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July 31, 2013P ICKER I NG News Adver tiser Wednesday, July 24, 2013 facebook.com/newsdurham • twitter.com/newsdurham • d durhamregion.com • Pressrun 54,400 • 36 pages • Optional 3-week delivery $6/$1 newsstand DURHAM -- The latest numbers released by Durham Workforce Authority revealed 23 per cent of individuals aged 15 to 24 in the Oshawa Census Metropolitan Area, which includes Oshawa, Whitby and Clarington, were unemployed in December 2012, compared to an overall unemployment rate of just 6.2 per cent for the area. Young and unemployed Durham jobless rate for young people highest in country Page 7 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 2 AP FREEFAMILYFUNDAYATTHERACES SUNDAY,AUGUST18TH |10:30A.M.-4:00P.M. AjaxDowns 50Alexander’sCrossing,Ajax FREE FAMIL Teamuptobeapartofthefun!Eventsponsorshipsandprizedonationswelcome.ContactKaraat905-686-8001orkferguson@ajaxdowns.com 10:30a.m.-Registration TrytheTrack,FacePainting,CreateaCraft,FreeDraws, LootBags-(whilesupplieslast),ZootoYou-PettingZoo 11:00a.m.-50/50Draws Magician,PonyRides,DuckRaces, BBQ-$2HotDog&Drink,FreeFreezies&CottonCandy SpecialguestappearancesfromCaillouandStrawberryShortcake! Theraceisontosupport children’shealth Ajax & Pickering hospital Dog walker takes canine packs on Oshawa trails each weekday Dogs get social at Harmony Valley Dog Park Kristen Calis kcalis@durhamregion.com DURHAM -- As photo editor Ron Pietroniro and I enter the Harmony Val- ley Dog Park, a black Labrador retriever comes bounding toward us like we’re old friends. Although I’ve never met Koda before, it’s clear she’s happy to be outdoors and running free with her pack at this off- leash park. As am I -- I’m out of the office on a sunny day to see what it’s like to walk a pack of dogs with Bonnie Perry, Whitby resident and owner of Tails and Trails Pet Care Services. Ms. Perry has already cleaned up after one of the six dogs she’ll walk this hour and the trek has just begun. Four are off the leash and two stay on -- Buster, a yellow Labrador retriever and an original member of this Durham pack, has been a little stressed since his family moved, and Boomer, a coton de tulear, is sweet but better with his own pack than he is meeting strange dogs. This pack meets every morning during the week and the members are ecstatic to see Ms. Perry come to their homes and take them into the red Tails and Trails van that will take them to the park. Rounding them up each morning takes this dog lover about 45 minutes. As we start off through the trails, run- ning ahead with Koda is Rosie, a lively vizsla who leads the way the majority of the time. She’s also the first, along with Koda, to run into the first pond we see. “They’re partners in crime,” says Ms. Perry. A dog that’s smaller than my littlest cat is a Yorkshire terrier named Pickles. His little legs keep him toward the back of the pack, but he always keeps up. He choos- es to skip the swim, along with Boomer. But the rest all dash into the water and make sure to spray my note pad as they dry off. Harley, Ms. Perry’s own yellow Labrador retriever, rubs up against Mr. Pietroniro and me to get extra dry. Despite having six excited dogs with varying personalities, Ms. Perry makes the job of walking them, picking up after them, keeping track of them, and ensur- ing they’re all happy and safe, look easy. “Generally, the dogs understand the whole pack mentality,” she says. “They stay together.” But Ms. Perry has extensive experience with walking dogs. She started her busi- ness 10 years ago in Toronto, and she’s since moved it to Durham. She now serves Whitby and Oshawa. To her, dog walking is the best job she could have. “What job do you have where you show up, and they’re like ‘You’re here! You’re here’!” she says. She believes daily exercise and social- ization are some of the key elements to a healthy and well-behaved dog. Harley, for example, tags along with Ms. Perry on all of her walks. “Everyone always comments on what a good dog he is. He has lots to do, gets lots of exercise and he gets social time,” she says. By the end of the walk, the pack has done their business, sniffed new dogs and even played with some of the regulars along the way. Once out of the park, they all pile into the van for the ride home. Although not overly dirty, I’m ready for an application of AfterBite. As for Ms. Perry, after dropping off these dogs, she’ll do it all over again at noon with another pack, made up of different dogs with different personalities, except for Harley, of course. Ms. Perry, who is happy to expand her packs, also provides puppy visits, potty breaks and cat visits. For more information including rates and anniversary specials, visit tail- sandtrailspetcare.ca. For more information: visit tailsandtrailspetcare.ca OsHAWA -- Bonnie Perry, the owner of tails and trails Pet Care services, has been in business for 10 years. News Advertiser report- er Kristen Calis tagged along with Bonnie and six dogs for a walk at the Harmony valley Dog Park. ron Pietroniro / Metroland What It’s Like... What It's Like... What It's Like... du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 3 AP WE KEEP OUR PATIENTS SMILING BY TAKINGTHE TIME TO UNDERSTAND THEIR NEEDS. 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Northumberland Coun- ty OPP said that on July 20 around 10:40 p.m., officers arrived at the scene of a collision between a 2004 GMC Sierra pickup truck and a 2013 Hyundai Elantra to find the driver of the truck crawling out of its back window. The two people inside the Elantra were uninjured. Police found four grams of marijuana in the truck, as well as a number of beer bottles. Eric Brian Buchholz, 49, of Pickering, is charged with dan- gerous driving, impaired driving, failing to provide a breath sample, and pos- session of marijuana. He is scheduled to appear in a Cobourg court on Aug. 7 at 9:30 a.m. He was also issued a 90-day driver’s licence suspension. 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Officers found the woman with obvious signs of trauma in her townhouse on Torr Lane, near the intersection of Kingston Road East and Salem Road South, on Friday, July 19 at approximately 7:22 p.m. The victim has been identified as Nasi- ra Fazli, 31. On Monday, July 22, the cause of death was determined to be sharp force trauma. Her husband, 31-year-old Feraidon Mohammad Imbrahem, has been charged with second-degree murder. Police have not commented on whether there was any previ- ous violence reported in the home. “We’re in the initial stages of the investiga- tion,” said Detective Sergeant John Allan. Neighbours say the couple, who had a young son, had only lived in the townhouse for two months. The family is described as quiet. The man seemed to be staying home to care for their toddler, and he was often seen taking the boy to the park nearby. No one else was in the residence at the time of the incident and the boy is now staying with family, according to police. “I came out and saw all the police cars. They had police with guns pointed at the man. They were trying to resuscitate her right beside the ambulance,” said neighbour Mike Ormonde. Mr. Ormonde said after the suspect and vic- tim were taken away, three brothers or male relatives of the victim arrived on the scene “ranting and raving.” Shortly afterward, the woman’s parents arrived at the home and a second ambulance was called for the vic- tim’s mother, who fainted, according to Mr. Ormonde. “I don’t know, it’s crazy,” said Mr. Ormonde, who has lived in the area for 12 years. “This is a quiet neighbourhood.” Some neighbours mentioned hearing gun- shots but police have now said that no gun was involved in the murder. The forensic identification unit, homicide unit and investigators from the west, central west and central east division criminal inves- tigation bureaus have been called in to assist with the investigation. Police are expecting to continue their investigation at the home for several days. The accused remains in custody and will appear in court next on Tuesday, Aug. 6. Anyone with new information is asked to contact Det. Leipsig (ext. 5319) or D/Sgt. Allan (ext. 5400) of the Homicide Unit at 1-888-579-1520. Anonymous information can be sent to Durham Regional Crime Stop- pers at 1-800-222-8477. Tipsters may be eli- gible for a $2,000 cash reward. AJAX -- Police investigated the crime scene on Torr Lane July 20. An Ajax man was arrested and charged with murder after his wife died at the home July 19. JasOn liebregts / MetrOland du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 5 AP RETAILBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY FORAN AGENCY STORE IN CLAREMONT, LCBO RFP#2013-120 CLAREMONT An excellent business opportunity is now available to established retailers in Claremont. The Liquor Control Board of Ontario (LCBO)is seeking a responsible, customer-focused retailer to operate an LCBO Agency Store in Claremont. To qualify, the applicant must have an existing, currently operating retail business in the community and commit to operating the Agency store within established LCBO guidelines. To facilitate the sale of beverage alcohol products, the operator may be required to enter into separate commercial arrangements with the LCBO and domestic beer suppliers. The successful applicant will also be required to participate in a special LCBO server-training program to ensure the responsible sale of beverage alcohol products. Since 1962, the LCBO has authorized more than 200Agency stores to serve communities that have requested service but where the local population is too small to support a regular LCBO or beer store. TheseAgency stores are operated by local retailers within their existing retail business.Agency store contracts are normally awarded for a five-year term. In communities where there is currently anAgency store, as the contract nears expiry, the LCBO will take into consideration the fact that new businesses in the community may have been established and will allow an opportunity for all businesses in the community to compete for the next five-year term. Operating an LCBOAgency Store provides a retailer with an excellent opportunity to increase revenue and attract customers while providing local residents with beverage alcohol services. Agency stores also deliver economic benefits to the community in many cases through job creation and increased customer traffic for local merchants. Interested businesses must request by mail the application package for this competition before end of business day,Friday, August 9, 2013 and must quote the following information: RFP# 2013-120 Claremont Request forApplication Package Procurement and Contract Management, LCBO 1 Yonge Street, Suite 1404 Toronto, ON M5E 1E5 Please note: An application fee of $100 must be included with your request in order to receive an application package. Make the cheque or money order payable to the LCBO only. In order to be considered for this business opportunity, applicants must submit to LCBO Procurement and Contract Management a completed proposal in the required format before the closing date and time,Friday,August 23, 2013, 3 p.m. local time. Late submissions will not be accepted and will be returned unopened. lc YOUR CASINOTOUR SPECIALISTS! VISITOURNEWWEBSITEATwww.funbuscanada.com As Always, Please Call For More Details. 