participating Toyota dealer for details. WHEN THERE GONE…THERE GONE !!!THEBIGSTOREBESIDETHE401AMAZING LEASE & FINANCE RATES AVA ILABLE WITH DOWN PAYMENT MATCHING UP TO $1,000 ON SELECT MODELS*! 2011 CamrySave up to $5,000◆ Cash Incentive 2011 MatrixSave up to $4,000◆ Cash Incentive 2011 CorollaSave up to $3,000◆ Cash Incentive 2011 RAV4Save up to $3,000▼ Cash Customer Incentive RIGHT HERERIGHT NOW! 2011 Tu ndraSave up to $6,000◆ Cash Incentive 2011 Ve nzaSave up to $4,000▼ Cash Incentive CLEAROUT! BEFORE TIME RUNS OUT SAVE UP TO $6000 ON NEW 2011s. 557 Kingston Rd., Pickering 905-420-9000 www.pickeringtoyota.com durhamregion.com14 AP If you did not receive your News Advertiser/flyers OR you are interested in a paper route call Circulation at 905-683-5117. Hours: Mon. - Fri. 9 - 6:30 Yo ur Carrier will be around to collect an optional delivery charge of $6.00 every three weeks. Remember, all inserts, including those on glossy paper, can be recycled with the rest of your newspaper through your blue box Recycling program. SAVE TIME, SAVE MONEY View Flyers/Coupons At Carrier of the We ek Ajax & Pickering Locations8 Salem Rd South Ajax, ON L1S 7T7 279 Kingston Rd. E. Ajax 260 Kingston Rd. E. Ajax (in Home Depot) 1105 Kingston Rd. Pickering (in Home Depot) 255 Salem Rd. S. D#1 42 Old Kingston Rd., Ajax 465 Bayly St.W.#5, Ajax 1995 Salem Rd., N., Ajax 1889 Brock Rd., Pickering 300 Harwood Ave. S., Ajax 6 Harwood Ave. S., Ajax Congratulations Nicholas for being our Carrier of the Week. To day’s Carrier of the Week is Nicholas. He enjoys hockey and football. Nicholas has received dinner vouchers compliments of McDonald’s, Subway and Boston Pizza. FRIDAY FLYERS FRIDAY,SEPTEMBER 9, 2011 *DURHAM TA E KWON DO PICKERING *HERBAL MAGIC PICKERING *HYDRO ONE PICKERING *KAITLIN GROUP AJAX PICKERING *LEON’S AJAX PICKERING *LIFESTYLE SUNROOMS AJAX PICKERING *LITTLE CAESARS AJAX PICKERING *MARITIME TRAVEL PICKERING *NEW HOMES AJAX PICKERING *RED PLUM AJAX PICKERING *SEARS AJAX PICKERING *SHOPPERS DRUG MART AJAX PICKERING *THE BRICK AJAX PICKERING *DELIVERED TO SELECTED HOUSE ONLY 250 Bayly St.W., Ajax (Between McDonald’s and Dairy Queen)905-683-3535Hours: Open Daily 6am - 3pm EggsCrepes BREAKFAST SPECIAL 3 EGGS •CHOICE OF MEAT HOMEFRIES •TOAST COFFEE*FOR $6.95 (BUY 1 GET 1)MONDAY TO FRIDAY EXCLUDING HOLIDAY S BUY 1*GET 1FREE LUNCH SPECIAL CLUB SANDWICH SERVEDWITH* CEASAR SALAD, HOMEFRIES AND COFFEE MONDAY-FRIDAY 11 :00AM-3:00PM $599 REG $895 *Not valid with any other offer (with coupon only) Expires Sept. 30, 2011 *Not valid with any other offer (with coupon only) Expires Sept. 30, 2011 EXCLUDING HOLIDAYS If there is a baby on the way,then you’ll want to attend this!Baby Shower Sunday September 18, 2011 Pickering Recreation Complex 1867Valley Farm Rd., Pickering Doors Open at 1pm EveryBaby Shower Includes: •Exciting Door Prizes •FREE Gift Bags to the first 130 expectant Moms •Special Displays For your FREE invitationor for exhibitor informationplease call: 1-866-873-9945 1-866-873-9945www.welcomewagon.ca GRAND DOOR PRIZE Free 3 month in-home diaper service courtesy of Easy To Bum Diaper Service FREE ADMISSION First such cases in region this year DURHAM -- Two people in the region have tested positive for West Nile virus. A man and a woman, both in their 50s, are the first confirmed cases in Durham this year. Confirmation the two had contracted the virus was received by the Region’s health department on Sept. 6. The number of people contracting WNV has dropped across Ontario since 2002. There has never been a death related to the virus reported in Durham Region. “While the overall risk of becoming infected with WNV is low, it’s still impor- tant for everyone to take precautions to avoid mosquito bites,” Laura Freeland, manager, environmental health with Durham Region Health Department, says in a press release. “Although the nights are now several degrees cool- er, mosquitoes still remain quite active.” Adult mosquitoes with the virus were collect- ed in six traps throughout the Region during the summer. Only one positive test in a trap was collected in 2010. WNV is mosquito-borne and is spread to humans through the bite of an infect- ed mosquito. Mosquitoes become infected by feed- ing on the blood of a bird that carries the virus. The disease is not passed from person to person or from bird to person. Most people who get the virus will experience mild illness including fever, headache, body ache, nausea, vomiting and rash on the chest, stomach or back. More serious symptoms can include muscle weakness, stiff neck, confusion, tremors, numbness and sudden sensitiv- ity to light. Symptoms usually develop between three and 14 days after being bitten by an infected mosquito. Health department spokeswoman Glendene Collins said the affected peo- ple had gone to their family doctors, who ordered tests. The tests were sent to a public health lab, which confirmed the virus, and noti- fied the Region. For more information on WNV: CALL 905-723-3818 or 1-888-777-9613, ext. 2188 (health department’s Environmental Help Line) visit durham.ca health Two Durham residents test positive for West Nile virus news Advertiser 905 683 5110News Advertiser • September 9, 2011 durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201115 AP DURHAM -- The Durham Catholic District School Board is offering free lan- guage courses for school- age children. Classes are being offered at schools in Ajax and Oshawa, and lan- guages range from Arabic to Mandarin to Bengali. In Oshawa, classes are being held at St. Christo- pher Catholic School, 431 Annapolis Ave., and St. Hedwig Catholic School, 421 Olive Ave. In Ajax, languate class- es are at Mother Teresa Catholic School, 15 Fish- lock St., and at St. Jude Catholic School, 68 Coles Ave. Classes are for elemen- tary school-age children, from junior kindergarten to Grade 8. There are also classes for high school students needing a credit. Sessions are from 9 a.m. to noon on Saturdays from Sept. 10 to June 2, 2012. For more information: CALL 905-683-7713 www.DurhamSavourtheSeason.ca 1-800-413-0017 Durham Region’s 10-day local-licious culinary event features 29 of our best casual and fine dining restaurants partnered with over 35 local growers and producers. Make your reservations early to avoid disappointment. September 9 to 18, 2011 education Durham Catholic board offering language classes Please recycle your copy of the Ajax-Pickering News AdvertiserWATCH FORNEW DEALS DAILY! Fall Registration 2011 durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201116 AP �������� ��������������������������������������������������������������� �������� ������� �������� ��� �� ��� ������������ ������� ��� �������� �� ����� ������� PLATINUM ����� �� �� ������ ������ �������� ������ ������� ��������������� ������ �������� ������������ ������� ��� ����� ������� AJAX SKATING CLUBOPEN REGISTRATION September10,10am-1pm AjaxCommunityCentre, PoolViewingLobby We accept cash, cheque,Visa or Mastercard �������� ��� ������ ��� ���� �� ��� ���� ���������� ������� �� ���������� ���� ���� 905-683-1753 SYNCHRONIZED SKATING AND SKILLS FOR HOCKEY/RINGETTE ������ ���� ������ ��� ����� ���� ���� ���� �� ��������� ��� ��������� 1099 Kingston Road, Pickering 905-831-6388 (Kingston Road and Dixie Road) www.pianogroup.ca Piano, G u i t a r or V o i c e L e s s o n s PIANOS GUITARS KEYBOARDS MUSIC BOOKS YAMAHA Yamaha Guitars from $109 & up Yamaha Keyboards from $139 & up REGISTER NOW FOR FA LL DA NCE CLASSES The place you start,the place you stay... BRAND NEW TO DA NCE? Visit www.jacquelines-schoolofdance.com to: • Learn the four questions to ask before choosing a dance studio • See what our clients are saying • Browse pictures and videos WHY CHOOSE US? 1735 Bayly Street #18 SE Corner of Bayly & Brock 905-420-7399 www.jacquelines-schoolofdance.com Ja cqueline’s School of Dance All 3-6 year old classes have been specifically designed by Jacqueline Willis,who combined her dance and E.C.E. knowledge to create a unique program. Fully Qualified and Dedicated Fa culty Customer Service Spacious Dance Studios Fa mily Oriented Environment Convenient Options Special Combo Classes Ballet,Jazz and Ta p (for 4-6 year olds) and Special All Boys Crew Hip Hop •BALLET •TAP•JAZZ •HIP HOP •LY RICAL •CONTEMPORARY•ACRO •MUSICALTHEATRE •RECREATIONAL &COMPETITIVE •CLASSES FORALL AGES REGISTRATION/TOURS: SATURDAY 1:00 -3:00, SUNDAY 11:00 -2:00, MONDAY -FRIDAY 5:00 -8:00. JOIN US IN CELEBRATING 25 YEARS OF DANCE!! Register Online:www.jldance.com email:jldanceinfo@aol.com 2010 Junior Tap Champion • 2010 Junior Ballet Champion 2010 Senior Tap Champion 2011 Home of the British Ballet and Jazz Champions QUALIFIED Techers Annual Dance Recital OPEN HOUSE SEPTEMBER 6-7-8-9 from 2PM - 7PM SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 10th from 10AM - 2PM Register Now by Phone 905-430-3164 1380 Hopkins St., U-2, WHITBYCome by anytime for a tour or to register for Fall Classes. Parent & Tot Kinder Gym Teen Gymnastics Trampoline www.planetgymnastics.ca Register now for Fall classes. 105 Industrial Drive Unit 4 & 5 Whitby (905) 665-1990 1755 Plummer St. Unit 8 & 9 Pickering (905) 839-7669 Fall Registration 2011 durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201117 AP Roofing Transom Sidelites Steel Doors Architectural Windows Fascia,Soffits&Siding Windows Does your home need Windows, Doors, Siding, Soffits, Fascia, Roofing? Maybe a Sunroom or Addition? Fully Transferable 50 Year Warranty Available! 905-665-9565 Financing Available O.A.C. 1628 Charles Street, Whitby 1-866-660-9565 CallUsTo d ay !FO R A FR EEC O N S U LT A T IO N Low E Glass When it comes to home comfort -leave nothing to chance! Air Conditioning Units from $1995Furnaces from $2495 Ask about our Combo Deals and Rental Programs! Call to Inquire About Our Maintenance Plans Tankless water heatersinstalled for $39.99/month (Free installation included) (905)240-0123 www.canadianairsystems.cominfo@canadianairsystems.com ONLINE VOTING BEGINS September 7, 2011 VOTE @ WWW.DURHAMPARENT.COM Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA Y!AOUR SVE YHA * Conditions apply, see contest rules for details. CONTEST ENDS October 7, 2011 All eligible voters* will be entered into a draw to win ONE $100 gift card from Pickering Town Centre. Winner will be notified by phone. One vote per household. KOBA Entertainment & Durham Parent are pleased to offer you a chance to win ONE ofTHREE sets of FOUR tickets plus a meet & greet! CONTEST ENDS October 7, 2011 October 22, 2011 Regent Theatre, Oshawa Enter to Win! ENTER ONLINE @ www.durhamparent.com O’Donnell School ofTraditional Irish Dancing Durham RegionBeginners Welcome * boys & girls * ages 3 years & up School offers students direct contact with the professional dance world. Registered Member of: •An Coimisiun Le Rinci Gaelacha, Ireland • Irish Dance TeachersAssociation of Canada • Irish Dance TeachersAssociation of NorthAmerica Professional Instructor: Anne-Marie O’Donnell,T.C.R.G., A.D.C.R.G., B.G.416-484-8734 Also available for shows Fitness & Fun * adult ceili classes available www.odonnellirishdance.com Registration Info: mwoolgar@hart-well.comAlso available for showswww.odonnellirishdance.com 416-484-8734Registration Info: mwoolgar@hart-well.com Home Sweet HomeADVERTISING FEATURE Canadians, in this Information Age, are now more informed than ever when discussing construction with their builder. Most of us expect only the most energy- efficient and environmentally responsible designs, fixtures, materials, and methods. As a result, builders must constantly keep up with latest technology and how to apply it. Here's the latest scoop in the world of construction: Replace wood-framed walls with the newest, concrete system. 