Ontario Community Newspapers

Barrie Examiner, 9 Jul 1979, p. 15

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THE GENERAL TIRE AND RUBBER COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED GENERAL TIRE DIVISION 2201mm smcsr TIRE BARRIE ONTARIO LAN 2L3 7256520 MANUFACTURING ANALYST Due to the continued growth of our business we are in need of Manufacturing Analyst at our tire plant in Barrie This challenging position involves analysis of manufacturing variances preparation of manufacturing statements budgets and working with our inhouse computer systems group Applicants should have minimum of years manufacturing accounting experience and be enrolled in the intermediate level of recognized accounting course Send detailed resume to the Employment Manager Jy9 YOU ARE INVITED TO ATTEND CAREER IN REAL ESTATE SEMINAR If you have planned to take the Community College Course or iust thinking of entering the rewarding field of real estate we would be happy to have you attend an informal evening designed to help you decide COULD BE SUCCESSFUL IN REAL ESTATE For reservations immediately call Helen Hopkins 726261 Our brand new office is located at 152 Bayfield Street 5AMva vuav CouncilorON IALYOI 152 BAYFIELD ST CORNER OF WELLINGTON BARRIE 726261 Jy9lll3 LAB TECHNICIAN New laboratory facilities are opening in Barrie by late August The successful applicant will be required to perform and record all phases of lab analysis and assist in commercial and private research and development Reply with resume to Box A87 The Examiner Barrie 11 Iioip wanted PRINTING UNLIMITED requires ReceptionistSecretary immediately General office experience must Cd 030 pm pm ROBERT KNOWLDEN 737l69l JyIO OPPORTUNITY We require fulltime and parttime male or female salespersons SIOOSZOO week parttime $200$400 week fulltime International Canadian manufacturing sales organization Free training INTERESTING CHALLENGING No investment Car required For return call please leave your name address and phone number at 7371368 Jy9 COMPANION HOUSEK EE PE for elderly lady In town at Alliston full or part time live in All inquiries to 435 7736 or 435 4464 NEED MONEY Fuller Brush Company provides flexible hours lield support top commission Cameron Bower 726 9725 SHORT ORDER COOK three years ex perience necessary Apply in person at the Green Corner Restaurant 90 Tittin Street Barrio BOYS 7i Iiob wanted LEGAL SECRETARY required ex perienced litigation Telephone 726 6497 business hours LARGE FINANCIAL ORGANIZATION requires sales and service represen tative for the Barrie area Starting in come to $300 per week it qualified Three year training program Full benefits No overnight travel Opportunity for management in future Write brief resume to the Personnel Manager Box A88 The Examiner Barrie WAITERSWAITRESSES required for cocktail lounge Telephone 726 1009 72salos hob agents EXAMINER WANT ADS PHONE 7282414 11 edited AVOH SELL THE BEST KNOWN NAME IN BEAUTY Avons top quality products find receptive customers At present we openings for sales representatives in °BARRIE ORO TWP INNISFIL TWP FLOS TWP WASAGA BEACH OTINY TWP Phone today and find out how easy it is to get started Highest commission Call 7289652 Avon you make me SMILE WANTED STUDENTS to deliver Ex aminer routes as substitutes during summer Flat rate per route Prefer those with bicycles Call 726 6539 Mr White REQUIRED person to do babysitting and light housekeeping from August 27 June 30 in Painswick Must have ex perience references own transporta tion 726 2473 EXPERIENCED PAINTERS required top wages steady work Call after pm 326 7945 DO YOU WANT to make some extra money Part time no experience necessary For further information telephone 737 4841 EXPERIENCED WAITERWAITRESS wanted with bar experience Apply in person after 430 pm at Firenze Restaurant 54F Maple Avenue TEMPORARY help service needs clerks typists stenographers etc Short and long term assignments Barrie and Orillia Minimum years experience Fleming and Associates 728 3309 STUDENTS OVER 25 for delivery and collection duties Salary plus bonus Telephone 728 619i Mon or or Tues 12 pm CLEANING POSITION part time please apply at pm Wednesday July 11 Court House 114 Worsley Street Bar rie Court House COMPANY EXPANSION tmeediate openings people needed skilled or unskilled will iob train Above average earnings depending on quality ing positions Call 726 7400 72sales helpagents TOP COMMISSIONS Sell anywhere part timefull time sideline Calendars ad specialties printed labels tapes ball pens office supplies etc Our 27th year New catalogue available Alco Box 3772 Ottawa 12 solos tub agents SALES REPRESENTATIVE leading Canadian