8 MIDTOWN DR., OSHAWA 905-576-1357 O/B Fun Time Travel Co. Ltd. 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Know your limit and play with in it. “Let’s find solutions together” AJAX-by appt. only905-619-1473 50 Commercial Ave. COBOURG - by appt. only 905-372-4744 24 Covert St. www.jamesryanch.com Oshawa 215SimcoeSt.N.•905-721-7506 Pickering mayor calls for business as usual following Doug Dickerson guilty plea MOYA DILLON mdillon@durhamregion.com PICKERING -- Councillor Doug Dickerson is apologizing for his errors, but assuring resi- dents he is committed to continuing as their elected representative after pleading guilty to two counts of campaign finance violations. On July 19 Coun. Dickerson pleaded guilty to contravening the Municipal Elections Act during the 2010 municipal election by fil- ing an incorrect financial statement and exceeding the campaign spending limit. The judge ordered him to pay a total of $17,500 in fines and return nearly $30,000 to the City of Pickering. However, the judge agreed to let the councillor retain his seat on City council after special prosecutor David Reiter called Coun. Dickerson's assertion that the contra- ventions were inadvertent "plausible," and suggested an exception in the act that allows a guilty party to keep their seat and run in future elections be invoked. "While I continue to maintain that some of the language in the Municipal Elections Act still needs to be clarified, to better protect everyone involved in the election process, I accept the outcome and will personally pay all financial penalties," Mr. Dickerson said after the hearing. "Let me assure you that my commitment to this community is as strong as ever." Some residents, however, feel the council- lor should have been relieved of duties after the admission of guilt. David Steele, one of three residents who brought Coun. Dickerson's campaign finance inaccuracies to the attention of the City through a complaint to Pickering's Compli- ance Audit Committee, said he has little con- fidence in Coun. Dickerson's ability to serve. Mr. Steele pointed to comments made by Mr. Reiter in court while reading an agreed statement of facts. In it, Mr. Reiter stated that Coun. Dickerson told a Durham Region- al Police Constable investigating the com- plaints that "in his mind no reasonable per- son alive would give money back to any level of government if they could avoid it." "It's scary he thinks like that and is in charge of accounts and spending for the City," Mr. Steele said of Coun. Dickerson. "It's crazy. I think he should resign as deputy mayor." Ian Cumming, who also filed a complaint against Coun. Dickerson, noted that he didn't hear "anything like contrition" from the councillor, who declined to speak to the charges in court. "His admission of guilt was never a question for any of us that reviewed the financial filing," Mr. Cumming said. "If he had admitted guilt, shown contrition, and paid the money back at the outset of this process then he could have saved the City thousands in legal costs. Now it's just back to business as usual, but I would have liked to have seen him lose his seat." Pickering Mayor David Ryan is calling for normalcy at the City level in the wake of the verdict. "To my knowledge the issue is now resolved, the councillor has admitted to an error in judgment in terms of his interpre- tation of the Act, and the judge and special prosecutor have accepted that," he said. 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All content copyright Publication Sales Agreement #40052657 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 6 AP Send us your letters to the editor Finding jobs for youth in Durham Region If it takes a village to raise a child, in 2013 it takes an entire region to help a young person find a job. With the staggering youth unemploy- ment numbers in Durham, all of us should be motivated to discover the reasons why. Recent statistics from Durham Work- force Authority show 23 per cent of peo- ple aged 15 to 24 in the Oshawa Census Metropolitan Area were unemployed in December 2012, compared to the overall unemployment rate of 6.2 per cent for the area. The Oshawa CMA encompasses Oshawa, Whitby and Clarington. For all of 2012, the rate was 22 per cent, close to double the 13 per cent figure for 2003 and far higher than the Canadian (14 per cent) and Ontario (17 per cent) figures. Samantha Teney, general manager of the YMCA Durham’s employment com- munity, told us the numbers don’t sur- prise her as the youths they’re seeing are having a very tough time. One factor, she noted, is that many of the jobs are being snapped up by workers with more experience seeking “survival jobs”. Finding a job after finishing college or university has often been a tough proposi- tion. You’ve heard it before: ‘Can’t get a job because I don’t have experience, can’t get experience because I can’t get a job’. But it’s harder today, as many more adults are seeking work or better jobs after the brutal 2009 economic slowdown. There was a time when a young person was expected to go to university and often told to ‘just take what you like’. The expec- tation was that with a degree in hand, the world would be their oyster. Those days are long gone. Young people today need to have an idea what they want to do and can do as soon as possible. They need a game plan to get there and they need the impor- tant foundations, starting with strong lit- eracy skills. Young people need to be aware of the job market and where it is likely to be in five years so they can plan their post-sec- ondary education accordingly. Local experts say community partner- ships are the answer to combating youth unemployment. The reasons are complex and an integrated approach that consid- ers all of the contributors is best. Durham Workforce Authority is con- ducting a youth survey to find the reasons for Durham’s high youth unemployment rate. If you’re in the target group, ages 15 to 24, take part in it at durhamworkforceau- thority.ca. Mind the ducks on Ringer in Ajax To the editor: There is a pond on Salem Road between Kingston Road and Ringer Road. Twice in the past two weeks, I have been driving along Ringer and have stopped my car and gotten out so that I can halt other drivers to allow a mother duck and her ducklings to cross the street. I write this letter to warn people. Be care- ful at that corner. I have phoned to ask if the Town of Ajax can put in a ‘duck cross- ing’ sign but was told they couldn’t make any promises. I also cannot put a sign up myself. So I ask any drivers moving through that area: Be aware. Don’t speed. And please, help the ducks across by getting out of your car and warning oncoming traffic. Each time I have done so, drivers give me thumbs up, or yell ‘thank you’. It warms my heart. Thanks for looking, Sarah Eddenden Brooklin Like a day at the park On a sunny day, I had a few hours free, so decided to read an interesting book. I live near the south end of Oshawa, but by habit visit a coffee shop on King Street. As I drove through Oshawa, I noticed a couple of patios outside restaurants. It reminded me of Toronto, where you could enjoy a beverage or meal and enjoy the sun. I do not know my rationale, but decided to have a coffee. After doing that and reading for about an hour I became restless. I hopped back into my car and as I passed Memo- rial Park, it became my next stop. I parked my vehicle, and as I walked into the park saw a group of people. The last time I did this there was a group of Metis selling mer- chandise. As I grew closer I saw that this group was smoking marijuana and hashish. There were signs protesting the laws that criminalize pot. If I was in my younger days I could have mingled, and since pot smok- ers are benevolent, could have partaken in this activity myself. I had to ask the ques- tion: “Do you think the police will drop by?” The answer I got was: “They usually make an appearance.” By his nonchalant demeanour it sound- ed like no one would be arrested. If this was the case, I would agree with the outcome. They were not causing problems. In any event, I left to find a table on the opposite end of the park. As I sat in the shade, with a slight breeze, it seemed like paradise. Even though my book was enlightening me on why there is inequality in the world, once again I became restless. I started to drive again, still intent on read- ing and decided to stop at another park. It is called Chopin Park and informed everyone of its name via a placard on a stone taller than myself. I looked around for a table, but could not find one. I did not need to be high to ponder why there were no tables in the shade at this park. Many adventures can happen on a sunny day. -- Brad Hogg is a Durham resident and a regular contributor to our letters to the editor page. Brad Hogg Guest column Out and about e-mail letters to newsroom@durhamregion.com / max. 200 words / letter writers are obliged to back up 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 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 7 APDurham youth unemployment on the rise Latest numbers show Durham rate higher than Ontario, Canada Kristen Calis kcalis@durhamregion.com DURHAM -- Community partnerships are key to addressing the declining rate of youth employment in Durham Region, say local organizations that want to see an improve- ment in the staggering number. The latest numbers released by Durham Workforce Authority reveal 23 per cent of indi- viduals aged 15 to 24 in the Oshawa Census Metropolitan Area, which includes Oshawa, Whitby and Clarington, were unemployed in December 2012, compared to an overall unemployment rate of just 6.2 per cent for the area. The rate for youth unemployment in the Oshawa CMA for all of 2012 hit 22 per cent, a significant increase from 13 per cent in 2003. “If you’d asked me before I’d pulled the numbers, I would have said they’ll be in line with Toronto or with the province,” said Heather McMillan, DWA’s executive director. Instead, she found Oshawa was higher than Barrie, Peterborough, Toronto and Hamilton. Ms. McMillan was pulling numbers from Statistics Canada for DWA’s annual Labour Market Plan when she came across the num- bers. “We’re