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More information on this-as well as efficient ceilings and floors-is available online at www.nudura.com. www.newscanada.com Get the scoop on concrete Builder Quick Tip: durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201118 AP Mike Ruta Entertainment Editor mruta@durhamregion.com durhamregion.comEntertainment live theatre Visitors from New York, Michigan coming to Pickering this month for A Spirit Walk Public performances Sept. 16, 17 and 23 Mike ruta mruta@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- The rebels are returning to Pickering, at least their relatives are, but they won’t have mischief on their minds. Instead, visitors from Michigan and New York State will be in town later this month for a special pre- sentation of A Spirit Walk. The Backwoods Players’ pro- duction tells the story of Picker- ing’s early settlers and the condi- tions that led to the Upper Canada Rebellion of 1837, in which local people played a prominent role. The 70 cast and 10 crew members hail from all over Durham. This year’s shows are special, and not just because it’s Pickering’s 200th birthday and the museum’s 50th. After more than two years of research and work, descendants of the rebels will be coming from the United States to see a descen- dants-only production on Sept. 24. You can see the play at Pickering Museum Village Sept. 16, 17 and 23. Oshawa resident John Edmonds, A Spirit Walk director, explains that after the 2009 production, friends of friends found out they were speaking with direct relatives of Peter Matthews, the former Pickering resident and one of two men hanged for treason after the rebellion. But it was not something they usually readily shared. “They had been brought up to never mention his name because he had been hanged for treason,” Edmonds says. “He was the black sheep of the family.” The relatives saw the show “and were in tears because we were cel- ebrating the rebels,” he says. The search for more descendants brought 14 Backwoods members to Croswell, Michigan where, last October, they spoke at the town’s community hall, where every one of the 75 people in the room were related to an Ontario rebel. The rebellion was quickly quashed by the British military. And while history is written by the victors, Edmonds notes that the rebellion had far-reaching effects for Ontario and all of Canada. Brit- ain, still smarting from the loss of the American colonies, wanted to know why it had occurred and what could be done to prevent in Canada what had happened south of the border. “The one thing the history books fail to set up in all of this is the common person was all for the reform, they just didn’t want to rebel,” Edmonds says. He says some of the rebels, try- ing to escape after the failure of the rebellion, headed east. “Some of the rebels when they were trying to get away on Dec. 6 and 7, 1837 got to Oshawa Har- bour and the harbourmaster at the time (took) the group across the lake to get away,” he says. Of the 400 to 800 people arrested for their part in the rebellion, some were sent home while others were banished to Tasmania. “They were bringing into the courts 10 or 20 men a day to be tried and the majority of them were banished,” Edmonds says. Plans are already in the works for next year’s A Spirit Walk, as it will be another special anniversary: the 175th anniversary of the Upper Canada Rebellion. A Spirit Walk is recommended for audience members ages 12 and older. For tickets, call 905-683-8401. Pickering Museum Village is on Hwy. 7 between Brock and West- ney roads in the hamlet of Green- wood. coluMn Oshawa’s Regent Theatre back in a big way landmark hosts a variety of concerts If I had a bucket list (I don’t) I could cross out “see classical music live” after last weekend. I had the pleasure of seeing the Evening to End Polio Con- cert Friday at The Regent Theatre in Oshawa. Guests were in town, the Heidelberg Youth Chamber Orchestra, and it joined the Dur- ham Youth Orchestra and the Ontario Philharmonic for a perfor- mance of Beethoven’s 7th Sympho- ny. OP conductor Marco Parisotto described it as “a wonderful, bril- liant, sparkling symphony,” and it’s all that and more. I would add the words stirring and dramatic. It was quite a sight to see so many musicians (close to 100 or even a few more) packed onto the stage. The three orches- tras gelled fantastically well. And the cause was a great one, as Rotary International and its partners are on a mis- sion to completely erad- icate polio from the earth. Now, I’ll fess up: I enjoy and appreciate classical music but am more of a jazz fan, so I prefer Monk to Mendelssohn and Coltrane to Chopin. But the music was truly excellent and there’s no replacing see- ing music, any kind of music, live. I encourage you to check out the OP at The Regent. If you’re think- ing it’s a bit too high- brow for your tastes, think again. The atmo- sphere was great, not stuffy at all, and Durham should be justifiably proud and supportive of its orches- tra. And if you have a young person at home who plays violin or anoth- er classical instrument, a visit to The Regent to see the OP is a must. Check out www.ontariophil.ca, where you’ll see what’s coming up next. The Regent was perfect for the concert and more than held up under the scrutiny of our German visitors. It’s an ideal size, not cav- ernous and not tiny, you can’t beat the location and one concert-goer I overheard noted how roomy it is between the seat aisles. It’s a very comfortable place to see a show and the acoustics are good. Following its huge restoration, the venue looks top-notch and hosts a wide variety of events, with some- thing for all tastes. Coming up is the Durham Region Comedy Festi- val, guitarist Pavlo, hypnotist Mike Mandel and, for the kids, Toopy and Binoo. Visit regenttheatre.ca. Mike Ruta is the Metroland Durham Region Media Group’s Entertainment Editor. JaSon liebregtS / Metroland PICKERING -- Derik Gould and Scott Carroll, front, and, at back, Joshua Carroll, Noah Hazlett, Lary Goucher, Mary Parulski and Greg Oakes from Backwoods Players rehearsed A Spirit Walk. MIKE Ruta Sex Please, We’re 60! on at Herongate Barn Theatre PICKERING -- Michael and Susan Parker’s Sex Please, We’re 60! has begun its run in Pickering. The comedy is at Herongate Barn Theatre Aug. 26 to Oct. 29 and the cast includes Don Green, Made- leine Atkinson and Rose Green of Pickering and Elizabeth Holden of Oshawa. “Mrs. Stancliffe’s Rose Cottage Bed and Breakfast has been suc- cessful for many years,” states a press release. “Her guests (nearly all women) return year after year. Her next door neighbour, the elderly, sil- ver-tongued, Bud “Bud the Stud” Davis believes they come to spend time with him in romantic liai- sons. The prim and proper Mrs. Stancliffe steadfastly denies this, but really doesn’t do anything to prevent it. She reluctantly accepts the fact that “Bud the Stud” is, in fact, good for business. Her other neighbour and would-be suitor Henry Mitchell is a retired chem- ist who has developed a blue pill called “Venusia,” after Venus the goddess of love, to increase the libido of menopausal women. The pill has not been tested. Add to the guest list three older women: Vic- toria Ambrose, a romance novel- ist whose personal life seems to be lacking in romance; Hillary Hud- son, a friend of Henry’s who has agreed to test the Venusia: and, Charmaine Beauregard, a “South- ern Belle” whose libido does not need to be increased.” For tickets and more informa- tion, visit www.herongate.com or call 905-472-3085. Herongate is at 2885 Altona Rd., between Taunton and Whitevale roads.durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201119 AP SALE STARTS TODAY! WeManufactureandInstall TAXREBATESAVAILABLE ONSELECTED PRODUCTSPLUSDON’TPAYUNTILSPRING CALLFORDETAILS VisitOurShowroomtoReceivea$25.00GasCard WithEveryPurchase** FA LLSPECTACULARFALLSPECTACULAR VISITOUR FA CTORY&SHOWROOM 239STAT IONST.,AJAX OR CALL 905-686-9607 lifestyleproducts.caDelivered to SelectedAreas!IN TO DA Y’SPA PER! CustomerAppreciation DayJoin us Saturday,Sept. 10th10am-2pm INCREDIBLE PROPERTY SIGN # 194941 $1,437,000 20 Buggey LaneAjax416-662-5642 HERONGATEDINNERTHEATRE 2885 Altona Rd., Pickering 905-472-3085MoreSavings at herongate.com. SEX PLEASE,WE’RE 60! IT’SAHIT!SPECIAL $10.00 OFFwith coupon PER COUPLE Sept. 15th, 16th, 17th and 18th (matinee) live THeaTre Venusia gets a test run in Pickering supplied pHoTo PICKERING -- Stouffville’s Paul Francies, on the ground, and, clockwise from left, Elizabeth Holden of Oshawa, Margaret St. John-Francies (Stouffville) and Pickering’s Don Green, Madeleine Atkinson and Rose Green, rehearse Sex Please, We’re 60! special evenTs First McLaughlin Literary Festival in Oshawa Full-day event at parkwood estate sept. 18 Mike ruTa mruta@durhamregion.com OSHAWA -- The written word is celebrated in Oshawa later this month. The Friends of the Oshawa Public Library present the first McLaughlin Literary Festival on Sept. 18 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. And the Friends have chosen to hold the event, appropriately enough, at Parkwood Estate. Festival director Olga Filina of Oshawa explains that the Friends hold events such as readings and dinner theatres to raise money for the library. “This year we found a little more money in the bank... and we thought, ‘why not do something free for the community’,” she says, adding the goal was to attract high- profile authors for the event. “It’s a little sampling of what the Toron- to festivals are offering. Residents of Oshawa and Durham Region don’t necessarily want to trek to Toronto.” The format will see authors read- ing for roughly 20 minutes and then book signing. Blue Heron Books of Uxbridge will be selling titles written by the participating authors and attendees will have a chance to meet and mingle with the writers. “Many have said they intend to stay for a portion of the day; they won’t be reading and running,” Filina says. Among those reading are Dur- ham’s own Susanna Kearsley, whose eighth book, The Win- ter Sea, was a nominee for the Romantic Novel of the Year award by the Romantic Novelists’ Asso- ciation and a finalist for the 2009 RITA award by the Romance Writ- ers of America. Kearsley will be reading from The Rose Garden. The strong contingent of Toron- to writers includes Lilian Nattel, C.S. Richardson and Janice Keefer. To start and end the day, local authors will be featured, and Fili- na says the Friends are in contact with the Writers’ Community of Durham Region to see who can attend and take part. She says this is the first of what is planned as an annual outdoor event in the Parkwood garden. Parkwood is at 270 Simcoe St. N., at the corner of Adelaide Avenue. FasT FacTs Mclaughlin literary Festival schedule 10 a.m. Opening Ceremonies 10:10 to 11:30 a.m. Local talent, including Sarah Caterina reading from