very concerned because that means a loss of capacity in our community,” she said. In a recent presentation to interested com- munity partners, Ms. McMillan said when young workers enter the job market during periods of high unemployment, they’re more likely to accept less attractive and lower-skill jobs with less pay and advancement oppor- tunities. Their wage is significantly lower than the initial wage of individuals who graduate when the job market is strong, and this disad- vantage tends to persist well into their work- ing lives. In the Oshawa CMA, the youth unemploy- ment rate for 2012 at 22 per cent is greater than the average for Canada, 14 per cent, and Ontario, 17 per cent. “It’s shocking but it doesn’t surprise me because of the youth we’re seeing coming through the doors and the difficulty they’re having finding jobs,” said Samantha Teney, general manager of the YMCA Durham’s employment community. She said many jobs are being taken by more experienced workers seeking “survival jobs.” Maralyn Tassone, executive director for Durham Region Unemployed Help Centre, sees the same issue, and said young people have to start making money in order to buy houses, cars and essentially drive Durham’s economy. “If we don’t have young people who are actually getting jobs with a reasonable wage ... I shudder to think what’s going to happen to Canada’s economy,” she said. Ms. McMillan hopes a new youth survey will help DWA find out exactly why the youth unemployment rate in Durham is high. The Durham Region Youth Survey is aimed at people aged 15 to 24, and asks questions relating to employment, education, programs and services in Durham. It can be found at durhamwa.ca. Also to address the issue, the DWA and the Community Innovation Lab hosted a recent seminar on how to address the problem. Sev- eral local organizations attended. “We really want to go deeper and find where those pockets of unemployment in the region are and the best ways we can address it,” said Pramilla Ramdahani, executive director and co-founder of ILAB, which helps youth apply their talent, acquire new skills, network and more. John Howard Society of Durham Region’s manager of employment and literacy ser- vices, Christina Barrow, is one of many con- cerned with the low employment rate for uni- versity graduates. For those in Durham with a post-second- ary certificate, diploma or degree, the unem- ployment rate is 16.4 per cent, according to the labour market plan. For those specifically with a bachelor’s degree, it’s 17.8 per cent. Ms. Barrow said there’s a need for more transition planning for students leaving school for work. “Youth really need to focus on the labour market, look at what the labour market is call- ing for,” she said. Ms. Ramdahani agreed that simply having post-secondary education isn’t enough any- more. “The municipalities need to step up in terms of rethinking their policies and how to stimulate youth in the region,” she said, add- ing this also has to be done to keep workers in Durham. Most stakeholders believe community part- nerships are an answer. Jennine Agnew-Kata, executive director for Literacy Network of Durham Region, sees lit- eracy as being deeply related to unemploy- ment and underemployment since there are skills gaps between potential employees and the job market. “I fully believe a community development approach is what’s needed to solve this par- ticular issue,” she said. For example, those needing help with lit- eracy and basic skills may also need income support and mental health counselling or job-seeking advice. Ms. Tassone said the Unemployed Help Centre is not only willing to help job seek- ers, but employers as well. She sees great opportunity for both businesses and workers in regards to the 2015 Pan Am/Parapan Am Games that will come to Durham. “We will find employers whatever they need. We are absolutely committed to that,” she said. She believes this, coupled with the soon-to- be announced Ontario Youth Employment Fund, could boost youth employment in Durham. The proposed funding of $195 mil- lion over two years will create employment opportunities for 25,000 youth in Ontario, and create incentives for employers to hire young people. She encourages youth looking for work to utilize the centre’s services now since the funding is expected to be released in September. By then, a lot of the jobs will already be taken, she said. For more information: visit www unemployedhelp.on.ca. visit www.durhamworkforceauthority.ca Top employers Below are the top 10 areas of employment for Durham Region youth aged 15 to 24: Industry Number of youth employed 1. Limited service restaurants 4,160 2. Grocery stores 3,020 3. Full-service restaurants 2,625 4. Clothing stores 1,380 5. Other amusement and recreation industries 1,315 6. Other general merchandise stores 1,010 7. Department stores 955 8. Services to buildings and dwellings 940 9. Local, municipal and regional public administration 925 10. Building equipment contractors 800201220112010200920082007200610 15 20 25 Un e m p l o y m e n t r a t e b y p e r c e n t a g e Year Oshawa CMA Ontario Canada Comparing annual youth unemployment rates Source: Stats Can, 2013, Data provided by the Durham Workforce Authority Metroland graphic OsHAWA -- Christina Barrow, manager of the John Howard society, with Kathryn Buckley, 23, help unemployed youth deal with challenges of job hunting. Ms. Barrow said there’s a need for more transition planning for students leaving school for work. sabrina byrnes / Metroland View the website with du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 8 P IT’S FREE!Sign up today at www.wagjag.com Save up to 95% brought to you by your trusted hometown Metroland Newspapers Oshawa•Whitby•Clarington News Advertiser T H E The News Since 1866Since1869Since1970 Since 1991Since1965 SAVE $81SAVE$44 $69 for 10 lbs ofWhole,Cooked Atlantic Lobsters (a $150 Value) PICKUP AVAILABLE AT OSHAWA&AJAX LOCATIONS $46 for 10 lbs ofWildAlaskan Salmon Portions (a $90 Value) PICKUP AVAILABLE AT OSHAWA&AJAX LOCATIONS www.wagjag.com/grocerywww.wagjag.com/grocery WAGJAGGROCERYDEAL WAGJAGGROCERYDEAL dA tiser swehe NT SAVE $70 $59 for a Month of Unlimited Sexy Fit Outdoor Women’s Boot Camp from Optimum Bodies (a $129 Value) 1 YR SUBSCRIPTION TO NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC KIDS SAVE $48 BUY FOR $21 Forages6-14(a$69.90Value) 3PACK OF AHH BRAS SAVE $31 BUY FOR $29 Shipping included.(a $60 Value) 5 LBS OF COOKED CANADIAN SNOW CRAB CLUSTERS SAVE $51 BUY FOR $39 (a $90 Value) 4 LBS OF WILD-CAUGHT ARGENTINE RED SHRIMP SAVE $65 BUY FOR $35 (a $100 Value) WagJag ProductDeals WagJag GroceryDeals PICKUP AVAILABLE AT OSHAWA&AJAX LOCATIONS $32 for 2Wave or Round Turquoise Bracelets from Urban Shop Goods (a $100 Value)-includes shipping.May choose 1 of each style or 2 of the same. Discount:68% SAVE $68 SAVE $85 $50 for a HydratingAnti-Aging Facial and Eyebrow Threading at Haute-Ville Spa (a $135 Value) $19 for 5 Three-Hour Paintball Passes from PaintballTickets.ca (a $49 Value) Discount:61% SAVE $30 y b uoy ot thguorb y b uoy ot thguorb oningtlary•Chitba•WwOsha sweNEHT SAVE $101 $49 for up to 2,400 sq. ft. of House Cleaning from LDMC Solutions (a $150 Value) SAVE $129 $119 for a Raft and Rock Package for Kitchissippi Music Festival at Wilderness Tours ResortAugust 17-18 (a $248 Value) du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 9 P Alternate versions available upon request, call 905.683.7575 City of Direct Access 905.420.4660 General Enquiries 905.683.2760 Service Disruption 1.866.278.9993 Fo llow us on Fa cebook Upcoming Public Meetings Allmeetingsareopen to thepublic.Fordetails call905.420.2222orvisit the City website.For Service Disruptionnotification call1.866.278.9993 Date Meeting/Location Time July24 Committeeof Adjustment Civic Complex –Main CommitteeRoom 7:00pm August14 Committeeof Adjustment Civic Complex –Main CommitteeRoom 7:00pm Civic Holiday Hours of Operation Civic Complex (CityHall)905.420.2222 August5 Closed Recreation Complex,Pool&Arena 905.683.6582 August5 Closed Dunbarton Pool 905.831.1260 August5 Closed PickeringMuseum Village 905.683.8401 August5 Closed Pickering PublicLibraries 905.831.6265 August4and5 Closed Living | Business | Discovering | City Hall Keep up-to-date with the latest from your City. Sign-up for one of our eNewsletters, or visit our facebook, twitter, City App, andYouTube sites. sign up foreNewsletters and Social Media with your CityConnect Your City. Right Now! pickering.ca Prog ra m Re gistr at io n Da te s Aqua tics st ar ti ng Th ur sd ay ,Au gus t 15 Fi tnes s & Leis ur e st ar ti ng Mo nd ay ,Au gus t 19 Fa ll 20 13 Cit y Se rv ic es &Le is ur e Gu id e Aq ua tics |Ic e Spo rt s | Hea lth &Fit ne ss |Leis ur e | Ra cq ue ts Re gist er O n l i n e! pi ckerin g.ca Aquatics |Ice Sports |Health & Fitness |Leisure|Racquets FaGoes Digital this Fall! City Services & Leisure Guide Star ting this fall, paper copies of the guide will no longer be delivered to Pickering households.This change reflects our commitment to sustainability,and will greatly reduce our carbon footprint.Leisure Guides will be available in City facilities after August 7. Questions regarding this service change can be directed to Customer Care. Pickering Recreation Complex nowoffers reloadable gift cards.Load the amount you want and use it however you like -it ’s a convenientpass to healthy living.Pick yours up today! 18 67 Valley Farm Road pickering.ca/fit 905.683.6582 Pickering FIT The Corporationof The City of Pickering In TheMatterof The Ontario Heritage Act,R.S.O.1990,c.0.18 AndintheMatterof Landsand Premises at the FollowingMunicipal Address 560 Park Crescent,City of Pickering Provinceof Ontario Notice of Pa ssing of a By-law TA KENOTICEthatthe Councilof The Corporationofthe City of Pickering haspassed By-law#7290/13 to designate theproperty andbuilding at the followingmunicipaladdressofhistoricalandarchitectural valueorinterestunderPartIVoftheOntarioHeritageAct,R.S.O.1990,c.0.18 Nesbit-NewmanProperty560ParkCrescentPartofLots12&13,Plan175BeingPart1,Plan40R-27959Pickering,Ontario Reason forDesignationof560 Park Crescent,Pickering Thesubjectproperty isaone-and-a-half-storey,three-bay fieldstone farmhousebuiltinthemid-1850’sinamodified Georgianstyle.Itislocated onthe westsideof Park Crescent,at the western terminusof Surf Avenue,in the City of Pickering’s Westshoreneighbourhood. As theonly remaining19th centurybuildinginthe Westshoreneighbourhood andoneof very fewbuildingsofthisvintagein South Pickering,theNesbit-Newman Houseisavisiblelandmarkandacherished resource inthe community. Dated at the City of Pickeringthis24th dayof July,2013 DebbieShields,City Clerk City of Pickering One The Esplanade,Pickering,ONL1V6K7905.420.4660 ext.2019 Look for the eBook on pickering.ca! We’r e callingon residents to completea communitysurvey to provideinsightinto keyareasofhealth,safety,services,participation andsustainability.Helpusbuildonthesuccessofour City to makeit asustainable,prosperousand welcomingplace forall.Participants willbeenteredinto adraw fora PickeringRecreation Complex Seasonal Health ClubMembership($246 value) anda PickeringMuseum Vi llage Family Season Pass($65 value). Thesur veyis availableonline at pickering.ca/sustainabilityfrom July15th –July29th. Shaping yo ur City Pickering Fire Services reminds youthatmany firerelateddeaths are caused by people attempting to cookorsmokewhileunder theinfluenceofalcohol.Alcoholand fire areadangerousmix. Keepacloseeyeonindividuals consumingalcoholin your householdandmakesureallcigarettesareproperly extinguished andthestoveisturnedoff beforegoing to bed.Installsmoke alarmsoneverystoryof yourhomeandoutsidesleepingareas. Ifsomeonein yourhomesmokesintheirbedroom,ensurea smokealarmisalsoinstalledintheirbedroom. Formoreinformationon Alcohol,Smokingand Fire contact Pickering Fire Services at 905.839.9968oremail fire@pickering.ca. A Message from Fire Services Pickering Events 905.420.4620 events@pickering.ca Wa terfront Concert Series Thursdays 7 - 9 pm in Millennium Square Featuring rock music from “Blue Nash” Sponsored by Ontario Po wer Generation Esplanade Concert Series Sundays 2 - 4 pm in Esplanade Park, Gazebo Featuring “The Liverpool 4”a Beatles Tr ibute Band Theatre in the Park - THE ODYSSEY We dnesday,July 31 at 7:30 pm Esplanade Park (Pay-what-you-can event) Visit pickering.ca/museum for Boredom Busters at Pickering Museum Village.Live history from We dnesday to Sunday - see online for times. Aquatics | Ice Sports | Health &Fitness |Leisure |Racquets du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 10 AP MYnissAn SALES EVENT 0%FINANCING FOR UP TO84 MONTHS± ON SELECTROGUE MODELS PLUS CHOOSE *FROM or40¢ OFF GAS UNTIL20151 /L 2 PAYMENTSON US 2 or NOCHARGE5YEAR/100,000 KM EXTENDED WARRANTY3 OFF GAS UNTIL OFF GAS UNTIL 51021 YMENTSAPON US2 D EDNETXE ANTYARRW CHOOSE QUICKLY. OFFER ENDS JULY 31 ST. FIND YOURS AT CHOOSENISSAN.CA OR YOUR LOCAL RETAILER BEST-IN-CLASS COMBINED FUEL ECONOMY ∞ FINANCE A 2013 NISSAN SENTRA FROM ONLY $16,499◆ STARTING FROM $88 BI-WEEKLY≠MONTHS FREIGHT AND FEES INCLUDED$1,375 DOWN FREIGHT AND FEES INCLUDED$3,698 DOWN PER MONTH FOR 841.9%APRAT BEST-IN-CLASS HIGHWAY FUEL ECONOMY ∞ LEASE A 2013 NISSAN ALTIMA FROM ONLY $25,377◆ STARTING FROM $228 MONTHLY MONTHS† PER MONTH FOR 601.9 %APRAT AVAILABLE INTUITIVE ALL WHEEL DRIVE FINANCE A 2013 NISSAN ROGUE AT $25,862◆ STARTING FROM $5,000‡ CASH PURCHASER’S DISCOUNTS ON OTHER SELECT ROGUE MODELS ON ROGUE S FWD FOR UP TO 840%APR MONTHS± 1.8 SL model shown ▲3.5 SL model shown ▲ SL AWD model shown ▲ OR GET ≠±Finance offers are now available on new 2013 Sentra 1.8 S (C4LG53 AA00), manual transmission/2013 Rogue S FWD (W6RG13 AA00), CVT transmission. Selling Price is $16,449/$25,862 financed at 1.9%/0% APR equals 182 bi-weekly/84 monthly payments of $88/$278 for an 84/84 month term.$1,375/$2,500 down payment required. Cost of borrowing is $1036.16/$0 for a total obligation of $17,486/$25,862.†Lease offer available on new 2013 Altima Sedan 2.5 (T4LG13 AA00), CVT transmission. 1.9% lease APR for a 60 month term. Monthly payment is $228 with $3,698 down payment or equivalenttrade-inandincludesfreightandPDE($1,695)andnoSecurityDepositrequired.Leasebasedonamaximumof20,000kmperyearwithexcesschargedat$0.10/km.Totalleaseobligationis $17,375.Includes $150DealerParticipationon2013AltimaSedan2.5(T4LG13AA00),CVTtransmission.Conditions apply. See your Nissan retailer for details. ‡$5,000 Cash Purchaser’s Discount is based on non-stackable trading dollars and is applicable to all 2013 Nissan Rogue models except 2013 Rogue S FWD (W6RG13 AA00), CVT transmission. The $5,000 cash purchaser’s discounts is only availableon the cash purchase of select new 2013 Rogue models (excluding the W6RG13 AA00 trim model). The cash purchaser’s discounts will be deducted from the negotiated selling price before taxes and cannot be combined with special lease or finance rates. This offer cannot be combined with any other offer.Conditions apply.◆$16,449/$25,862/$25,377 Selling Price for a new 2013 Sentra 1.8 S (C4LG53 AA00), manual transmission/2013 Rogue S FWD (W6RG13 AA00), CVT transmission/2013 Altima Sedan 2.5 (T4LG13 AA00), CVT transmission. ▲Models shown $24,699/$36,282/$34,427 Selling Pricefor a new 2013 Sentra 1.8 SL (C4RG13 SL00), CVT transmission/2013 Rogue SL AWD (Y6TG13 AA00), CVT transmission/2013 Altima Sedan 3.5 SL (T4SG13 AA00), CVT transmission. ≠±†‡◆▲Freight and PDE charges ($1,567/$1,750/$1,695), air-conditioning levy ($100) where applicable, certain fees(ON: $5 OMVIC fee and $29 tire stewardship fee), manufacturer’s rebate and dealer participation where applicable are included. License, registration, insurance and applicable taxes are extra. Finance and lease offers are available on approved credit through Nissan Canada Finance for a limited time, maychange without notice and cannot be combined with any other offers except stackable trading dollars. Retailers are free to set individual prices. Offers valid between July 3, 2013 and July 31, 2013. ∞Fuel economy from competitive intermediate/compact 2013 internal combustion engine models sourced fromAutodata on 13-12-2012. Hybrids and diesels excluded. 2013 Sentra/Altima fuel economy tested by Nissan Motor Company Limited. Sentra: CVT transmission (4.9L/100 KM HWY/6.6L/100 KM CITY/5.8L/100 KM COMBINED), manual transmission (5.5L/100 KM HWY/7.5L/100 KM CITY/6.6L/100 KMCOMBINED), CVT model shown. Altima: 2.5L engine (7.4L/100 KM CITY/5.0L/100 KM HWY), 3.5L (9.3L/100 KM CITY/6.4L/100 KM HWY). 3.5L shown. Actual mileage may vary with driving conditions. Use for comparison purposes only. *Offer available to all qualified retail customers who lease, finance(and take delivery), or cash purchase a new 2013 Sentra // Altima Sedan // Rogue models, on approved credit, from a participating Nissan retailer in Canada between July 3 - 31, 2013. 1Purchase or lease a 2013 Sentra, Altima Sedan, Rogue by July 31, 2013 and you can choose to receive a Preferred Price TM Petro-Canada gas card redeemable as follows: 40 cents per litre savings applies to 1750L on 2013 Sentra, 40 cents per litre savings applies to 2,000L on 2013 Altima Sedan, 40 cents per litre savings applies to 2,600L on 2013 Rogue. The Preferred Price TM card is valid on all grades of motor fuel. See Nissandealer or www.choosenissan.ca for details on the number of litres received per model leased or purchased. 2Offer available only to qualifying retail customers. First two (2) monthly lease/finance payments (including all taxes) will be waived, up to a maximum of $600 (inclusive of taxes) per month. Consumeris responsible for any and all amounts in excess of $600 (inclusive of taxes). After two (2) months, consumer will be required to make all remaining regularly scheduled payments over the remaining term of the contract. This offer cannot be combined with the $5,000 Cash Purchaser’s Discount on all 2013Rogue models except Rogue S FWD (W6RG13 AA00), CVT transmission. 3No charge extended warranty is valid for up to 60 months or 100,000 km (whichever occurs first). Some conditions/limitations apply. The no charge extended warranty is the Nissan Added Security Plan (“ASP”) and is administeredby Nissan Canada Extended Services Inc. (“NCESI”). In all provinces NCESI is the obligor. See details at www.choosenissan.ca. Offers subject to change, continuation or cancellation without notice. Offers have no cash alternative value. See your participating Nissan retailer for complete details. AJAX NISSAN 500 Bayly Street West, Ajax, ON Tel: (905) 686-0555 www.ajax.nissan.ca OUT ON THE TOWN JULY 27 GALAXY DANCE PARTY. at the Oshawa Navy Club, 320 Viola St., Oshawa, from 8 p.m. to 1 a.m. Admission is $10. TOWN HALL 1873. 302 Queen St., Port Perry, hosts The Johnny Cash tribute to the Man In Black performed by Jim Yorfido at 8 p.m. 905-985-8181, townhall1873.ca. WHITBY HARBOUR DAY. from noon to 10:30 p.m. at Port Whitby Marina, 301 Wat- son St. A free family event including chil- dren’s activities, live entertainment, com- munity displays and Station Gallery artists. Vendors and food sales on site. Parking at Iroquois Park Sports Centre and Whitby GO station. www.whitby.ca/events. KENT FARNDALE GALLERY. in the Scugog Memorial Public Library, 231 Water St., Port Perry, hosts the Opening Reception for the exhibit ‘Painting for the Love of It’ by the Port Perry Artists’ Asso- ciation. The reception is at 2 p.m. and the show runs to Sept. 5. JULY 28 CHARITY BARBECUE. in support of local charities from 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. at Mount Lawn Memorial Gardens and Reception Centre, 21 Garrard Rd., Whitby. With a $5 donation, enjoy massages, spine assess- ments, garden tips, cooking demos, kids dance/music demos and more. 905-665- 0600. THINGS TO DO JULY 26 MOVIE IN THE PARK. a free screening of Rise of the Guardians (Rated G) at 9 p.m. at the Whitby Civic Recreation Complex, 555 Rossland Rd. E., Whitby. www.whitby.ca/ events. JULY 31 OSHAWA COMMUNITY MUSEUM. hosts a drop-in craft: Egg carton trains from noon to 4 p.m. $5 a child ages 5 to 12. 1450 Simcoe St. S., Oshawa. ONGOING DROP-IN BRIDGE CLUB. every Monday and Wednesday at the St. Andrew’s Com- munity Centre, 46 Exeter Rd., Ajax. Come as early as 12:15 p.m., cards start at 1 p.m. 905-619-2626 (Jean). PICKERING POWERHOUSE TOASTMAS- TERS. meets every Monday from 7 to 8:30 p.m. in the Pickering Central Library audi- torium, One The Esplanade, Pickering. Learn leadership and public speaking skills. Guests always welcome. 905-837- 5637 (Janice), jahjones1974@gmail.com, 6809.toastmastersclubs.org. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 11 APSports Brad Kelly Sports Editor / bkelly@durhamregion.com / 905-579-4400 #2254 Local soccer teams prosper at Robbie International tourney SCARBOROUGH -- Soccer teams from the area posted strong results at the 47th annual Robbie International Soccer Tournament that attracts youth teams from around the world. In the U11 girls’ division, the Oshawa Kicks Renegades reached the final, but goals by Rachel Kucera and Alexandra Stewart were one short of what they needed in a 3-2 loss to the Ottawa South United Force Black. Those three goals were the only ones the team allowed in its march to the final, blank- ing Richmond Hill Raiders 4-0, Leaside Soc- cer Club 8-0, West Ottawa Warriors 2-0 in the round robin, and Vaughan Dynamo 6-0 in the semifinals. The Ajax FC 99B Red got goals from Kemani Arca-Stewart, Darryn Commissiong, Adrian Martini, Dillon Williams, and a shutout by Devin Smith in a 4-0 victory over the Wex- ford Shockwave in the U14 boys’ division. In the preliminary round they beat Whitby Iro- quois A 3-0, Lakeshore SC 8-0 and Wexford Shockwave 2-1. The quarter-final produced an 8-1 win over Erin Mills C, followed by a 9-0 shutout over Oak Ridges Knights 9-0. Ajax FC Red beat Dixie Athletics 4-0 in the final of the U15 boys’ division. Jovante Etienne scored twice, with Dwight Van Dyke and Tre McCalla adding singles. The shut- out was shared by Tristan Schyvenaars and Nicholas Holland. In the round-robin stage, Ajax shutout Wexford Galaxy 2-0, Markham Lightning Black 3-0 and Albertson 98 Acade- my (New York State) 4-0. They defeated East York Gunners 3-1 in the quarter-finals, and edged Kitchener 98A 2-1 in the semis. In the U15/16 girls’ division Pickering Power Green got a goal from Jessica Smart and shutout by Zoe Brochu in a 1-0 victory over Ajax FC Red 98s. Shutouts over Tecum- seh Warriors (Ontario) 2-0, Oshawa Kicks Fury U16A 2-0, and Nepean Hotspurs Heat 5-0, put them into the semifinals where they shutout Pickering Power Gold 97G 3-0. The road to the final for Ajax included beating the Oshawa Kicks Energy 3-0, Scarborough Blizzard 3-0, Berlin SC (New Jersey) 6-0, and in the semifinal, winning over the Chi- nook United 98/97 (Calgary, Alberta) 2-0. A goal by Allison Spry and shutout by Allanna Jelic helped the Pickering Power Green U17 win the Girls Elite Show- case Division 1-0 over Ajax FC Black. In the round robin Pickering lost to Ajax FC Black 2-0, edged Gloucester Hornets 2-1 and Niagara United SC 1-0. The semifi- nals produced a 1-0 win over the Vaughan Azzurri Storm. Ajax got to the final by shut- ting out Pickering Power Green 2-0, beat- ing Vaughan Azzurri Storm 3-1 and Lincoln Storm 2-0. In the semifinals they shutout Niagara United SC 2-0. The Buzz is gone CLARINGTON -- Ajax’s Todd Nakasuji finished the Jr. B lacrosse playoffs with a share of the team lead in points for the Oakville Buzz, with 25 in eight games. The Buzz had a 2-0 series lead over the Clarington Green Gaels in the Ontario Lacrosse Association quarter-finals, but let it slip away with three losses from Thursday through Saturday. Sabrina byrneS / Metroland Watersports Pickering club attracts dragon boaters from Trinidad PICKERING -- The Pickering Dragon Boat club’s reputation attracted a team from Trinidad to train at Frenchman’s Bay in Pickering. Due to Pickering’s reputation for excel- lent paddling conditions, the team from Trinidad elected to train out of the facilities in preparation for their races at the Toronto Island Dragon Boat Festival. Dragon boat racing continues to be one of the world’s fastest-growing sports and combines skill, power, endurance and teamwork in a sport that is accessible for all ages. The Pickering Dragon Boat Club has existed for the past 10 years and has become one of the most successful clubs in the world. PDBC is the only club ever to win a world championship medal in every age category: Junior, Under 23, Premier, 40+ and 50+. The club is currently the reigning world champion at the 50+ division. Hockey Pickering Panthers part of opening weekend in OJHL DURHAM -- The Pickering Panthers and Whitby Fury have a starting point for the 2013- 2014 Ontario Junior Hockey League season. The league released its schedule on Monday, and opening night on Friday, Sept. 6 will feature the Panthers hosting the Burl- ington Cougars in 7:30 p.m. at the Pickering Recreation Complex. The Fury will have to wait until the following night to get their season underway, host- ing the Newmarket Hurricanes on Sat- urday, Sept. 7 at the Iroquois Park Sports Centre, with a 6:40 p.m. faceoff. The OJHL schedule features 22 teams with the new inter-conference play. Each club will play a 53-game regular season including 26 home games and 26 road games, with the extra game coming at the annual Governors’ Showcase in Oakville on Sept. 28-29. Other highlights included multiple teams hosting special afternoon ‘School Day’ games, allowing school groups/kids to attend, as well as an outdoor game hosted by the Buffalo Jr. Sabres when they host defending league champion, the St. Michael’s Buzzers, on Dec. 15 in Rochester as part of the AHL Rochester Americans’ 10-day outdoor festival at Frontier Field. The regular season ends Saturday, Feb. 22. Canada finds silver lining at World Cup brian Mcnair bmcnair@durhamregion.com OSHAWA -- With gold apparently not really up for grabs, Canada will cherish the silver medal it won on home soil at the 2013 World Cup women’s lacrosse championship. After all, it’s a first for this country. The United States capped off the most dominant tournament in the history of the event with a 19-5 dismantling of the host Canadian team before a packed stadium at the Civic Recreation Complex in Oshawa Saturday afternoon. In claiming their second straight championship and seventh in nine tournaments since 1982, the Americans put on a veritable clinic, breezing to victory in all seven games and out-scoring the opposition 127-34 in the process. But, while the Americans have put some impressive distance between themselves and the rest of the world since the tourna- ment was last held in Prague four years ago, the Canadians have reached a new level as well. With its first two wins ever over Austra- lia, including 11-7 in Friday’s semifinals, Can- ada claimed its first silver medal, to go along with two bronze, five fourth-place efforts and a fifth-place result. “Obviously we wanted the gold, so right now I’m not very excited but I’m sure look- ing back on it and realizing that this is the farthest Canada has ever got, even just say- ing that out loud gives you a lot of pride,” said Whitby’s Katie Guy. “It’s exciting for Canada, but at the same time disappointing because we all had our hearts set on the gold.” Guy was one of four Durham Region play- ers on the team. She was joined by Janaye Dzikewich of Whitby, Emily Boisson- neault of Brooklin and Kaylin Morissette of Bowmanville. du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 12 AP NEW!NEW!DISCOVER IMPROVE ACHIEVE Oshawa: 200 John St. W. oshawatrucking.com � �� 4-month internship with leading-edge transportation companies � �� Introduction to Supply Chain & Logistics � �� Commercial Driver Improvement (Defensive Driving) Course Certificate � Air Brake Training � 50 hours of one-on-one in-cab instruction � Training on state-of-the-art 3D simulators 40WEEKS PROFESSIONAL TRANSPORT OPERATOR � �� Air Brake Training � Commercial Driver Improvement (Defensive Driving) Course Certificate � Preparation for AZ Class license � Training on state-of-the-art 3D simulators 8WEEKS TRACTOR-TRAILER (AZ) Member of:Delivered inPartnership with: Courses include a diploma from theTruck Training Schools Association of Ontario (TTSAO). CONTACT US TODAY! 1-888-246-4337 © 2013 Ta rget Brands, Inc.Ta rget and the Bullseye Design are registered trade-marks of Ta rget Brands, Inc. Join our team. Expect the best. target.ca /c areers Be part of our unique approach to re tail. We’re building our Store Te am and we can’t wait to hear from talented people who want to be part of a new,exciting retail experience. If you’re looking for a fun, collaborative, friendly workplace with flexible hours and opportunities to grow,you’ll fit right in. Discover our in-store positions including Sales Floor, Cashier, Logistics and much more. Career Tr ainingFeatureC Drivers AZ DRIVERS REQUIRED for Whitby. Must have 3 years GTA experience. Clean abstract. Excellent communication skills. Call 905-624-5728 ask for Gary. FT ROLLOFF TRUCK Driver for K&K Recycling in Picker- ing. Must be able to work Monday-Friday with the oc- casional weekend. 2years experience, valid AZ/DZ Drivers license, clean ab- stract. Lugger experience an asset. We offer competitive rates and benefits. Send re- sume: hrjobposting@hotmail.com TOW TRUCK DRIVERS required full-time. Experience necessary. AZ license a must. Criminal background check required. Please email resume to: charlene@ bobstowingbowmanville.ca GeneralHelp A1 JOB! Filling 10 FT open- ings now! We need help with our Fundraising & Promo- tions Team. Up to $20/hour. Must be outgoing, ambitious & work well in a team setting. Call Now! Rose 1 888 767 1027. CURRENTLY SEEKING ex- perienced Aggregate Loader and Crusher operators. Must have Common Core Surface Miner Certificates. Fax: 905-852-2771 or email: sales@weldonenterprises.ca F/T DRIVERS wanted to transport people Monday to Friday. Will train. Email: rctrans@rogers.com LABEL MANUFACTURER in Ajax seeks experienced Flexo Pressman and General Help. E-mail resume to jkenney@proscanmedia.ca LICENSED TRUCK-ME- CHANIC wanted for mod- ern, A/C shop in Port Perry. Experience repairing tow trucks an asset. Call Jack (416) 989-6363 THAT 50S DINER is looking for Experienced Breakfast Cook, part-time including weekends & part-time Serv- er (morning/afternoon). Apply with resume to: 1660 King- ston Rd, Pickering, Unit 1A, 905-686-2055 Career Tr ainingFeatureC General Help NOW HIRINGCONCRETE TESTING TECHNICIAN Required Immediately for the GTA and surrounding areas. CCIL or ACI certified or will train qualified candidates. Reliable vehicle required.Fax resume to:705-454-0367 ON-CALL TEMPORARY Contract Commercial Plaza Custodian required for vaca- tion and peak times for one of the largest property man- agement companies located in Durham Region. The hours are day-time hours weekdays and weekends. Responsible for keeping plaza clean, changing side- walk bins and rear compac- tors, liaising with tenants and contractors, snow removal on sidewalks, and monthly inspection reports. We thank you for your interest but only selected candidates for inter- viewing will be contacted. Apply by sending resume to careers@vrpl.ca or fax to (905) 579-9472. QUALIFIED DISPATCHER required for Midnight shift in Oshawa office. Must be re- liable and have excellent communication skills. Please email resume to charlene@ bobstowingbowmanville.ca UMBRELLA CENTRAL Daycare Services requires RECE's for part time posi- tions for two of our locations in Durham. 2:30pm-5:30pm daily. Email resume to byng@umbrelladaycare.com by July 29th. WORKING CARPENTER, 5 years experience, rough con- struction, concrete forming. Driver's license a must. In the local area. Please send resume or contact infor- m a t i o n t o : o f fi c e @ lardaleconstruction.com Career Tr ainingFeatureC Drivers Skilled &Te chnical Help A HVAC INSTALLER, Gas 2 licence with duct work expe- rience. Oil license an asset. Please email resume to: ftcullen@hotmail.com or phone 905-260-0172 FLEET MECHANIC required for Williams Taxi & Limo Corp in Oshawa. Respon- sible for inspection, mainte- nance and repairs to fleet of vehicles. Must have valid driver's license, clean abstract valid mechanics license. Full description: http://sn.im/williamstaxi S e n d r e s u m e : rwilliams@williamstaxi.ca or call 905-926-6412 LICENSED MECHANIC or 3rd to 5th year apprentice, used car salesperson (OM- VIC approved), part-time body man for very busy 10 bay garage. Must have own tools. Apply in person with resume. 