In the Shadows 11:40 a.m. Andrew J. Borkowski reading from Copernicus Avenue Noon Mary Rose Donnelly, Great Village 12:20 p.m. Lilian Nattel, The Singing Fire 12:40 p.m. Karen Connelly, Burmese Lessons: A Love Story 1 p.m. C.S. Richardson, The End of the Alphabet 1:20 p.m. Judy Fong Bates, The Year of Finding Memory: A Memoir 1:40 p.m. Emily White, Lonely: Learning to Live With Solitude 2 p.m. Susanna Kearsley, The Rose Garden 2:20 p.m. Tom Taylor, Brock’s Agent 2:40 p.m. Janice Keefer, Ladies Lending Library 3 p.m. Helen Humphreys, The Reinvention of Love 3:20 p.m. Kate Taylor, A Man in Uniform 3:45 to 4:45 p.m. Local talent to be announced 4:45 p.m. Closing ceremonies Brad Kelly Sports Editor bkelly@durhamregion.com durhamregion.com facebook.com/sportsdurhamregion twitter.com/scnewsdurhamSports durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201120 AP Pickering opens new season tonight Brad Kelly bkelly@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- With another junior hockey season set to begin tonight when the Pickering Panthers host the Toronto Jr. Canadiens, the local club will be attempting to shake a negative reputation it has been tagged with in recent years. The phrase ‘Same old Panthers’ sums up the team’s recent run in the Ontario Junior Hockey League, finishing last four years in a row, including just 14 wins in 50 outings last season. With the dawn of a new season, there is always optimism, but then the Panthers went winless in five exhibition games, outscored 28-8 in the process. So can fans expect the ‘Same old Panthers’ again this season? New head coach Mike Galati cautions everyone not be so quick to judge. “Obviously we need a good start,” he says of shaking the stigma attached to the hockey club. “The exhibition season, I don’t think you can take that very seriously. “Exhibition season is for us to see if guys can play in this league and that’s what we use that season for. A good start and people will forget about what happened the last five or six years.” The chance to prove other- wise starts with the home opener tonight at 7:30 p.m. at the Pickering Recreation Complex, followed by a matinee game on Sunday at St. Michael’s at 2 p.m. “I think we’re as ready as we can be,” said Galati in looking at the season opener on home ice. “I think fans can expect a team that is going to work hard. One thing I do like about our team is our work ethic. “I think we’ve added some toughness with (Matteo) Baldas- sara, (Mark) Ramkema and (Sean) Levac. I think we’re team tough more than anything. The guys like each other and have come together in the last couple of weeks.” Baldassarra is a former 15th- round draft pick of the OHL Niag- ara IceDogs in 2008, racking up 72 minutes in 2009-10 with Niagara, and 127 last season in the OJHL with Streetsville. Ramkema played in the OHL a couple of seasons ago with Owen Sound, before returning to the OJHL with Aurora and Tren- ton, while Levac has league experi- ence with Dixie and Streetsville. One of the young players who has impressed Galati thus far has been Aiden Wallace, a sixth-round pick this year by the London Knights. “I think he is going to be a kid that will be big for us through the sea- son,” noted Galati, who scouts for London and is familiar with Wal- lace. “He’s a young kid and he has a lot to learn as a 16 year old. I think he’s a kid that will be better than we expected back in May when we first signed him.” Galati also threw in Justin Peri- era (Aurora Tigers), Matt Galati (Streetsville) and Levac as players in the league with experience who will be relied on to get the team going in the right direction early on. Another will be Cosimo Fontana, a forward the Panthers picked up from the Ottawa 67’s. The former fourth-round pick played 14 games in the OHL last season before being sidelined with a concussion. Five teams from ajax FC make Ontario finals Shawn Cayley scayley@durhamregion.com AJAX -- Having one team advance to the Ontario Cup championship is quite a feat. Having five borders on unbeliev- able. Unless of course you’re the Ajax FC. Later this week five club teams will begin their quest for a champi- onship as the boys’ U12, U15, U16 and U17 programs and girls’ U16 team take to the pitch at The Soc- cer Centre in Vaughan. Earlier this summer, Ajax’s U21 team won the Ontario Cup, mean- ing it’s quite possible the club could have six Cup champions this season. While such a high level of success may seem unreal from the outside, the club’s head coach Tom Croft said the formula for the success Ajax FC has enjoyed is quite sim- ple. “Number one, it’s hard work from the coaches and the players,” said Croft, who, in addition to over- seeing the entire club, also heads the U16 team and the Gunners’ 93 program that has sent a number of players off on scholarship this fall. The U12 team is coached by Mark Purdy, while at the helm of the U15’s is Alex Bianchi. Dario Gasparotto heads the U16 pro- gram, while Bob Langford pilots the girls’ U16 team. Another key, said Croft, is the development model the club fol- lows. “Here at the club we have a full development plan for these clubs, for these teams, right from under four, five, six when they start with the club,” Croft explained. “We’re able to start the development pro- cess with them through the acad- emy program ... We identify (play- ers) very early and we have top level coaches that we’re always upgrading with our coaching edu- cation plan. We have a lot of expe- rience. A lot of our coaches have been around for a while. And we have a plan ... We know the route to get to this level.” Indeed they do. Just two years ago, according to Croft, Ajax sent six teams to the Ontario Cup finals, while last year saw two play through to the end. Those statistics serve as a nice feather in the cap of the club. “It is great. We’re very fortunate, but I also know how hard these coaches and players work,” said Croft. “It’s great that near the end of the season we have teams in these positions and we get to go and watch them. There is nothing like success on the field, winning league championships and Ontar- io Cup’s. It’s great to see all the hard work at the end of the day pay off. It’s really good for the whole club and the parents and players.” Speaking of reaching the high- est level possible, for three of the teams with a shot at the Ontar- io Cup, should they prove to be successful, a trip to the nationals awaits. The boys’ U16 and U17 team, along with the U16 girls, with wins will earn the right to attend the national championships later this month. Should the U17 team reach that point it’ll be taking a bit of a step up by competing at the U18 nation- als. SaBrina ByrneS / MetrOland eye on the ball WHITBY -- Ajax Spartans Adam Cooke took a swing against the Clarington Orioles during the Eastern Ontario Baseball Association Rookie AA championships held at Iroquois Park. OntariO JuniOr hOCKey league Will it be same old Panthers? SOCCer Time for Cup fever we have a plan ... we know the route to get to this level. Tom Croft durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201121 AP racing McColm looking for home track advantage AJAX -- Joey McColm cut his stock car racing teeth at Barrie Speedway. The Ajax resident hopes return- ing to his former ‘home track’ will change the racing luck that has frowned on him in recent events. McColm will drive his Espar- sponsored #50 Dodge in the Wild Wings 300 NASCAR Canadian Tire Series race at Barrie Speed- way Saturday, Sept. 10. It will be his first oval track race in more than a month. “Barrie is as physical a race track as we visit,” said McColm. “The track is so small that if you’re off the pace just a little you’ll be out of con- tention quickly. I feel confident we can have a great run if I can avoid trouble.” In his most recent races McColm was knocked out of two consecutive events as he was in the wrong place at the wrong time. The road course events on the streets of Toronto then the Circuit Gilles Villeneuve in Montreal were abnormally unkind. “We really turned our road course program around,” said McColm. “I used to struggle on the technical road courses, but the past couple of years I’ve had great success staying out of trouble and making passes. Our strongest finishes had come on road courses until this season. “It seems strange to head to Bar- rie Speedway thinking we can turn our luck around. That’s a race track where you’re almost guaranteed to knock off a fender or two from physical racing. I know the team is capable, and I want to have a solid run for Espar. They’ve been a great sponsor.” McColm is balancing a heavy schedule this year. The Ryerson University civil engineering gradu- ate has focused as much attention on his off-track activities as he has with his competitive program, and he’s done that while working a full- time career. “We’re striving to become NASCAR’s first sustainable organi- zation,” said McColm. “I have a great opportunity to use my race team to help educate the community as well as other race teams. It’s been an exciting sea- son.” Football Ajax-Pickering Dolphins send a strong message to TigerCats DURHAM -- The Ajax-Picker- ing Dolphins teams successfully defeated the Clarington TigerCats at all levels in COMFL play. Leading the way were the young but talented Dolphins atom team that trumped the TigerCats 47-0. Darius Brown rushed to the end- zone with the first touchdown of the day. Izzy O’Brien followed with three touchdowns, one com- ing from a 50-yard dash to the endzone, orchestrated by a throw from QB Riley McBride. The Dol- phins continued the onslaught with two touchdowns from Malik Williams. McBride also rushed in a touchdown and provided extra points from converts. On the defensive end, tackles came from Shaeden Currie, Aamarii Notice, Kieran McDowell, Nathaniel Gor- don and Darius Brown. The Dolphins peewee team fol- lowed up with a convincing 41-0 win over the TigerCats. The Dol- phins continued to dominate with some tactical offensive moves, resulting in touchdowns from wide receiver Tyus Hibbert, run- ning backs Craig Gonsalves and Bailey Grimes who juked around the Clarington defence on his way to three touchdowns. The Claring- ton TigerCats came up against a stingy Dolphins defence in Cam- eron Tabatabaei, Rasheed Tuck- er, Jordan Wright, David Richard, Quintyn Pettiford and Nathaniel Chung. Demitri Mougos had a fumble recovery for the Dolphins, while Lucas Welby provided an interception. The Dolphins bantam team completed the sweep with a 36-0 win. Quarterback Jaylen La Tou- che provided precision throws to wide receiver Justice Johnson, who made spectacular plays on his way to four touchdowns. Run- ning back Julian Ward-Williams also rushed for a 35-yard touch- down. On defence tackles and sacks came from Dylan Colth- irst, Jorin Grant, Kesean Bennett, Nicolas Lapi, Brandon Chong, Alex Douncette, Sean Foreman, Nathaniel Benjamin, Shareef Tucker, George Goudogianis and Jadin Ash-Dawson. OPEN HOUSE View these local open houses this weekend only Real Estate Your Local Contact your representative today 905.683.5110 Marilyn Brophy ext.233 l Barb Buchan x292 FALL PINOBRUNI* 905-728-1600 OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY SEPT. 11, 1-3 1618 RAYLEEN CRESCENT PICKERING $414,900 Outstanding location. 