905-683-7301 or 905-424-9002 WE ARE A BUSY a u t o collision shop in Durham, looking for an experienced car detailer. Some duties will include cleaning customer vehicles, shuttling vehicles, receiving parts and overall shop clean-up. The successful candidate MUST hold a VALID "G" drivers license. Please submit your resume by e-mail ONLY to jensen1@rogers.com Career Tr ainingFeatureC Drivers Dental D ASPEN SPRINGS DENTAL CENTRE in Bowmanville requires a RECEPTIONIST or TREATMENT COORDI- NATOR with minimum two years of experience as an admin or dental assistant. Please send resume to info@AspenSpringsDental.ca DENTAL ASSISTANT, Certi- fied, for Hospital in Durham Region. One Friday per month. Accountability, flexibility, experience pre- ferred. Successful candi- dates will be contacted within 7 days. Please email re- sume: sgt1kota@rogers.com Absolutely No Phone calls. Hospital/Medical /Dental FAMILY WELLNESS clinic in Ajax hiring Part-Time Chi- ropractic Assistant. We have an opening for a new team member with a great smile and a burning desire to help people become their best. A solid work ethic, computer proficiency, and an ability to multi-task in a fast-paced en- vironment are required. Hours are Monday-Friday evenings approximately 2pm-8pm (no Friday after- noons during summer). Email resumes to drjeremy@ dynamicbalancechiro.com Hospital/Medical/Dental MEDICAL OFFICE Assistant required for fast-paced medical clinic. Temporary position, part-time leading to full-time, includes day, eve- ning and weekend hours. Responsibilities include scheduling appointments, greeting patients, scanning records into EMR system, and maintaining chart audits. Minimum 2 years' experi- ence, multitasking ability, and able to prioritize work- load. Must have excellent communication skills. Please send resume and cover letter to credshaw@kidsclinic.ca or fax to 905-436-7600. Hotel/Restaurant SHIFT MANAGERS required full and part time for Wendy's Restaurants in Port Perry and Oshawa. Must be mature and reliable. e-mail wendys662@bellnet.ca Houses for Sale$ ALMOST 2 ACRES Of Prop- erty With Custom Built 3 bed- room 2 bath home with open Concept Kitchen/Living Room and Main Floor Mas- ter. Call 905-449-6440 LEGAL 2-FAMILY DE- TACHED. Olive/Ritson. Upper: 3-bdrm, 1.5 baths, walk-out to large deck and yard. Was rented at $1200. Lower: 2-bdrm, 4pc. bath. Rented at $850. Shared laundry, new windows, new roof, move-in condition. Ask- ing only $239,900. 647-707-3324 TOWNLINE/ADELAIDE area $228,900 Bright, spacious 4- level Backsplit semi featuring 4 bedrooms, 4&3pc bths, 2 kitchens, separate side entrance, private fenced lot, OPEN HOUSE Wednesday 2-4 & Sunday 1-4:30. Brumley R/E Brokerage 905-668-0515. Mortgages,LoansM 2.69%5 yr. FixedNo appraisal needed.Beat that! Refinance now and Save $$$ before rates rise.Below bank RatesCall for DetailsPeter 877-777-7308Mortgage Leaders $$MONEY$$ CONSOLI- DATE Debts Mortgages to 90% No income, Bad credit OK! Better Option Mortgage #10969 1-800-282-1169 www.mortgageontario.com Apartments & Flats For RentA 1 BEDROOM north Oshawa. Simcoe North at Russett. Well-maintained 12-plex, Clean, new appliances, Rogers cable, heat/hydro/ water, 1 parking included. Laundry, No dogs. 905-576-2982, 905-621-7474 BEAUTIFUL, NEW base- ment apt, 1-bedroom, en- suite laundry, sep entrance, 1 car parking, walk to bus. all inclusive. first/last $925/month. Call or text Jo- hanna 905-424-1213 Classifieds YourClassifieds.caFor Delivery Inquiries, please call 905-683-5117 News Advertiser To Place an Ad Call: 905-683-0707 durhamregion.com • Email: classifieds@durhamregion.com AZ OWNER OPERATORS Let TRANSX Keep you Busy and Make You Money Short 300 to 1000 USA Trips Single Long Haul Single USA Long Haul Team USA Long Haul Team CDN Call 855 291 - 3460 Careers Careers Careers Careers Careers du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 13 AP INSERTER/POCKET FEEDER Oshawa, Warehouse - 845 Farewell St. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES • Feed newspaper flyers into the pockets of an automated inserting machine • Count newspapers into specified amounts to be strapped, bundled and stacked onto skids • Retrieve flyers from surrounding skids • Weekend Hours only • Hours fluctuate seasonally based on insert/flyer volume • Work in a secure and safety-conscious manner as outlined in the Company and department safety policies • Perform physical material handling • To perform other duties as assigned by the alphaliner Supervisor WHAT WE'RE LOOKING FOR • Full training will be provided • Must have an excellent command of the English language (read- ing/speaking/writing ) • Physically capable of lifting and carrying material up to a maximum of 30-35-lbs • Ability to perform repetitive tasks accurately and thoroughly, with minimal errors • Ability to remain alert and maintain a high level of concentration • Ability to work in a fast-paced environment • Have the ability to work independently and as part of a team • Previous experience in a manufacturing environment, an asset • Attention to detail • Have their own transportation • Starting rate is minimum wage If working for a highly energized, competitive team is your ideal environment, please email your resume to opope@durhamregion.com by August 2, 2013. Thank you for your interest. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. No telephone calls please Job Category: Warehouse; Production Christian Daycare in Pickering is seeking a PART TIME BOOKKEEPER! l Good working knowledge of QB, Word, Excel, CMS (experience an asset) l Ability to prepare Financial Statements, budgets and file Gov't returns, Wage Subsidy and Pay Equity Reports l Working knowledge of Pay Equity in daycare industry is an essential qualification l Prepare Parent Receipts, Prepare trial balance of books, Reconcile accounts, Prepare other statistical, financial and accounting reports, maintain general ledger, post journal entries, collection of accounts, year-end adjustments l Hourly rate based on level of experiencePlease forward cover letter and resume to office@bayfairdaycare.com l Must possess excellent customer services skills Lifetouch School Photography - Oshawa Is seeking unique individuals who will enjoy capturing memories that last a lifetime. We provide all training, equipment & team support. Seasonal Opportunities available: August-November and January-April. Valid Drivers License, Reliable Transportation and Criminal Background check required. Please email resume to Jim McCann at: jobs.oshawapeterborough@lifetouch.ca LEGAL SECRETARY Full-time, permanent for busy Oshawa sole practitioner. Real estate experience required, with a good working knowledge of Word, PC Law, Conveyancer and Teraview. Please forward resume to mac@paltermccarthy.com WagJag Sales Consultant Metroland Durham/Northumberland Media Group THE OPPORTUNITY The WagJag.com brand, a leading Canadian online daily deal desti- nation, offers amazing deals on restaurants, spas, fashion, activities, and events on behalf of a growing number of retailers in Canada. We deliver great offers by assembling a group of "WagJaggers" with combined purchasing power. The Outside Sales Representative will introduce and sell WagJag.com's daily deal marketing solution to local, small and medium sized businesses in their defined territory to achieve aggressive revenue targets. They will also provide account management by managing the relationship with their clients before, during and after the featured offers are presented on our website. They will find and organize WagJag deals to benefit local businesses to grow business and provide discounted deals for our readers. KEY ACCOUNTABILITIES • Identify and call local businesses • Structure sales agreements • Develop and build strong relationships with local businesses • Respond promptly to sales enquiries, and provide thorough customer follow up WHAT WE'RE LOOKING FOR • Experience in sales/account management with a proven history of achieving and surpassing sales targets • Experience in online or media sales preferred • Strong negotiation, presentation, and telephone skills • Experience in developing new business If working for a highly energized, competitive team is your ideal environment, please email your resume tocareers@durhamregion.com by Friday August 2, 2013. Thank you for your interest. Only those candidates selected for an interview will be contacted. Available Mortgages Up to 90% LTV Don’t worry about Credit! Refinance Now! Personal Tax arrears... Property Tax arrears... Must be current home owner to qualify Call 647-268-1333 Hugh Fusco AMP #M08005735 Igotamortgage Inc. #10921 www.igotamortgage.ca Parklane Estates - 50 Adelaide Ave. (905-720-3934) Tower On The Green - 1140 Mary St. N. (905-438-1971) Governor Mansions - 110 Park Rd. N. (905-723-1712) Simcoe Estates - 333 Simcoe St. N. (905-571-3760) Come home to your newly renovated units. Social events, close to hospital, shopping, easy access to transit. Please visit www.qresidential.ca 2 & 3 bedroomapartments Close to school, shopping, hospital On-site superintendent.Rental Office Mon. - Fri. 9 a.m. - 5 p.m. (905)686-0845 or(905)686-0841Eve. viewing by appt.www.ajaxapartments.com COME & WORSHIP To advertise your Church Services in our Worship Directory NOW PUBLISHING "WEDNESDAY'S" Deadline: Monday 12 Noon Call Erin Jackson @ 905.683.0707 or email: ejackson@durhamregion.com KUKSIS LEARN TO SWIMBackyard Swimming Lessons * Red Cross Certified* Private, Semi-Private or Group Lessons Contact Kirsten, Alissa or Davis 905-426-2900 or kuksisjd@rogers.com GeneralHelp Office Help Apartments & Flats For RentA BOWMANVILLE immaculate 1-bedroom $1025; All inclu- sive, security entrance, very clean building. Includes ap- pliances, utilities, parking, laundry, no dogs. 905-697-1786, 905-666-1074 GeneralHelp Office Help Apartments & Flats For RentA LIVERPOOL/HWY 2, new large 1-bdrm basement apartment. Separate en- trance, parking, laundry, A/C, full sized appliances. No pets. No smoking. Available immediately. $875 incl. 416-737-6971 GeneralHelp Apartments & Flats For RentA WHITBY Central, immacu- late 1-bedroom $866.50+ hydro. Appliances, heat, water, laundry facilities, and parking. Avail Aug 15. No dogs. 289-675-3997 905-666-1074 Houses for Rent A+ RENT TO OWN Beautiful Townhouse North Oshawa Immaculate 3 Beds/3 Baths. Open Concept. Laminate Main Floors. Master Ensuite Large Yard/Deck. Finished Basement. C/Air, C/Vac. Near Schools, Shops, Parks. All Credit OK. 24 Hr Mes- sage 888-570-1173 EAST OSHAWA 3-bdrm main and 2nd floor semi. Parking for 2, laundry, fire- place, mature garden. All utilities and satellite incl. $1400/month incl. First/Last references. Call Mark 905-213-2865 MCGILL/OLD HARWOOD newly renovated, large 4- bedroom, 3,000sq.ft., 2-1/2 washrooms, eat-in kitchen, family/living/dining room, ex- cludes basement. 2 car parking. Available Aug 1st. $1800 +utilities. 647-896-3259. OSHAWA, DREW ST. 3-bdrm detached house, fin. bsmt., fenced yard. 4-appli- ances, Furnished or unfur- nished. Avail. Aug. 1st. $1350/mo+utilities (nego- tiable). First/last, credit check. 647-505-8143 To wnhousesfor RentT COURTICE, brand n e w 3-bedroom townhomes for rent. 6 blocks & 4 design lay- outs to choose from, $1600-$1670 monthly plus utilities. For all information to www.handhproperties.net or call 905-429--RENT (7368). OSHAWA HARMONY/Olive. townhouse. 3-bedrooms, $900 + heat/hydro, First/last. Available August 1st/Sep- tember 1st. No pets. Cell (905)718-1890. Sales Help& Agents Mortgages,LoansM To wnhousesfor RentT WHITBY, Rossland/Brock, Spacious 3-level, 4-bdrm, 3 bathrooms, a/c, 4 applianc- es. safe family oriented neighbourhood" close to all amenities and schools. $1675/mo. First/last. 647-268-1333 WHITBY: Thickson/Taunton, 3-bedrm brand new town- house, Master Ensuite, 3.5 baths, car garage, Hrdwood stairs & living area, 5 brand new appliances, air condi- tioning, deck, near amenities, Non-smoking, $1850/mo + utilities. Credit check. Va- cant, Avail. Immediately/ne- gotiable: (905)-995-0529 Rooms forRent & WantedR 1 BEDROOM: CENTRAL WHITBY. Parking, transit, lots of sunshine, quiet home, share bath, kitchen, laundry, large garden. Asking $525. Avail Aug 1. Female pre- ferred. 905-668-4208 AJAX, FURNISHED ROOM. New fridge, toilet, shower, microwave, TV, double bed. Price negotiable. Available immediately. 905-428-6385 Sales Help& Agents Mortgages,LoansM Rooms forRent & WantedR AJAX, Rossland/Westney. Room for rent in quiet subdi- vision. Suitable for working male. No pets. Avail. immedi- ately. Call (647)828-4571 OSHAWA PROFESSIONAL resident offers B&B style accommodations (Monday to Friday). Suits (mature) female professional, non- smoker. Avail. late Au- gust/Sept 1st. $125/wk. (905)723-6761. OSHAWA small, clean room for rent. Very quiet house. Suit man 55+. $395/month. First/Last required. Please call 905-579-4015. OSHAWA, THORNTON/ ROSSLAND. 1 furnished room with private entrance, parking. Working gentleman preferred. No smoking/pets. $125/week. First/last 905-434-7532. Sales Help& Agents Shared Accommodation WORKING PROFESSION- AL seeks same or Student to share house, centrally locat- ed in Oshawa, close to all amenities, college & bus. Cable, phone, internet. $450/month. (905)666-8305 Campers,Tr ailers, Sites PRESTIGIOUS LOCATION, Dreamland Resort, Hastings Fisherman's Paradise. 2005 Northlander Cottager Classic trailer, 40'x14' wide, sleeps 9, 2-bedrooms, livingroom, diningroom area. 4pc bath. Central air, gas furnace, 30" gas stove, propane 100lb tank, sliding glass walkout to deck, 33'x11' H+H perma- nent covered, plus 14'x6' deck facing waterview. Shows like new, offers over $60,000. Call 905-668-1889 or 905-925-1887 Boats &Supplies 1992 14FT Pro Princecraft boat, extras, 25hp Johnson motor, and 16ft trailer. Also 6 wheel Argo. Excellent con- dition. 905-655-4503 Pools& Supplies INGROUND POOL Liner Sale. 25% off Selected Patterns. Safety Cover Sale. Order now and receive a free pool closing. Clearwater Pools and Spas 905-985-6650. Email: clear- waterpools@on.aibn.com Personals NEEDEDFemale retired pensioner as companion for elderly male widower. Will provide room, board, amenities and food at no cost.Call 647-525-8692after 6pm Apartments & Flats For RentA Places ofWorship ProfessionalDirectoryP Articlesfor SaleA CEDAR TREES for sale, starting from $4.00 each. Planting available. Free De- livery. Call Bob 705-341-3881. HOT TUB (SPA) Covers Best Price, Best Quality. All shapes & Colours Available. Call 1-866-652-6837. www.thecoverguy.com/sale 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 RENT TO OWN Appliances, TV's, Electronics, Furniture, Computers, BBQ's & More!! Apply today. Contact Paddy's Market 905-263- 8369 or 800-798-5502. Visit u s o n t h e w e b a t www.paddysmarket.ca 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 fridge's - differ- ent colors. SMALL DENTS EQUAL HUGE SAVINGS! 18 cu. ft. fridges at $399. New coin laundry available, Call us today, Stephenson's Ap- pliances, Sales, Service, Parts. 154 Bruce St. Oshawa. (905)576-7448 Apartments & Flats For RentA Places ofWorship ProfessionalDirectoryP Swap & Tr adeS WANTED: PING 3 WOOD, G10 series, 17 degree draw loft, soft regular graphite shaft. Right hand. 905-431-9727 CarsC 2006 TOYOTA MATRIX XR $4495.; 2005 Nissan Altima 3.5S - 93k. $5495.; 2003 Honda Civic $1995.; 2002 Acura 3.5 RL $2495.; 2002 Acura 1.7 EL $3195.; 2002 VW Golf TDI - diesel $3495.; 2000 Nissan Maxima $2495.; 2001 Toyota Highlander $5495.; 2000 Toyota Echo $1795. 2000 Mazda MPVDX $1495.; 1999 Pontiac Sunfire GT $895., 1999 Buick Lesabre Custom $995.; 1998 Honda Accord V6 $1495.; Amber Motors, 3120 Danforth Avenue, Scarborough, 416-864-1310. OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! 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 **$!$$!! ! AAAAA WHITTLE SCRAP Solutions. We pay cash for your scrap cars, truck, and vans! Fast free pickup. 24/7. 905-431-1808. !! $$$$ ! AAAAA ! AARON & LEO Scrap Cars & Trucks Wanted. Cash paid 7 days per week anytime. Please call 905-426-0357. Apartments & Flats For RentA Cars WantedC $$$-A1 JOHNNY JUNKER $25 removal for unwanted appliances, electronics, scrap metal. Also Cash paid for good used 2000 & up or scrap vehicles. Call now for the best cash deal 905-655-4609, 905-424-1232 Places ofWorship Vans/4-Wheel DriveV 1996 TRANS SPORT SE 97,500km. Driven daily. Ask- ing $2,500 as is. 905-686-0955 MassagesM AAA PICKERING ANGELS H H H H H Relaxing Massage VIP Rooms & Jacuzzi 905 Dillingham Rd. (905)420-0320 pickeringangels.com Now hiring!!! ANNA'S SPA Russian Girls "SPECIAL"4286 Kingston Rd. Scarborough Kingston Rd before Galloway, past Lawrence (416)286-8126 NOW OPEN LaVilla Spa 634 Park Rd. South Oshawa (905)240-1211 Now hiring!!! www.lavillaspa.ca OSHAWA The Holistic $35 you want Ritson Rd. / Bloor 905-576-3456 Home RenovationsH 905-409-9903 HomeImprovement WINDOW Cleaning up to 20 windows $60 No Squeegee (By hand) EAVESTROUGH Cleaning & Repairs * Lawn Care * Powerwash/Stain * Int./Ext Painting Call Fred 905-626-7967 Waste Removal W A1 1/2 PRICE JUNK REMOVAL!!Homes, Yards,Businesses, etc.We do all theloading. Seniors Discounts. Cheap and fast Service! John 905-310-5865 Painting & DecoratingP ALL PRO PAINTING AND WALLPAPERING Repair & Stucco ceilings Decorative finishes & General repairs (905)404-9669 allproinfo@hotmail.com Moving & StorageM Apple Moving Dependable & Reliable Good Rates 24-hour Service Licensed/Insured 905-239-1263 416-532-9056 Flooring & Carpeting F HardwoodFlooring Pro Supply, Install, Custom Staircases, Laminate, Sanding & Refinishing Low $$$ Experience Free Estimates Call Angelo647-287-6089 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 14 AP CORNEIL'S AUCTION BARNFriday July 26 at 4:30pm Located 3 miles East of Little Britainon Kawartha Lakes Rd 4 Selling the Property of Bill Brown of Oakwood plus others - oak Hoosier cupboard (with flour sifter) - large ornate wooden bird cage - 4 drawer oak file cabinet - 5 matching double press back chairs - modern pine harvest table - 2pc modern oak hutch - oak wall telephone - approx 40 pieces Beleek china - oil lamps - qty of "Flo Blue" china - kitchen cupboard - copper boilers - floor model radio - OG clock - qty of pictures - copper pots - washstands - refinished window mirror - mantle clock - marble top washstand - 2 ship pictures - parlor chairs - 2 door armour - bonnet chests - copper fire extinguisher - quilts - quilt rack - slant top writing desk - maple corner cabinet - modern 8pc oak dining room set - walnut tea wagon - church pew - 2 heavily carved chairs - side boards - lg blanket box - butter churn - wicker desk and chair - jam cupboard - mahogany bedroom set - floor model showcases - Panasonic LCD 32" TV - oak drop front desk -- 21' Suncruiser cuddy cabin boat with trailer (fish finder and lifejackets) Farm Machinery -three pth sicklemower -11' triple K cultivator - 12" post hole auger - 5' Howse & 5' Ford rotary mowers - 6' Rhino scraperblade - 7' Lucknow and 6' McKee snowblowers (SA) - 3 furrow 12" plow - Forano 3pth loader - 3pth log splitter - quick attach bale spear - gas powered cement mixer - 12' x 7' dump trailer with sides - 16' x 8' flat rack wagon - qty of steel gates - approx 100 cedar posts - qty of reddi racking - scaffolding - harrows - cattle head gate - cattle show chute - General band saw - Mastercraft 12" planer - 16' Larson fiberglass boat with 85HP Johnson and trailer - Qty of china, glass, household and collectable items Don and Greg Corneil Auctioneers 1241 Salem Rd Little Britain 705-786-2183 for more info or pictures go towww.theauctionadvertiser.com/DCorneil open for viewing Thursday from 8:30am to 5pmand 7pm to 9pm and Friday at 9am 5- Bridgeport, First, & Index vert. turret mills. Kao Ming radial arm drills, universal mills, Chien Yeh and Howa gap bed engine lathes, Clausing tool room lathe, Jakobsen hyd, surface grinders, Liam Feng surface grinders, Sunnenn percision honing machine, Niagara power shear Hyd. Shop press, air compressor, Yale propane forklift truck, roll-in band saw, Butler shaper, Canox mig. welder, vertical belt sanders, granite surface plates, electronic time clocks, sand blast cabinet, New mill tooling, Lista cabinets, New and used, lathe & mill tooling,die trucks, pallet trucks, tons of steel and Aluminum & Brass inventory, air craft landing gear, racking ,factory equipment and much more. For further information go to our web site www. X-SELLAUCTIONS.COM (905) 458-8809 12% buyers premium major credit cards accepted As instructed we will be selling by auction AJAX LBW TOOLING PUBLIC AUCTION THURS, JULY 25 @ 10:00 am Inspection : WED. JULY 24, 10:00 -2:00 Location 595 MACKENZIE AVE. # 5 AJAX , ONTARIO gear, racking ,factory equipment and much more. 13% buyers premium major credit cards accepted ESTATE AUCTION Stapleton Auctions Newtonville Friday, July 26th 5:00 p.m. Selling two homes from Wilmot Creek and a Newcastle home: 7 pc. Oak Dining Room suite; 9 pc. gibbard Walnut Dining Room; 3 pc. Dinette; Duncan Phyfe Dining Room; 3 pc. Bistro; China Cabinet; Pr. White Tallboy Shelf Displays; Wall Unit; Sectional w/2 recliners; Lazy Boy Recliner Loveseat; Occ. Chairs; Ikea Flop Chair; Futon; Single Poster Bed; China; Glass; Danby Freezer; Lg. Black Fridge; A/C Tools; Bosch Table w/Stand; etc. etc. Preview at 2:00 p.m. Check the website for full listing... Terms: Cash, Approved Cheques, M/C, Visa, Interac. 