2500 sq.ft. all brick home on large lot.Completely renovated and improved: new roof,windows,hardwood floors,new kitchen, new furnace and central air,all new paved drive and more.4 bedrooms with lovely open concept design. Great commuter location and close to schools and mosque. 4 piece master bath, double garage, fireplace.Immaculate and move in condition. Dir: Brock Rd. north to Major Oaks and follow signs. SAT SEPT 10, 2-4 PM 793 ZATOR AVE, PICKERING $349,900 • 3 Bedroom, 2 Bath situated on 56 ft lot • Freshly Painted Throughout • Updated Kitchen • Hardwood & Ceramics • 2 Fireplaces • Picturesque Backyard Setting Call Heather now for your appointment HEATHER PA RKSales Representative 416-293-3900905-706-0272 (direct) INDEPENDENTLY OWNED AND OPERATED $434,900SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 10TH 1 –3 P.M.AND SUNDAY SEPTEMBER 11TH 1-3 P.M. 400 MEADOW ST., OSHAWA , ONRITSON & CONLINS JIM McBURNEY Sales Representative905-619-2100 ROUGE RIVER Realty Ltd. Brokerage Stunning Jeffery Built 5 Level Sidesplit Home, Located OnPremium 50X153 Ft Lot Backing Onto Greenspace, Gourmet Kitchen,With To p OfTheLineStainlessAppliances,Pantry,Granite Counter And Center Island Over Looking Spacious Family Room With Gas Fireplace. Gleaming Hardwood Floors In Foyer,Stairs, Living &Dining Room And Family Room. Underground Sprinkler Front And Back Yard. Beautifully Landscaped, Rec Finished, With Gas Fireplace And Bedroom. Open Concept Home. GAIL KEBERSales Representative905-477-0011416-275-0504www.gailkeber.com CLAREMONT BUNGALOW4904 OLD BROCK RD. Fabulous 2+2 BDRM Totally Renovatedand Updated Claremont Bungalow onapprox1AcreBacking to Conservation.Hardwood Floors, Finished Basementwith2 Walkouts, Master w/LuxuryEnsuite and Private Deck with Hot Tub,OversizedCustomKitchenwithBeautifulScenicViews. Fully Landscaped,Nothing Left to do. Don’t Miss Out OnThis Georgeous Property. $599,900 All-Stars Realty Inc.Brokerage each office independently owned and operated B C OPEN HOUSE SUNDAYSEPT 11, 2 – 4 PM NEW P R I C E PICKERINGPICKERINGADVERTISING FEATURE You can’t see it, taste it or smell it, but carbon monoxide can have lethal consequences. Carbon monoxide is a colourless, odourless gas, and it’s toxic. Even the smallest amount of exposure can cause serious health problems, especially for the most vulnerable, including children and the elderly. What makes it all the more dangerous is it can be in our homes without us knowing. Once you know how carbon monoxide gets into the house and how to safeguard against it, you can protect your home and family. Carbon monoxide (CO) is a gas that forms when fuel-propane, natural gas, gasoline, oil, coal or wood is burned. Any appliance or device that burns these types of fuel can produce it, from furnaces and fireplaces, gas stoves and barbecues to cars. Inside your home, fuel burning equipment that is properly installed and maintained produces little CO, which is safely vented outside. However, if not properly installed or maintained, the gas can leak into the house (and quickly rise to dangerous levels). When carbon monoxide levels rise in your home, even though you can’t see it or smell it, there are warning signs. Carbon monoxide reduces the amount of oxygen in your blood. Signs of exposure range from headache (this is the most common and earliest symptom), shortness of breath, tiredness and other flu-like symptoms. Indications of more serious levels of gas include nausea, dizziness, chest pain and disorientation (these symptoms can also occur if a person has been exposed to low levels of CO for long periods of time). At very high levels, this gas can cause convulsions, unconsciousness, coma, brain damage or death. The best defence is to ensure carbon monoxide has no way of getting inside the house. First, it’s important to have your furnace checked annually by a professional to ensure it’s in good working order. Chimneys and vents should be inspected each year for cracks, blockages or damage and fireplaces need to be examined for blocked or closed flues. Periodically, you can also check outside to make sure exhaust vents for the dryer, furnace, wood-burning or gas stove are clear of debris, including lint, leaves or snow. The garage is another source of concern, whether it’s attached to the house or not. Never let a car idle in the garage, even if the door is open. It’s best never to run any gas-powered equipment - whether a snow blower, lawn mower or tool - there. Once you’ve done your best to ensure your home is protected from carbon monoxide leaks, the next step is to install CO detectors. It’s smart, and in some cities, it’s the law. For all of your heating and cooling needs - from new furnaces to maintenance and repairs, AirPlus Heating and Cooling can help. For more information, please call (905) 619-9978 or visit www.airplus.ca. Carbon Monoxide: Silent But Deadly durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201122 P SALES •SERVICE •INSTALLATION Complete selection of Vinyl Windows & Doors (905)579-22221-888-576-8575 Wayne Hutchinson696 King St. W. Oshawa, ON DURHAM WINDOWS& DOORS Vinyl WindowDesigns Ltd. TM windows for life! Readers’ Choice Winner SHAMMY’S AUTO DETAILING INC. 905-831-2444 933 Dillingham Road,Pickeringwww.shammysauto.com RUST PROOFING Dripless Oil from $89.95 Go Green. Save Green. AIRPLUS is proud to offer home heating and cooling options that save money and the environment. Durham:905-619-9978 • airplus.ca Eco-Energy Rebates u p t o $5,000. Call f o r d e t a i l s . AIR CONDITIONERS FURNACES • HEAT PUMPS AIR PURIFIERS ClassicArrangementsArtGallery 250 Bayly St. Unit 5 Ajax Te l: 905-427-1663 Come visit us at our new location. We have a 50% sale on all our Tr isha Romances Artwork. We thank you for your business. We are open Mon-Sat.10am-6pm BASEBALL What a year for Pickering peewee team PICKERING -- Every spring the Pickering Baseball Association assigns house league players and coaches randomly to teams based on previous performance and spring player evaluations. This year, one peewee team, the Kinsmen and Kinettes, consist- ed of five players who had never played baseball in their lives, one player who had previously only played softball, one of only two female players in the league, a first year assistant coach and a first year head coach. With all that in mind, the coaches and players agreed that the team goals were to have fun and learn about baseball and each game the team learned something new, from bunting through to picking off runners stealing third. And as it all transpired, so to did the wins. Midway through the season the club represented Pickering at the 2011 Intact House League Championships in Burlington, an honour goes to the peewee team that has the most wins by June 30. Although this was a new experience for the team, the club proceeded to win its division and ended up finishing third place. The winning didn’t stop there. Pickering won nine of the 12 regular season games, mak- ing them the league champions. That run included a rare shut- out by combined pitchers Mat- thew Ward, Kyle McPherson and Shaun Scallen. The team then went on to win five of their six playoff games, qualifying them to play in the peewee A division champion- ship game, which they won with a final score of 16-6. It was an electrifying moment as the team crowded around the closing pitcher, Michael Currie, in celebration as family mem- bers cheered. Riley Brown won the leagues team spirit award and with two regular season home runs and 38 batters struck out, Shaun Scallen was nominated for the league’s player of the year. Coach Sara Currie was nomi- nated for volunteer of the year and both Peter Lin and John Cur- rie were nominated for coach of the year. Coach John Currie attributes the success of the team to the players’ dedication and parent support. “This team brought a great group of people together who I got to know and built new friend- ships with. I was impressed with the players’ positive attitudes and how well they listened and followed instructions. I was equally overwhelmed by the sup- port from all of the parents who would jump in and help without being asked,” he said. Currie was assisted this year by Peter Lin, Jim Watson, John Ward and Sara Currie, while team members were Mitchell Watson, Shaun Scallen, Sean Chapman, Mitchell Wiffen, Kyle McPherson, Ryan Weller, Jaden Wells, Camer- on Lin, Michael Currie, Matthew Ward, Cody Vaccher and Riley Brown. SUBMITTED PHOTO PICKERING -- The Kinsmen and Kinette’s peewee team of the Pickering Minor Baseball Association had quite the season, finishing the year as PBA champions. COLLEGE OCAA to postpone sports action TORONTO -- The Ontario Colleges Athletic Association announced Tues- day that it will not conduct any varsity events during the current Ontario Public Service Employees Union work stop- page. The work stoppage is affecting colleges across the province, including Durham College. Regular season games are cur- rently scheduled to begin in men’s and women’s soccer on Friday, men’s rugby on Sunday, women’s fastball on Sept. 13 and women’s rugby on Sept. 14. BASKETBALL Registration and rep tryouts AJAX -- The Durham City Basketball Association will be holding rep tryouts for boys and girls ages seven to 19 on Saturday at Lincoln Alexander Public School and McLean’s Community Cen- tre. The club will also have house league signup for boys and girls ages four to 16 at Pickering High School on Sunday from 2-4 p.m. For more infor- mation, visit www.durhamcitybasketball. ca or call 905-427-4253. durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201123 AP 911/Emergency Response Learn the skills needed to work in emergency response, dispatch or communications field. Employment opportunities in this field are very diversified and encompass the public and private sectors. Call for more information 905.721.2000 ext. 2496 www.durhamcollege.ca/coned ClassifiedEmployment TrainingAll zonesSeptember 9/11 Continuing EduCation Sewing Craftsmanship Certificate Designed to prepare you to work in the sewing industry. Learn the skills you need today. Courses begin soon. Call 905.721.2000 ext. 2260 for further details www.durhamcollege.ca/coned ClassifiedEmployment TrainingSeptember 9, 2011 classified_sewing.indd 1 8/24/11 3:27 PM REAL ESTATE SALES We're Hiring! *We pay course fees *Licensing Training & Support *7 Locations Considering, Licensed or In course, contact… Pam Palmer 1-888-472-2767 www.BecomeARealtor.ca Coldwell Banker R.M.R. Real Estate Brokerage Oshawa • Peterborough • Lindsay Campus 1-800-753-2284 Offering: ADBC and Z trainingInsurance Accredited Courses Oshawa •Pet erborough •Lindsay Campus Insurance Accredited Courses Weekend Air Brakes CoursesOshawa Campus – October 24th-25th Oshawa Campus - November 7th-8th Peterborough Campus – November 14th-15th ministry - approvedttsao air brake endorsement course Insurance Accredited Courses 65+ Refresher CourseFire Fighter Specials peterborough campus oshawa campus september 17th - 18th october 1st - 2nd Oshawa • Peterborough • Lindsay 1-800-753-2284 MILLWRIGHT - JOB OPPORTUNITY St Marys Cement Co., Bowmanville Plant, has an opening for an Industrial Maintenance Mechanic (Millwright). Duties will include troubleshooting, preventative maintenance, handling emergency repairs, and general machinery/equipment repairs. The ideal applicant will be a Licensed Industrial Maintenance Mechanic. Computer literacy and experience in the field would be an asset. The successful applicant will work days but may be required on a shift schedule as determined by the needs of the plant. This position offers an attractive wage and a full comprehensive benefit package. Qualified applicants please submit your resume by September 22, 2011: Human Resources St. Marys Cement 400 Waverley Road South Bowmanville, Ontario L1C 3K3 Or Email: recruitmentbowmanville@vcsmc.com Or Fax: (905) 623-8462 (No telephone calls please) We appreciate your interest in St. Marys Cement; however, please note that only applicants selected for an interview will be contacted. We are an equal opportunity employer. ACCOUNTS RECEIVABLE COORDINATOR Essential Duties & Responsibilities l Calls all customers whose accounts are overdue to arrange collection. l Collection and maintenance of customer accounts l Reconciliation of accounts l Control of payments l Professional interaction with customers & internal contacts l Produce various reports for department Qualifications l Three to five years related experience l Extremely well organized and detail oriented l Excellent interpersonal and communication skills l Professional telephone skills l Strong Microsoft Office Skills We offer a competitive remuneration package including full benefits and profit sharing. Please send resume, cover letter, and salary expectations to: EAST PENN Canada 165 Harwood Ave. N. Ajax, Ontario L1Z 1L9 Fax: (905) 619-4248 Email: hr@eastpenncanada.com Canadian Tire at 111 Rylander Blvd. is looking for Auto Service Advisors, Auto Parts Sales, Tire, Lube and Drive Clean Technicians, Sports/Seasonal Manager and General Customer Service Staff. Flexible hours required including nights and weekends. Please fax resume & cover letter to: 416-283-1883. No calls or visits please. AIRLINES ARE HIRING- Train for high paying Aviation Maintenance Career. FAA approved program. Financial aid if qualified- Housing available. CALL Aviation In- stitute of Maintenance (877)818-0783 OPEN HOUSE, Sat. Sept 10th - 9:30am-4:30pm, 500 Beck Cres., Ajax (Hilton). AZ drivers, 3 years exp., clean abstract, C.V.O.R., criminal search. (905)673-9777. CALL TODAY START TO- MORROW International Company has Immediate Openings REGISTRATION AGENTS Avg $25 /hr NO EXPERIENCE = NO PROB- LEM Call Anita 905-435- 0518 EXPERIENCED Tire techni- cian required full-Time for busy Automotive and Tire Store. Drop off resume to: Oshawa Tire, 245 King St. W., Oshawa or call (905)725- 6511 GET IN THE GAME. $11/hr to start, up to $20/hr. FUN WORK! Hourly, Paid Wkly No sales, No commission. F/T positions and benefits. Call Now, Start Tomorrow Whitney 1 888 767 1027 HANDYMAN, mechanically inclined. Clean valid drivers license. Suitable for semi-re- tired/retired. Part-time Satur- day's a must. Call Max be- tween 9am-2pm Monday-Fri- day. 289-988-4446 PRODUCTION OPERATORS We are a major UK branded cereal manufacturer with ambitious plans to grow our business in North America. As part of the exciting future we are building we are seeking enthusiastic, focused production operators to compliment our team based environment. Candidates should have some experience in the production of food products. Training in HACCP or ISO as well as GMP would be preferable. You should be self-motivated, have technical skills as well as basic computer skills. Applicants need a post-secondary education. These positions are on a (3) three shift rotation and on a (5) five day schedule. We offer an enhanced wage & benefit package. Only applicants selected for an interview will be contacted. No phone calls please.Resumes are to be submitted to:M.D. (Mike) RobinsonHuman Resources SupervisorWeetabix of Canada Ltd.P.O. Box 2020Cobourg ON K9A 5P5 Employment Services Call 905-666-8847 Now! Has the following positions: Roofer/FramerGeneral Labour Retail/Customer Service Sandwich Artist Come drop in and visit our NEW Downtown Whitby location! (114 Dundas St. East-Suite # 200) for more details, or Looking For Employment? OSHAWA AREA inbound Call Centre is expanding. All positions are being recruited for from CSR's to Manage- ment. Please send resume to oshawacc@gmail.com ASSISTANT SUPERINTENDENT COUPLE REQUIRED Mature COUPLE needed for hi-rise in Ajax. Live in position, good benefits and salary. Please fax resume to (905) 619-2901 between 8:30 a.m. - 4:00 p.m. Blue Line Taxi is seeking customer orientated TAXICAB DRIVERS for our Oshawa group. Training provided and earn cash daily. (905)440-2011 DATA ENTRY PERSON re- quired for Pickering office. Multi-task, computer and telephone skills essential. Email: rctrans@rogers.com LANDSCAPE Foreperson, min 3-years experience, in- terlock/natural stone installa- tion for well established North Pickering based land- scape company. D license an asset. Must have own transportation. Benefits pack- age available. Call Mon.-Fri. (905)619-6761 or Fax re- sume to (905)619-0788. NIGHT SHIFT DISPATCH- ER wanted. Experienced Dispatcher wanted for Whit- by taxi company. Must have knowledge of the Town of Whitby, responsible, flexible and able to work evenings through the week. Please call (905)668-6696 Ask for Kathy or Paul. QUALITY SUITES, Whitby and Comfort Inn Oshawa looking for Part-time House- keeping. Apply on line www.durhamhoteljobs.ca REPAIR TECHNICIAN Industrial Spray Equipment required immediately. A valid drivers licence a must. Candidate needs Strong Organizational Skills in a demanding environment. Previous experience with Spray paint equip an asset. We are willing to train. French an asset.Send resume to: canada@exel-na.comor fax 416-431-7115 ONTARIO DUCT CLEANING requires full /part time technicians with good driving record and own transportation. Professional & mechanically inclined. fax 905-655-9069 or email ontduct@bell.net SITE CUSTODIAN required for the self-storage site for one of the largest property management companies lo- cated in Durham Region. Responsible for keeping site clean of garbage and debris, liaising with tenants and con- tractors, snow removal and salting of sidewalks and in front of doors, and complet- ing monthly inspection re- ports. We thank you for your interest but only selected candidates for interviewing will be contacted. Apply by sending resume to careers@vrpl.ca or fax to (905) 579-9472. HAIRSTYLIST FULL TIME with experience JOSEPH'S HAIRSTYLING, Oshawa Centre. Apply in person or call Joe (905)723-9251 BAYVIEW METALS is look- ing for experienced bender for precision sheet metal, must know how to set up and operate brake press with little supervision. Prototypes and long runs. Fax resume to 905-426-7273 or drop off at 6 Barr Rd Ajax, ask for Wayne. CARPENTERS & CARPEN- TER'S helpers needed im- mediately. Restoration expe- rience an asset. IICRC Train- ing a must. Fax resume to: 905-492-8321. EXPERIENCED WINDOW Installer required. Must be experienced in capping and caulking! May lead to busi- ness partnership. Please fax resume to (905)579-9688. CareerTraining Careers CareerTraining CareerTraining Careers Drivers CareerTraining Drivers GeneralHelp CareerTraining Drivers GeneralHelp Careers GeneralHelp Careers GeneralHelp Careers GeneralHelp Careers GeneralHelp GeneralHelp Skilled &Te chnical Help GeneralHelp GeneralHelp Skilled &Technical Help Salon & SpaHelp Classifi eds News Advertiser To Place an Ad Call: 905-683-0707 Or Toronto Line: 416-798-7259 localmarketplace.ca • Email: classifieds@durhamregion.com CANLAN ICE SPORTS is hiring exp'd p/t hockey and skating instructors. Must be avail wknds. Contact Tana Tremblay at (905)725-6951ext 230 or forward your resume to ttremblay@icesports.com Drivers Drivers YOUR SOURCE FOR JOBS durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201124 AP Make a Connection…Become a To ronto Zoo Vo lunteer! Dynamic and outgoing adults wanted to educate &inspire visitors and promote wildlife conservation (no contact with the animals).For more information visit torontozoo.com or email tzvolunteers@torontozoo.ca. Please apply by Fri.Sept.16 2 & 3 bedroom apartments Close to school, shopping, hospital On-site superintendent & security. Rental Office Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. (905)686-0845 or (905)686-0841 Eve. viewing by appt. www.ajaxapartments.com Vo lunteers Skilled &Technical Help FITTERS & WELDERS required by a well established plate fabricator in Ajax. Top wages & benefits. Fax resume to 905-428-6933 RAGLAN INDUSTRIES Inc. currently has openings for the following positions: Welder/Fitters and AutoCad Detailer. The Welder/Fitter positions are M.I.G. and T.I.G. aluminum and steel welding to C.W.B. standards. Compensation between $22- $27 per hour plus benefits. The AutoCad Detailer position must be someone that is familiar with metalworking and knowledge of nesting programs is an asset. Apply at 5151 Simcoe S.N., Oshawa L1H-7K4 or fax to 905-655-5997. Office Help PART TIME- "Girl-Friday" PROFICIENT in MS word & excel for Pickering design of- fice. kkortekaas@hkla.ca RECEPTIONIST FOR heath center needed. Also Retail Sales positions available. Immediate openings. Fax re- sume to 416-686-5233. RECEPTIONIST required, very busy real estate office in Ajax, evenings and week- ends, good computer skills, ability to work under pres- sure necessary. Real Estate office experience an asset. Fax resume to 905-619-3334 Sales Help& Agents CAR SALES PERSON re- quired, full time, Oshawa. Please fax resume to (905)404-9842. Hospital/Medical/Dental P/T ADMIN ASST. with busy multidisciplinary clinic. Must have HCAI, MVA & WSIB billing experience. Fax resume to: 905-426-2731 or e-mail info@totalrehab.net PROGRAM/ ACTIVATION Manager LTC, 1 year jwest@hellenichome.org fx 416.654.0943 RAI/MDS COORDINATOR RN Excellent Compensation. Contact: fx. 416.654.0943 jwest@hellenichome.org RPNS/RNS LONG term Care, great working condi- tions and team, Contact jwest@hellenichome.org fx 416.654.0943 Hotel/Restaurant RILEY'S AND JUNCTION looking for security, F.O.H. and kitchen staff. Apply with resume to: 104 King St. E., Oshawa. Vo lunteers Houses for Sale$ 60K BELOW MARKET VALUE! 3-bdrm bungalow. Ajax by the lake. On Dreyer Drive. 647-977-8170 Industrial/Commercial SpaceI SMALL COMMERCIAL of- fice, 200 sq.ft. downtown Bowmanville, private en- trance, washroom, ideal for insurance office, zoned for car dealer/wholesaler, mail order etc. Prime location. $500/month. all inclusive, with A/C. (905)983-1016, leave message. STORAGE UNITS 10' x 20' Wilson Rd. S. Oshawa. Un- heated. $125. - $135. per mo. Call (905)725-9991 Offices & Business Space DOWNTOWN Bowmanville, two-retail units for lease. Ap- prox 600 & 650-sq ft. Call Jane Goo 647-707-7754 BusinessOpportunitiesB COKE & CANDY VENDING ROUTE. Local Hi-Traffic Locations. Earn $40K+ per year. Fast & Safe Investment Return. Secure Your Future- Be the Boss! Factory Direct Pricing 1-888-579-0892 Must Sell HAIR SALON FOR SALE. Bowmanville location. For in- formation call (905)718-2248 or (905)243-3515. Mortgages,LoansM $$MONEY$$ CONSOLI- DATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com 1.89% Mortgage No appraisal needed. Beat that! Refinance now and Save $$$ before rates rise. Below bank Rates Call for Details Peter 877-777-7308 Mortgage Leaders NEED CASH FAST! Good, bad credit, even bankruptcy, debt consolidations! Person- al loans, business start up available. Home renovations loads, 1st & 2nd mortgage, medical bills, From $5,000K to $500,000K. No application fees, no processing fees. Free consultations. Quick, easy and confidential. Call 24 hrs Toll Free 1(866)790- 7176 Apartments &Flats for RentA DOWNTOWN WHITBY, 2- bedroom main floor of house, living room, laundry room on site, large fenced yard. Avail. Oct 1st. 1-877-808-3729 or 416-436-8591 1-BEDROOM main floor of house. Includes heat, hydro, water & air conditioning. Bus at door. $750/mo first/last re- quired. 