10% Buyers Premium Applies AUCTIONEERS Frank & Steve Stapleton 905.786.2244, www.stapletonauctions.com 'Celebrating 43 years in the auction industry'ESTATE AUCTION SALE Sunday July 28, 20139:00 am (viewing 8:00 am) Auction Features an Outstanding Selection from Past to Present including J/D Riding Lawnmower, Trailer & Push Mower, Dining Room Set, Curio cabinet, Old Cupboards, Gibbard Tea Wagon, Misc. Tables (Harvest, Parlour, Occasional, Patio), 2 Trombones (one a Stradivarius Model 16), Royal Doultons, Underwater Camera Equipment, Silverplate & Com- munity Flatware, Limoge & Doulton China, Old Desks, Country Collectibles, Misc. Artwork, Lamps. Plus Many Pcs Still to be Unpacked & Removed from Attic & Basement. A Sale Not To Be Missed. Terms: Cash, Visa, M/C & Interac (10% buyers premium) see: www.macgregor.theauctionadvertiser.com MacGREGOR AUCTIONSLocated in Orono at Silvanus Gardens. Take 115/35 Hwy to Orono, Exit at Main St. (Exit 17).Follow signs to Mill Pond Rd.905-263-2100 1-800-363-6799 WEDNESDAY, July 31st • 4:30PM *A U C T I O N S A L E * of Furniture, Antiques and Collectables for a Toronto Home, selling at NEIL BACON AUCTIONS LTD, 1 km. West of Utica To Include: Iron and brass bed, 4pc walnut bed- room suite, oak washstand and low-boy, curio cabinet, wrought iron table and chairs, chester- field and chair, kitchen suite, chests, prints, ban- quet lamp, large quantity of collectables and glassware, jewelry, coins, quantity of tools, 4HP lawnmower, mountain bike, bookshelves, plus many other interesting items. Sale Managed and Sold by: NEIL BACON AUCTIONS LTD.905-985-1068 PUBLIC AUCTION Under Instructions received, we will sell: ELECTRONICS – JEWELLERY – ART – COINS – RUGS Rare Original Signature Folio of A.J. Casson & Norval Morrisseau Art Collection with Rare #1A/P Issues Mon. July 29 - 6:30 pm, Preview 5 pmClaremont Lions Club 4941 Old Brock Rd. Claremont Over 150 Jewellery items w/ 10/14/18kt Platinum Diamond & gemstone rings, earrings, bracelets, Appraised, watches, pearls, Swarovski, & more. A large estate coin collection & paper money, over 120 framed art works of important Canadian Artists, sports memorabilia collection w/ 23kt Gold cards, radio control choppers, trucks, cars, art glass, crystal, porcelain, bone china, Harley Davidson, Disney, M. Monroe, Marvel, A. Hepburn Beatles,Rush, Rolling Stones, Electric & Acoustic Guitar, Violin, One Direction Frame, garden décor, , & more. Plan to attend…. Free Draw at Sale……… Details, Terms, photos, on website.WWW.AUCTIONEER.CA HAYDON AUCTION BARN Midway between Bowmanville & Blackstock, just east of Durham #57 Monday July 29th - 4:30 pm Viewing from 3 pm Pottery, Glassware, Primitive Farm Items (ready for repurposing), Coins and Paper Money, Jewelry, Art, Vintage Trunks, Old Saddles & Tack, Oil Lamps, Apartment Size Freezer, 5000 BTU Air Conditioner, French Provincial Style Sofa, China/Curio Cabinet, DiningTable & Chairs, Pair Audio Tech Speakers, Post Cards, Textiles, Brand New Hot Water Pressure Washer, Air Compressor, Safe, Small Animal Cages, Antiques, Collectibles and Much More.. See Website for Photos, Full Details & Updatesww.haydonauctionbarn.com 2498 Concession Rd. 8, Haydon Rod Smith - Auctioneer (905) 263-4402 Auctions & Sales A PUBLIC AUCTIONUnder Instructions received, we will sell:ESTATE COINS AND BANK NOTES – JEWELLERY – SPORTS MEMORABILIA – NOSTALGIA Rare Original Signature Folio of A.J. Casson & Norval Morrisseau Art Collection with Rare #1A/P Issues Sun. July 28 - 1 pmPreview 12 Noon Oshawa Quality Hotel Conference Centre, 1011 Bloor Street East, Oshawa Over 150 Jewellery items w/ 10/14/18kt Platinum Diamond & gemstone rings, earrings, bracelets, Appraised, watches, pearls, Swarovski, & more. A large estate coin collection & paper money, over 120 framed art works of important Canadian Artists, sports memorabilia collection w/ 23kt Gold cards, radio control choppers, trucks, cars, art glass, crystal, porcelain, bone china, Harley Davidson, Disney, M. Monroe, Marvel, A. Hepburn Beatles,Rush, Rolling Stones, Electric & Acoustic Guitar, Violin, One Direction Frame, garden décor, , & more. Plan to attend…. Free Draw at Sale……… Details, Terms, photos, on website.WWW.AUCTIONEER.CA Waddingtons.ca/Cobourg Tel: 905.373.0501 Toll Free: 1.855.503.2963 Fax: 905.373.1467 Email: pn@waddingtons.ca 9 Elgin St. E., Unit 6, Cobourg ON K9A 0A1 CL 4 5 5 4 2 3 9 Elgin Street East, Cobourg Saturday, July 27, 2013 Large Royal Doulton, Antique & Collector’s Auction Preview @ 9:30 p.m. Auction starting at 11:00 a.m. Large Number of Royal Doulton Figures: To Include, Princess Badoura HN2081, Collection of Nippon, Collection of Hummel Figurines Sterling & Silver-plate, Limoges, Press Glass, Crystal, Cut Glass, Porcelain, Brass, Copper & Collector’s Items. Large Priced Indoor Yard Sale: Starting @ 9:30 a.m. Watch the website for updates & photos. www.waddingtons.ca/cobourg David Simmons Auctioneer & Appraiser Caterer: Julies’ Cafe. Auctions To advertise your Auction in this Section please call 905- 683-0707 (Ajax) Please read your clas- sified ad on the first day of publication as we cannot be respon- sible for more than one insertion in the event of an error. Don’t Miss out! Visit the new saVe.ca toDay to start saVing – great coupons on amazing products, sent right to your home or printer. checK out the Brand neW, reDesigneD Don’t Miss out! Visit the new saVe.ca toDay to start saVing – great coupons on amazing products, sent right to your home or printer. checK out the Brand neW, reDesigneD Don’t Miss out! Visit the new saVe.ca toDay to start saVing – great coupons on amazing products, sent right to your home or printer. checK out the Brand neW, reDesigneD facebook.com/savedotca is a division of Get your coupon at www.save.ca/drfresh 17th annual Friday A u g u s t 2 3 rd, S a t u r d a y A u g u s t 2 4 th at t h e P i c k e r i n g To wn C e n t r e (lower l e v e l b e s i d e t h e f o o d c o u r t ) Ve ndors Wanted! to reserve your booth Call Susan Fleming 905 579 4400 ext 2629 Register for gymnastics • dance • music • art • education • sports and more Fall Registration Show2013 Sponsored By Durham Taekwondo/KarateMartialArts du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 15 AP Melissa Julianne Coady Our Beautiful Angel If tears could build a stairway And memories a lane, We would walk right up to heaven To bring you home again. No farewell words were spoken No time to say good-bye You were gone before we knew it And only God know why. Our hearts still ache in sadness And our many tears still flow What it meant to lose you No one will ever know. -Love Mom, Dad and A.J. It is hard to find words to express how thankful we are for everyone's expressions of love to our family during this truly difficult time. All of the beau- tiful flowers, cards, phone calls, emails, charitable donations, meals, thoughts and prayers have truly been a comfort- ing blessing to us. Melissa touched so many people with her beautiful smile, her kindness and her love of life. She is a beautiful angel who will live on forever in all of our hearts. With love, Julie, Larry and A.J. FELLOWS, Michael - Suddenly and sadly at Rouge Valley Centenary Hospital on Sunday, July 21, 2013 at the age of 36, one day before his 37th birthday. Cherished son of Gord & Anita Fellows, predeceased by his loving sister Tanya. Dear grandson of Jean Fellows and nephew of Monica (Terry) and Susanna (Dave). Michael will be fondly remembered by his cousins, his many family and friends. Our heartfelt thanks go out to the ICU staff at Centenary Hospital. Visitation will be held at the McEACHNIE FUNERAL HOME, 28 Old Kingston Road, Ajax (905 428-8488) on Friday, July 26 from 11 am until 1 pm. A Celebration of Michael's Life will follow at 1:00 pm in the Chapel of the Funeral Home. If desired, memorial donations may be made to Canadian Wildlife Federation (www.cwf-fcf.org) or any charity of your choice. A Guest Book may be signed on-line at www.mceachniefuneral.ca GALLAGHER, Paul - August 23, 1935 - July 11, 2013. It is with great sadness we share the passing of Paul Gallagher. Loving husband, of 55 years, to Mildred; wonderful father to John, Julie and daughter-in-law, Karen; incredible grandfather to Patrick, Sean, Arianna and Gracie; and dear Papa to Charlotte. Paul passed away all too soon at his home, in Ajax and will be greatly missed and fondly remembered by all who knew him. Paul had a special way of looking at the world and everyone loved talking to him and listening to his wonderful words of wisdom. Memories will be forever cherished by his loving family. Family and friends were received at the McEachnie Funeral Home, 28 Old Kingston Road, Pickering Village, on Monday, July 15 from 5-9pm. Funeral Mass was held at, St. Francis de Sales Church, Ajax, on Tuesday, July 16 at 10am. As expressions of sympathy, donations in lieu of flowers can be made to the Royal Ontario Museum or Covenant House. Cards of Thanks Cards of Thanks Deaths Deaths Carrier of the We ek Congratulations Ty rique for being our Carrier of the Week.. 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 1889 Brock Rd. #24, Pickering 300 Harwood Ave. S.,Ajax 1995 Salem Rd. N.Ajax 6 Harwood Ave. S.,Ajax Ajax & Pickering Locations8 Salem Rd South Ajax, ON L1S 7T7 To day’s Carrier of the Week is Ty rique.He enjoys soccer and computer games. Ty rique has received dinner vouchers compliments of McDonald’s, Subway and Boston Pizza. JULY 24, 2013 FLYERS WEDNESDAY *AT MOSPHERE AJAX * GIANT TIGER AJAX * HOME DEPOT AJAX PICKERING * JYSK AJAX PICKERING * LOWES AJAX PICKERING * MICHAEL HILL JEWELLER AJAX PICKERING * NATIONAL SPORTS AJAX PICKERING * PRO OIL AJAX * REAL ESTATE AJAX PICKERING * SALVATION ARMY AJAX PICKERING * SEARS AJAX PICKERING * SPORT CHEK AJAX PICKERING * WHEELS AJAX PICKERING *DELIVERED TO SELECTED HOUSEHOLDS ONLY 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 Sat. 9 - 1:00 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 Vi ew Flyers/Coupons At ww w . d u r h a m re g i o n .c o m You can have any birth notice, birthday, wedding, anniversary or engagement notice published. For information call News Advertiser classi ed department Mon.-Thurs. 8am-8pm or Fri. 8am-5pm 905-683-5110. F Limit of 50 words. Please send Milestones submissions to milestones@durhamregion.com by Tuesdays at 4 p.m. for Thursday publication. YY For $35plus HST Prepayment is required. Milestones is now a fee-for-service feature. SELL IT NOW CALL AJAX 905-683-0707 du r h a m r e g i o n . c o m Ne w s A d v e r t i s e r • Ju l y 2 4 , 2 0 1 3 16 AP If you are driving a 2011 model vehicle, or older,this unique program is for you. 1LEFT VI S I T WW W . V I L L A G E C H R Y S L E R . 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