577 Ritson Rd South. October 1st. (905)725-9731 AJAX - RENT TO OWN. Beautiful Home, Detached, Modern 3 beds, 1.5 baths, deck, attch garage, finshd rec room. All Credit OK. 24hr msg: 1-866-456-7902 Apartments &Flats for RentA AJAX- OXFORD Towers. Spacious apartments, quiet bldg, near shopping, GO. Pool. 1-bedroom, 2-bedroom & 3-bedroom from $959, $1069 & $1169/mo. Plus parking. Available Septem- ber/October 905-683-5322, 905-683-8571 BOWMANVILLE immaculate 1-bedroom; $970 all inclu- sive. Security entrance, very clean building, freshly paint- ed, includes appliances, utilities, parking, laundry, no dogs, Avail. Oct. 1. 905-697- 1786, 905-666-1074 BOWMANVILLE large 2- bedroom apt. in well main- tained, controlled entrance 18-unit building, $925/month. New appliances, utilities and parking included. No dogs. Available October 1st. Phone (905)623-9397. BOWMANVILLE, 2-bed- room, $750/month, immedi- ately & bachelor, $550/month Oct 1. Includes Heat, water, parking and coin laundry. First/last, references required. Call 905-623-4622. GARDEN/DUNDAS- Whitby Bright 1-bedroom basement apartment, recently renovat- ed, own entrance, shared laundry, 1 car parking. No pets/smoking. References. First/last month. Available October 1st. $800/month. 416-902-3673. LARGE 2 bedroom in Oshawa, available immedi- ately. Close to schools. Friendly building. $950 plus utilities. Call 289-240-1139. MARY STREET APTS bachelors, 1's & 2s bdrm apts. Utilities included, min- utes to downtown, short drive to Whitby Mall. Mary/Garden 905-666-2450 www.real- star.ca NORTH OSHAWA-1 bed Oct. 1st. 2 bed. Oct. and Nov. lst. Clean, family build- ing. Heat, hydro and two appliances included. Pay cable, parking, laundry facilities. (905)723-2094. OSHAWA - clean, quiet building, overlooking green space, near shopping and schools. 2-bedroom, $895/month. Parking, utilities, appliances incl. Available Oct 1st. 289-388- 6401. OSHAWA HOSPITAL area, north of Adelaide, large upper 2-bedroom, 2 baths, laundry, 1 parking, $950/mo inclusive. First/last. Call 905- 579-2350 OSHAWA NEAR OC, 1-bed- room basement, in 4-plex. Available Oct 1st. Newly renovated, coin laundry, parking. No pets, First/last, references. (905)665-5537. OSHAWA NORTH, Spa- cious units. Adult & Senior lifestyle buildings. Renovat- ed 1, 2 & 3 bdrm apts. Across hospital, near bus stop, wheel chair and se- curity access. Call 905-728- 4966, 1-866-601-3083. www.apartmentsinontario.com OSHAWA, SMALL 2-BDRM, second floor of triplex, Bond/Ritson. On-site laun- dry, parking, on bus route. $800/month + hydro, heat/cable included. First/last. Avail. immediately. No pets 905-434-8349. WHITBY PLACE 1 & 2 bed. Landscaped grounds. Balco- nies, laundry & parking. Access to Hwy. 401 & public transit. Near shopping & schools. 900 Dundas St. E. (Dundas St. & Garden St) 9 0 5 - 4 3 0 - 5 4 2 0 www.realstar.ca Apartments &Flats for RentA Perfection!!! newly renovated suites 2-BEDROOM extra-large suite in clean, quiet bldg, freshly painted, beautiful Whitby neighbourhood. Ideal adult lifestyle bldg. insuite storage, onsite laundry. Incredible value $995/mth! 905-668-7758 viewit.ca (vit #17633) PICKERING 2-BDRM BSMT -Large Master, Natural Light, Ensuite Storage, AirCon, Shared Laundry. First/Last ,Year Lease. Available: Oc- tober 1st. $950 Utilities In- cluded. CALL CAROL 416- 543-0851 PICKERING, KINGSTON Rd/Liverpool, 1-bedroom basement, newly renovated, laundry, utilities, and parking included. $800/month, first/last. No smoking. Available immediately. (905)837-8509. Condominiumsfor RentC 3-BEDROOM CONDO in de- sirable Whitby area. Available November 1st. No smoking. Please call (905)655-0954 or email icook4u@rogers.com PICKERING, PENTHOUSE, lakeview, 1100-sq. ft. 3- bdrms, 1.5 baths, walk to GO, schools, waterfront. Utilities included, shared laundry, underground park- ing. No smoking/pets. Avail. immediately. $1400/mo. (905)239-7645 WHITBY, CONDO at lake. 1- bedroom, steps from marina, waterfront trail, shopping, GO Train. Ensuite laundry, parking space, gym, pool. Available October 1st. $1225/month. (905)449-1649 Houses for Rent HWY#2 / KEEWATIN, house available, Nov.. lst, 4 bed- rooms, 3 baths, finished basement, ravine lot with ac- cess to walking pathways, near school. and park, $1500 plus utilities. No pets/smoking. (905)786-2897 OSHAWA 3-bdrm. upper level of house. Spacious. Nice, family neighbourhood. Parking, laundry, appliances, full backyard. $1125/ mo. All inclusive. Students welcome. First/last. Avail. Oct 1. Phone evenings 905-686-2195. PICKERING, 3-bdrm cottage style bungalow on Rouge- mount Drive. Beautiful treed lot, great for couple or small family. Avail. October 1st. $1200/mo+utilities. Call 905- 509-3601. To wnhousesfor RentT CARRIAGE HILL 2 & 3 bed. TOWNHOUSES. In-suite laundry, util. incl., Balconies, patios, courtyard. Pking. avail. Near shopping, res- taurants, schools, parks. 122 Colborne St. E. (Simcoe N., Colborne E) 905-434- 3972 www.realstar.ca TAUNTON TERRACE 3 bedroom townhouses. En- suite laundry. Landscaped grounds w/pool & play- ground. Private backyards. Sauna & parking avail. Near shopping & schools, public transport. 100 Taunton Rd. E. (Taunton Rd. & Simcoe St.) 905-436-3346 www.real- star.ca Rooms forRent & WantedR AJAX- SUNNY large bed- room, share empty-nester, exec. home in Pickering Vil- lage, 1km from GO train. Ei- ther furnished/non-furnished. Suits working, mature gentle- man. Buses at door. NO PARKING. No lease. $525/mo. First/last. 905-424- 0286. OSHAWA B&B STYLE ac- commodations (separate area), suits Hydro/profes- sional male, 40+. Non- smoker, commuting to out-of- town home-base most week- ends. $115/week (nego- tiable). (905)723-6761. WHITBY, room avail. in quiet home. $500/mo inclusive, (wkly avail.) Includes inter- net, share use of kitchen, no smoking/pets, first/last/refer- ences. (905)430-8189, (905)259-8959. Va cationProperties ASK YOURSELF, what is your TIMESHARE worth? We will find a buyer/renter for CA$H. NO GIMMICKS- JUST RESULTS! www.BuyATimeshare.com (888)879-7165 BIG BEAUTIFUL AZ LAND $99/mo. $0 down, $0 inter- est, Golf Course, Nat'l Parks. 1 hour from Tucson Int'l Air- port. Guaranteed Financing, No Credit Checks. Pre-re- corded msg. (800)631-8164 code 4001 or visit www.sunsiteslandrush.com SELL/RENT YOUR TIME- SHARE FOR CASH!!! Our Guaranteed Services will Sell/ Rent Your Unused Timeshare for CASH! Over $95 Million Dollars offered in 2010! www.BuyATime- share.com (888)879-7165 Boats &Supplies 1989 STINGRAY, 19.5' bow- rider. 145 mercury cruiser, inboard/outboard. Too many new parts to list. $3000 OBO. 289-939-2044 Lost & FoundL LOST CAT "Henry" Henry is our little guy, and we miss him a lot. He is an indoor cat, large sized, brown and white stripped tabby, large pink nose, not declawed, no collar. Lakeridge/Taunton area. REWARD. If seen or found please call 289-200-5824OR289-200-7555 Music &Dance Instruction PIANO TEACHER looking for students, beginners wel- comed at any age. Westney Heights area of Ajax. Call Joani at 905-686-8351. Health& Homecare R.N. MALE, retired, 43-years experience in various set- tings, registration current. Avail. 3-5 days/week plus on- call to provide care/assis- tance for at-home person. Non-smoker, excellent driver. 289-200-6358 Ralph Articlesfor SaleA BED, ALL new Queen ortho- pedic, mattress, box spring in plastic, cost $900, selling $275. Call (416)779-0563 Articlesfor SaleA CEDAR TREES for sale, starting from $4.00 each. Planting available. Free De- livery. Call Bob 705-341- 3881. DININGROOM SUITE: table, 6 chairs, buffet, hutch, colour cream, tabletop light oak $1100. Coffee table, 2 end tables. Chairs. Rug. Pictures, Stereo Equipment, Speak- ers. (905)421-0155 HIGH SPEED Internet Newer Technology. Can be installed almost anywhere. Rental Special low monthly rates. www.SkyviewE.com 905- 655-3661 1-800-903-8777 HOT TUB COVERS All Custom covers, all sizes and all shapes, $375.00 plus tax Free delivery. Let us come to your house & measure your tub! Pool safety covers. 905-259-4514. www.durhamcovers.com HOT TUB (SPA) Covers Best Price, Best Quality. All shapes & Colours Available. Call 1-866-652-6837. www.thecoverguy.com/ newspaper HOT TUBS, 2011 models, fully loaded, full warranty, new in plastic, cost $8000, sacrifice $3,900. 416-779- 0563. HOT TUBS/SPAS – over 20 New & Used on display. From $495 - $4,995. War- ranties available. All offers considered. 905-409-5285 REMODELING SALE. Upscale furniture & home decor. Pristine condition. large solid wood armoire w/matching coffee table, floral arrangements, mirrors, pictures, decor items, etc. (905)426-1920, (416)200- 9630 RENT TO OWN - N e w a n d reconditioned appliances, new TV's, Stereos, Comput- ers, DVD Players, Furniture, Bedding, Patio Furniture, Barbecues & More! Fast de- livery. No credit application refused. Paddy's Market, 905-263-8369 or 1- 800-798-5502. STEEL BUILDINGS. Huge Savings/Factory Deals. Ca- nadian Certified. 38x50, 50x96, 63x120, 78x135. Misc. Sizes and material avail. www.sunward- steel.com Source#16M 800- 964-8335 TRUCKLOADS OF NEW SCRATCH & DENT APPLI- ANCES stainless steel, white and black French door fridge's available, variety of dented ranges, laundry, dish- washers and fridges - differ- ent colors. SMALL DENTS EQUAL HUGE SAVINGS! Front load washers from $399. New coin laundry available, Call us today, Ste- phenson's Appliances, Sales, Service, Parts. 154 Bruce St. Oshawa. (905)576- 7448 VendorsWantedV LUPUS FALL FESTIVAL G.B. Rickard Complex Bowmanville Crafts & Sales September 29th & 30th October 1st & 2ndVendors Call 905-623-1209 Firewood 100% A KOZY HEAT FIRE- WOOD, excellent, very best quality hardwood, guaran- teed extra long time fully seasoned, (ready to burn), cut and split. Honest meas- urement. Free delivery. Wood supplier of first choice by many customers since 1975. (905)753-2246. Pets, Supplies,Boarding DACHSHUNDS, MINIATURE, long haired puppies, red, black, tan & brindles, vet checked, vacci- nated, CKC registered, Port Hope area View at desrokennel.com or Call 905-797-2119. Cars for Sale 1977 PONTIAC LAMANS Classic A1 condition. one owner, low mileage 48000- miles. Orange with white upholstery. $15,000, Price negotiable. Call 8am-8pm 905-579-1090. 2001 HYUNDAI SONATA $2999, 2001 Grand Caravan Sport $3499, 2002 Grand Prix 169k $3999, 2000 Sun- fire 105k $3499, 2000 Ford Focus 159k $3499, 1999 Dodge Stratus 171k $2699, 2000 Dodge Neon $1999. Others $1,999 and up. Certi- fied E-test, free 6 month war- ranty (plus HST). (905)432- 7599 or (905)925-2205. www.rkmauto.com 2002 KIA Spectra. Engine has 80,000kms. New clutch, new timing belt, new water pump. Asking $2000 obo. 905-885-6966 97 FORD Escort Wagon, 216 Kms., Only needs tires for Cert. $1,500 as is. Call 905- 404-3262 TIRED OF TAKING THE BUS? Car Repairs Got You Down? Bankrupt? Poor Credit? 100% Approval. Drive The Car You Need Today. Call 1-877-743-9292 Or Apply Online @ www.needacartoday.ca. Cars WantedC !!!!! $ ! AAA AARON & LEO Scrap Cars & Trucks Want- ed. Cash paid 7 days/week anytime. Please call 905- 426-0357. !!!! ! !! AAAAA WHITTLE SCRAP Solutions. We pay cash for your scrap cars, truck, and vans! Fast free pickup. 24/7. 905-431-1808. ABSOLUTELY the best CASH deal for your old junk- er. Cars & trucks wanted, dead or alive. Free p-up. Call 24 hrs. John 905-914-4142. !!! $$ ADAM & RON'S SCRAP cars, trucks, vans. Pay cash, free pick up 7 days/week (anytime) (905)424-3508 ! ! ! ! ! ! ! A AAAAA ALL SCRAP CARS, old cars & trucks wanted. Cash paid. Free pickup. Call Bob any- time (905)431-0407. Cars WantedC ! ! ! $200-$2000 Cash For Cars & Trucks $$$$ 1-888-355-5666 !!! $250 - $2000. Paid for Cars and Trucks Dead or Alive! 1-888-3-555-666 $$$ TOP CASH paid for your car or trucks. same day re- moval service. Call Shawn (416) 577-3879 $250-$2000 Ajaxautowreckers.comCash for Cars, Trucks and All Scrap Metal. Or $300 Government Program 905-686-1771 416-896-7066 CASH FOR CARS! We buy used vehicles. Vehicles must be in running condition. Call (905)427-2415 or come to 479 Bayly St. East, Ajax at MURAD AUTO SALES NEED CA$H WILL PAY you up to $2000 for your scrap car, truck or van. Free tow. Will beat anyone's price call (289)892-3414. Tr ucksfor SaleT 1993 NISSAN PICKUP. 5-spd manual. Fiberglass cap w/front slider. Chrome mags, fog lights, tinted glass, front & rear lift kits. $1200 o.b.o. (905)509-1628 Garage &Storage SpaceG TRAILER, BOAT & Boat Trailer Outside Storage for Winter & Summer. Good Rates. Please call Chris (905)655-8276 or Andy cell 905-706-0321 AdultEntertainment #1 Asian Girls Hot, Sexy, Busty Best Service 24/7 Out Calls Only 289-634-1234 416-833-3123 Durham Craft & Gift Show Durham College October 28, 29 & 30, 2011 For booth information, Call Audrey 905 426-4676 x257 or Email: adewit@durhamregion.com www.showsdurhamregion.com VendorsWantedV AdultEntertainment Durham’s EliteDurham’s EliteDurham’s Elite Established Since 1997 289-688-5885 www.classelegance.com 24 Hour OutCall Service Discretion Assured Beautiful LadiesFor All Occasions Sexy, Clean,ProvocativeLadies available for your satisfaction. Discretion Assured In/Out calls (289)987-4926 (when only the Best will do!) MassagesM PICKERING SPA Relaxing Massage V.I.P. Rooms 1050 Brock Rd. S. Unit 25 7 days/week Open 10am (905)831-3188 Now Hiring 416-985-8628 AAA PICKERING ANGELS H H H H H Relaxing Massage VIP Rooms & Jacuzzi 905 Dillingham Rd. (905)420-0320pickeringangels.com Now hiring!!! VendorsWantedV MassagesM GRAND OPENING LaVilla Spa 634 Park Rd. South Oshawa (905)240-1211 Now hiring!!! OPEN 7 Days/Week Asian Girls serenityajaxspa.com 905-231-0272 43 Station St.Unit 1, Ajax Special $25 Relaxing Massage 6095 Kingston Rd. 401/Meadowvale SPRING SPA 10am-9pm 7days416-287-0338 Now Hiring WAREHOUSE SALE SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 10th & SATURDAY SEPTEMBER 17th, 10:00AM - 3:00PM. LOCATION: AFFPAC 225 MONARCH AVE., AJAX Refurbished/scratch and dent; Electronics, small appliances, car audio, toys, dvd & blu-ray, video games, memorabilia books, etc..... UP TO 60 % BELOW SUGGESTED RETAIL. CASH & CARRY. DEBIT, VISA, MASTERCARD AND AMERICAN EXPRESS ACCEPTED. GARAGE SALE Sat. Sept 17th (rain date Sat. Sept 24th) PARKWAY STORAGE 1535 Pickering Parkway - 9am Sharp! Rent a table $10, or donate All proceeds will go directly to the "Image is Everything Campaign"Help fund the MRI for Rouge Valley Ajax & Pickering Hospital. Call 905-831-9997 MULTI FAMILY GARAGE SALESaturday Sept. 10, 8AM - NOON 1970 Valley Farm Rd, Pickering (Brock/Hwy 2) housewares, appliances, furniture, t.v.'s clothes & much more., HOME DAY SOLUTION SALE Furniture Sat. Sept 10th, noon - 6pm 10 Sumac Crt. Burketon YARD SALE 122 Exeter Road, Ajax Sat. Sept. 10th 9am - 12pm GARAGE SALE803 Primrose Crt. Pickering North on Fairport & Finch Saturday September 10th * 8am - 2pm GARAGE SALE1325 Forest Park Dr. Pickering Sat. Sept. 10 8am - 2pm GARAGE SALE692 Balaton Ave. Pickering Sat Sept. 10TH 9am - 4pm GARAGE SALESaturday 8am - ...? 159 Clements Road East, Ajax Huge Garage Sale 23 Bondsmith St. Ajax Sat. Sept. 10 8am - 1pm Garage/YardSalesG Garage/YardSalesG Garage/YardSalesG Garage/YardSalesG Visit at www.durhamregion.com For more information, please contact your classified sales rep durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201125 APL I V E A U C T I O N S A L E Sunday, September 11th, Start 12 noon. Preview 11 a.m. Ajax Community Centre, 75 Centennial Rd. Ajax NEW ARRIVALS - NAME BRAND ITEMS FROM MAJOR DEPARTMENT STORES Partial listing only. Over 1000 lots to include but not limited to: Coin Collection:Mixed Estate Collections accumulated from across the Province of Ontario, Sterling Silver RCM issues, 999 Fine Gold, Silver Bullion Bars, Olympics, Dble. Dollar Sets, Cased Dollars, USA Special is- sue collector sets, Proof Eagles, Maple Leafs, Private Collection of ICCS Certified Coins, Bank Notes, 23kt Gold Cards, World Coins, Canadian Silver Dollars, 1937 Bank Notes, Centennial notes, Silver Maple Leafs with Folders, Cased Dollars mixed Silver & Nickel, 2010 Olympics, Royal Wedding Fine Silver Coin, Shin Plasters, British SIlver & more. Several tray & dealer lots. JEWELRY: (16ct.) Diamond Tennis Necklace, Internally Flawless Diamond Solitaire Ring Over (1ct), Over 400 -10-14-18kt Gold Diamond, precious & Semi precious Stone Rings, bracelets, earrings, custom made, one of a kind items, Swarovski Crystallized Element Jewelry Collection by Red Carpet Designer "MM", Appraised Diamond Solitaires over 1ct., Diamond ladies watch, gold bangles, WENGER Swiss Military Watches.Pearls, Loose stones ( Appraised), Jewellery suitable for home parties & resale, estate lot of hand made jewellery items, Sterling Silver, Home Décor: Mirrors, lighting, metal wall décor, accents, Grandfather Clock, Wall Clocks, European Landmark Wall Décor, Lamps, Wildlife Sculptures, 24 pc Pro Knife Set in Case, 78 pc Cut- lery set, German Designer Cookware, Samurai Swords, Luggage, Business cases. FURNITURE: Leather Accent Chairs * Grandfather Fireside Chairs * Tiffany Style Accent Lamps * Leather Look Storage Cabinets, Boxes, cases, Accent Benches Accent Tables * Screen Dividers * Carved Mahogany Gallery Easels * Tall Floor Vase Collection( Designers Choice), Unique Design Floor Lamp w/ Shells* Furni- ture arriving daily from distributors warehouse closure. Cotton Mill Disposal: duvets, comforters, sheet sets, pillows, Egyptian Comfort 1500, 1800, Sheet Sets, 7pc Comforter ensembles SPORTS MEMORABILIA: Collection from various Estates and collectors to include: Over 10,000 sports cards, signed jerseys, hockey sticks, old wax boxes, Panini Italy Stickers unopened from the 1980's, McFar- lane's signed, 16 x 20 multi signed photos, Bobby Orr Stick, Blue Jays Jersey, Factory card sets, bobble heads, Nostalgia - Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, Harley Davidson, Coca Cola, Betty Boop, Music Gold Records with rare guitar picks framed, Justin Bieber, Rolling Stones, Beatles, Scarface,Taylor Swift, Movie & TV Show Scripts, Old Programs from Maple Leaf Gardens, Baseballs, 3000 Penalty minute Tuff Guys signed 16 x 20, Signed Baseballs, NOSTALGIA: Betty Boop Statues, Harley Davidson Signs, Elvis, Marilyn Monroe, Waiters, Wine Holders, Die Cast Car Collection. ELECTRONICS: Digital cameras, accessories, IPAD Cases, MP3, Vacuums, Steamers, PDAs, BLACKBERRY , Memorex LCD TV/DVD, High End Headphones, Video Cameras, Tripods, Bluetooth, Bushnell binoculars, Spotting Scopes, & more. TV'S, RICE COOKER,4 WAY SWEEPER, SHOWER HEADS, AUDIO SYSTEMS,ITONE DOCKING STA- TIONS, SNOW THROWERS,DVD PLAYERS, SOLAR LIGHTS,NOTEBOOK COOLING PADS,SHRED- DERS,WIRELESS KEYBOARDS,IPOD DOCK, ELECTRIC FOOD SLICER, CD BOOMBOX, WIRELESS HEADPHONES, BODY FAT SCALE, MULTI FOOD PROCESSOR, 12 INCH SKILLET, SEWING MA- CHINE,RECHARGEABLE SHAVERS,IPOD CLOCK RADIOS, CANDLE POWER SPOTLIGHT, DVD VCR COMBO,TOASTER OVENS, HOME THEATRE SYSTEM,CORDLESS KETTLE,XBOX 360,32" LCD TV,POCKET CAMCORDER,NET BOOK,GRANDFATHER CLOCKS,BLUETOOTH KITS,GAR- MENT STEAMER,NANO 8GB,CORDLESS SWEEPER,AIRBEDS, MICROWAVE OVENS,ESPRESSO MAKERS,MPS, COFFEE CRINDERS, 18V DRILLS, STAINLESS BLENDER,MP4 PLAYER, TOYS, XBOX, GPS, WATER COOLERS, EXERCISE, APPLIANCES, COFFE MACHINES, TASSIMO, GARDEN, BREAD MAKERS, PERSONAL CARE PRODUCTS, SHAVERS, BAR STOOLS, BELLAGIO WATER COOLERS, CAMERAS, CAN OPENERS, TOASTER OVENS, CORDLESS PHONES , BLEND- ERS, RCA ELECTRONICS, SHOE RACKS, STAR WARS TRAINER, CANDLES, GUITARS, SEWING MACHINES, NEXTAR TOUCH SCREEN, SCALES, STORAGE OTTOMANS, AIR MATTRESS,QUICK- BEDS, WINE COOLER, PICTURE FRAMES, BOOKCASES, GAMES, DISNEY TOYS, 4GB VIDEO MPS, DVD PLAYERS, FIREPLACE, TOASTERS, PARSON CHAIRS, BIONAIRE STEAM MOPS, MEDIA STORAGE, DVDS, HAIRCUT KIT, KERTTLES, LOUNGE CHAIR, WI CONTROLLERS, EPAD W/7" TOUCH DISPLAY, VTECH CORDLESS PHONES, HDMI DVD, KITES, MICROWAVE OVENS, XBOX CONTROLLERS, COMFORTERS,SUITCASES, HEADPHONES, WALLCLOCKS All of the above items are store returns, samples, prototypes, refurbished and have been authorized to be sold "AS IS". A good selection for dealers, flea markets, handymen, and anyone looking for a real bargain. SEE PHOTOS on Website, STILL UNPACKING UNTIL SALE TIME, Some items listed may not be unavailable due to space limitations. Subject to additions & deletions without notice. Terms of Sale: As per posted and announced, can be viewed at www.auctioneer.ca. Removal same day, registration w/ID required, payment by Cash - Visa - MC - Debit - Buyers Fee on all items. THE AUCTION DEPOT CANADA WWW.AUCTIONEER.CA W orship Directory To advertise your Church Services PUBLISHING FRIDAYS Deadline: Wednesday 12 Noon Call Erin Jackson 905-683-5110 ext. 286 or email: ejackson@durhamregion.com Rev.Sonia Hinds Sunday Services 9am 10:30 with Sunday School 905-668-1822www.durham.net/~stjohn St John’s Anglican ChurchN/E Brock &Victoria, Whitby Canada Need A Car Loan Call Credit Zone ❏ SHUTTLE SERVICE AVAILABLE ❏ HUGE SELECTION TO CHOOSE FROM ❏ ALL CREDIT APPS. ACCEPTED* Call The Credit Zone Hotline905-668-1838 • 1-800-519-9566 ZoneZone Bad Credit? O.K. • New to Country? O.K. Bankrupt? O.K. • Slow Payments? O.K. Or Get Approval 24/7 On-Line At A Division of Durham Auto Sales Ltd *Down payment may be required. www.creditzonecanada.com "LOST" Our Dog "BUDDY" White Bichon Frise / Shih Tzu Lost Friday Sept. 2nd during the storm. Last seen Salem Rd & Mandrake St. in Ajax. Very friendly! Needs Medication due to illness! REWARD!!! Please call 905-428-6558 or 416-570-7992 or 416-525-7701 Buddy is on Facebook! www.facebook.com/pages/Lost-Dog-In-Ajax-Area-Reward-Offered/186451658090108 2ND ANNUAL FREE BBQ/CORNROAST St. Paul's on the Hill 882 Kingston Rd, Pickering Wednesday, Sept. 14th from 6:30p.m. - 8:30 p.m. A donation to the Food Bank would be gratefully accepted. Come and join the fun!! NOTICE TO CREDITORS AND OTHERS All claims against the estate of RAYMOND ANDREW GRACEY, late of the Town of Pickering in the Regional Municipality of Durham, who died on or about the 13th day of December, 2010, must be filed with the undersigned Estate Trustee on or before the 7th day of October, 2011; thereafter, the undersigned will distribute the assets of the said estate having regard only to the claims then filed. DATED at BRADFORD WEST GWILLIMBURY this 25th day of August, 2011. BARBARA ANN POLONI, Estate Trustee, by her Solicitor, W. ROY GORDON PROFESSIONAL CORPORATION, 57 John Street West, P.O. Box 1660, BRADFORD, ONTARIO, L3Z 2B9. 905-775-5301 Lost & FoundL Lost & FoundL Lost & FoundL Lost & FoundL Cars for Sale Places ofWorship Places ofWorship ComingEventsC LegalNotices Cars for Sale Places ofWorship ComingEventsC LegalNotices Cars for Sale FREE, Garry John - Suddenly in Pickering on Saturday, September 3, 2011 at the age of 67 years. Loving companion of Elaine. Awesome Father of Michelle and Todd (Gretta). Sadly missed by his brothers John (Debbie) and Kevin (Teresa) and sisters Bonnie and Debbie (Jim). Predeceased by his parents Jack and Madeline and by his brother Fred. Fondly remembered by Carol and by his many family members and friends. Visitations will be held at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME (28 Old Kingston Rd., Ajax 905-428-8488) on Sunday, September 11 from 2:00 - 4:00 and 7:00 - 9:00 pm. A Celebration of Garry's life will be held at Westney Heights Baptist Church (1201 Ravenscroft Rd., Ajax) on Monday, September 12 at 11:00 am. If desired, memorial donations may be made to the Ontario Minor Hockey Foundation. A Guest Book may be signed on-line at www.mceachniefuneral.ca PARKINSON, Melville Allan, June 25, 1920 - September 8, 2011 - A kind and generous man has left us and we will miss his love. Mel Parkinson, WWII Veteran, Canadian Medical Corps, Stretcher Bearer (Italy, Sicily, Holland); Elder, Sunday School Teacher, Danforth Gospel Hall, Toronto; Teacher; First Principal Fairport Beach Public School, Pickering; Youth Group Leader, Dunfair Baptist Church, Pickering; Volunteer Firefighter, Pickering; Crossing Guard; Friend and Neighbour. Mel lived, and encouraged others to live, by his ideals of positive thinking and unselfish giving. He was a true man of faith. Loving father to Elizabeth (Dennis) and Margaret. Papa to Jonathan (Carolyn) Benjamin (Lisa), Daniel (Jenna), Alexander (Katherine), Emma Gooch and all their friends. Eldest brother of Roy (Marjorie), Warren and Majorie Parkinson. Predeceased by his beloved Scottish bride Betty (2006). The family will receive friends at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME, 28 Old Kingston Road, Pickering Village, (Ajax), 905 482-8488 on Monday September 12th, 2011 from 3-5pm and 7-9pm. Private family remembrance at Erskine Cemetery. Online condolences may be placed at www.mceachniefuneral.ca WILSON, Mitchell James Robert - Suddenly at his home in Pickering on Tuesday, September 6, 2011. Beloved son of Craig and Tiffany (predeceased by his mother Shelley). Loving brother to Emma and Kaylen and nephew to "Che Che" (aunt Cheryl). Cherished grandson of Pam and Bob Wilson, John and Joan Usher, Fred Childs, Ken and Doris Wilson, and Lesley and Martin Davies. Mitchell touched the lives of so many who will remember him fondly and miss him greatly. The family will receive friends at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME, 28 Old Kingston Road, Pickering Village, (Ajax), 905 428-8488 from 2-7pm on Sunday September 11th. The Funeral Service will be held at Pickering Village United Church, 300 Church Street North, Ajax on Monday September 12, 2011 at 10am. If so desired, donations to Muscular Dystrophy Canada www.muscle.ca/nc/ontario-nunavut/ways-to- give.html would be appreciated. Online condolences may be placed at ww.mceachniefuneral.ca Death Notices Cars for Sale To place your personalized In Memoriam, call 905- 683-5110 and let one of our professional advisors help you 2011 01G 1469 IN THE SUPREME COURT OF NEWFOUNDLAND AND LABRADOR TRIAL DIVISION (GENERAL) IN THE MATTER OF an Application of CIBC Mortgages Inc., trading as FirstLine Mortgages, as Applicant and Velvet Mew as First Defendant, and Rocklyn Hale as Second Defendant, NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to ROCKLYN HALE that CIBC Mortgages Inc., trading as FirstLine Mortgages, has obtained an Order from the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador ordering the following: • Rocklyn Hale is to be joined to the within proceedings as the Second Defendant per Rule 7.04(2)(b) of the Rules of the Supreme Court, 1986 and the Statement of Claim amended accordingly; and • Rocklyn Hale is to be served with the Amended Statement of Claim via registered mail at his last known address and by publishing a notice in a local newspaper in the City of Pickering in the Province of Ontario. You are hereby notified that the Plaintiff may enter judgment in accordance with the Statement of Claim without any further notice to you unless within thirty (30) days of this publication you cause a defence to be filed in the Registry of the Supreme Court of Newfoundland and Labrador at St. John's and a copy of your defence is served upon the Plaintiff's Solicitor at the below address for service. DATED at St. John's, this 6th day of September, 2011. BENSON MYLES PLC INC. 215 Water Street, Suite 900 St. John's, NL A1C 5N8 Telephone: 709-579-2081 Facsimile: 709-579-2647 AVAILABLE MORTGAGES Up to 90% LTV. Don't Worry About Credit! Refinance Now! Call 647-268-1333 - Hugh Fusco AMP #M08005735 Igotamortgage Inc. #10921 www.igotamortgage.ca info@igotamortgage.ca Mortgages,LoansM LegalNotices Mortgages,LoansM LegalNotices Mortgages,LoansM LegalNotices DURHAM RENOVATIONS Specializing in Basements, Flooring Bathrooms, Kitchens, Decks, Fences & more No Job Too Small Steve 905-409-0443 DECKS Free Estimates Free Design Highest Quality Call Chris 416-460-3210 Email: deckplus @rogers.com 905-409-9903 KP HOMERENOVATIONSLTD. We specialize in kitchens, bathrooms, basements, flooring, etc. We are insured & bonded. 8 years experience www.kprenovations.com 416-283-8177 MJH MASONARY Basement Leaks & All Masonary Repairs. All stone work for porches & walkways Licensed & Insured Please call Mike 905-260-0686 No Job is too small Basement & Bathroom renovations Decks & Fencing Let me help you get rid of your TO-DO Lists For an estimate call Ian at 416-606-0195 PLUMBER ON THE GOTop Quality Plumbing at Reasonable ratesService andnew installationsResidential/CommercialNo job too big or smallFree estimates - over 20 years experience (905)837-9722 Siding Soffit & Fascia Eavestrough (also cleaning avail.) Roofing Repairs Specializing in Condo's MGL Contracting (905) 550-8424 A1 1/2 PRICEJUNKREMOVAL!! Homes, Yards, Businesses, etc. We do all the loading Seniors Discounts. Cheap and fast Service! John905-310-5865 HANDYMAN SERVICE FALL CLEANUPS Lawn Cutting, Tree Pruning, Hedge Trimming, Concrete & Interlocking brick repair, painting, Garbage Removal905-431-7762 905-655-5085 HANDYMAN Reliable F Retired All Household Repairs,Inside/Outside Fencing & Deck Repairs No Job too Small Reasonable RatesCall Ed (905) 427-7604(416) 277-4392 NEED A FRIEND WITH A TRUCK? l Junk Removal l Gen. Deliveries l Small Moves l Yard Services l Odd Jobs Reasonable RatesCall Hans anytime(905)706-6776www. afriendwithatruck.ca P.K.ELECTRICAL INC Wiring & Re-wiring, new and renovation. Panel, Knob & Tube Upgrades. Pot lights. Residential & CommercialFREE ESTIMATEMASTER LICENSE ESA#700/5096 Call Ben 416-824-2030 or 416-904-7308 ALL PRO PAINTING AND WALLPAPERING Repair & Stucco ceilings Decorative finishes & General repairs 20% off for seniors (905)404-9669 TMS PAINTING & DECOR Interior & Exterior European Workmanship Fast, clean, reliable service (905)428-0081 Apple Moving Dependable & Reliable Good Rates 24-hour Service Licensed/Insured(905)239-1263(416)532-9056 CLEAN MOMENT Experienced European cleaning. Residential. Pickering & Ajax area. For service call 647-295-0771 "Clean is our middle name" Euro Cleaning Services * Houses * Offices * Apartments Experienced Reasonable Prices Excellent Service For Free Estimate Call Elizabeth (416) 884-3658 Quality Cleaning By Jayne Serving Durham 26yrs I'm very thorough and reliable, low rates. Ref. avail/Work guar. Duties: fridge shelves, glassdoors, base- boards, couch cush- ions, stove top/fan/burners, bathroom floors hand washedCall (905)683-3864Cell (905)391-3864 HARDWOOD FLOOR SPECIALIST Hardwood & Laminate Installations Sanding, staining, & finishing of old floors 20 years experienceCall John(905) 655-3492 (416) 220-4768 HomeImprovement HomeImprovement HomeImprovement GarbageRemoval/Hauling HandymanH ElectricalServices Painting& Decorating Moving& Storage House Cleaning House Cleaning Flooring,CarpetingF BUSINESS ANDSERVICE DIRECTORY ADVERTISE YOUR BUSINESS HERE..... CALL OUR CLASSIFIED REP. 905-683-5110 On Friday, September 16, 2011 photographers and reporters with the Durham Region Media Group will be out day and night, witnessing for prosperity what happens in a 24-hour period. We’ll be in all Durham municipalities at truck stops, visiting bread makers, watching births and weddings and recording how Durham lets off steam at the end of the day. And we are inviting you along to help out with our special Night and Day publication. ARCHITECTURE | PEOPLE | LANDSCAPES | NATURE | ABSTRACT READERS’ CHOICE PRIZES | PHOTOGRAPHERS CHOICE | PEOPLE | LANDSCAPES | TURE NA SUB CATEGORIES  READERS’ CHOICE PRIZES | PHOTOGRAPHERS CHOICE WIN UP TO $500 CASH  24 hrs in the life of Durham Region &Night Day ABSTRACT , September 16, 2011 photographers On Friday Photography Contest TO ENTER go to the photo contest tab on our Facebook page. http://www.facebook.com/newsdurham and upload a web-ready version of your photo(s). You can upload and vote for your favorite photos from September 16 to the 30th. And be sure to tell your family and friends to vote! This event and post event publication are sponsored in part by: durhamregion.com No professional photographers, amateurs only Durham Region - Temporary Contract Position Available for College or University Students JUNIOR CLERICAL POSITION - Health & Safety GENERAL RESPONSIBILITIES: • Assist in the preparation of the Workwell Audit documentation • Ability to read and interpret documents • Work directly with the Health and Safety Committee • Other duties as assigned REQUIREMENTS: • Must be available to work daytime shifts • A student in the Human Resources field would be preferable • Experience in the Health and Safety Field would be an asset • Experience with a Workwell Audit would be an asset • Must be able to work independently and with little supervision • Excellent communications skills, ability to deal with all levels in organization • Organizational skills • Strong command of the English language both spoken and written Please forward your resume with salary expectations no later than Friday, Sept. 16, 2011 to: csouthwood@metroland.com Or By Mail to: The Metroland Durham Region Media GroupHuman Resources Department865 Farewell StreetOshawa, Ontario L1H 6N8 The Durham Region Media Group is a division of Metroland Media Group We thank you for your interest; however only those selected for an interview will be contacted.durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201126 AP durhamregion.comNews Advertiser • September 9, 201127 AP Sav eUp To90%!o 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSo 90%!e Up TavSSaveUpTo90%!IT’S FREE!Sign up today at www.wagjag.com! 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