supplier of consumer goods has an immediate opening for Sales Represen tative in the Barrie area We are leading manufacturer and distributor servicing wide range of products in chain and hardware stores across Canada Our varied products are basic to the hardware industry and we enjoy an excellent market position We are looking for an aggressive individual who is able to function with minimum supervision and has experience in hardware at the retail or sales level WE OFFER competitive salary paid expenses company car and generous incentive Please reply in your own handwriting to Box A86 The Examiner BARRIE Ontario vou CAN EARN EXTRA MONEY AND WIN PRIZES roe CENTRE KING STS ANGUS EXAMINER ROUTES ARE NOW AVAILABLE IN THESE AREAS Phone 7266539 TORONTO BRADFORD ST AREA BLAKE STEEL ST AREA DUCKWORTHNAPER AREA DUNLOP DALTON BAYFIELD ST AREA QUEEN ST DAVDSON ST TiFFiN ST MULCASTER ST SOPHA WORSLEY OWEN ST AREA RODNEY MOUNTBATTEN ST AREA CUMBERLAND ST CLAPPERTON ST AREA AREA BAYFIELD MARY STS GUNN WELLINGTON ST AREA SANFORD VICTORIA AREA CREEMORE Yes would like more information about an Examiner Carrier Route NAME JGE ADDRESS PNONE PARENTS SIGNATURE Clip and send to The Examiner Box 370 Barrie LAM 4T6 ANNOUNCEMENTS IIbbth Mondays Child isiair of face Tuesdays Child is full of grace Wednesdays Child is full oiwoe Thursdays Child has far to go Fridays Child is loving and giving Saturdays Child works hard ior its living And child that is born on the San bath Day Is fair and wise and good and gay Children hearing this verse by Counter Cullen always want to know which day of the week was their birth date Keep this and other important information for your childs iuture An Examiner Birth Announcement will include the name of your child the day oi the week month and year of birth the weight and other vital information printed message can become permanent record in Babys Book or Family Albums The rate ior an Examiner Birth Notice is only $550 PHONE 728 2414 EM LAPSLEY HENRY McKean at the Royal Victoria Hospital Barrie on Saturay July 1979 Henry McKean Lapsley in his 63rd year brother of Alexander Lapsley of Bridgeport Conn Friends may call at Steckley Funeral Home 30 Worsley Street Barrie alter pm Monday Service in the chapel on Tuesday July 10 at 330 pm iollowed by cremation MCLEAVY WILLIAM at the Royal Victoria Hospital Barrie on Saturday July 1979 William McLeavy in his 68th year beloved husband ol May Boughen loving brother in law oi Maude Boughen and dear friend oi Em meline Bell beloved uncle oi nine nieces and nephews Friends may call at Steckley Funeral Home 30 Worsley Street Barrie Service in the chapel on Tuesday July 10 at interment Barrie Union Cemetery It so desired memorial donations may be made to Canadiancancer society PLAXTON GARNET Everard at the Royal Victoria Hospital Barrie on Saturday July I979 Garnet Dlaxton beloved husband of the late Edith Irene Brennan loving brother oi Lorne oi Angus Miller of Angus and the late Roy and Clifford The late Mr Piaxton is resting at the Jennett Funeral Home 152 Bradford Street Funeral Service in the chapel on Monday at interment Angus Union Cemetery 86 card of tltanlu KENNY We wish to express our heart felt thanks to our relatives neighbours and friends Their floral tributes memorial donations many acts of kind ness and personal sharing oi memories of our iather and grandfather Tom Ken ny are treasured Thank you Dr Fred Smith Dr Little Rev Heron Pastor McFadden and Rev Chamberlain tor your loving concern We are comforted by John Il25 Jesus said and the resurrection and the lite he that believeth in Me though he were dead yet shall helive The Kennyiamily 08 coming events BINGO St John Vianney Hall EVERY TUESDAY $200 Jackpot MTF AIR FORCE BINGO EVERY TUESDAY Doors open 630 Early Birds 730 REGULAR GAMES PM JACKPOT $200 Navy 90 25 IIIonIotru WEST of CONTINENTAL INN MTF CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING DIRECT PHONE 7282414 Classified advertisements and notices for these pages must be received by pm day preceding publication with the exception of Classified Display advertisements which must be in by pm two days prior to publication BIRTH NOTICE $600 ENGAGEMENTS MARRIAGES DEATH NOTICES 40 words $600 Additional words It cts per word CARD OF THANKS 40 words $600 Addi Iional words II cts per word IN MEMORIAM NOTICES No verse $600 With verse per count line 23 cents per line COMING EVENTS $343 per column inch CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 74 word minimum Cash Discount Rates apply if paid within days One or two insertions IOc per word insertion Three consecutive in scitions cents per word insertion total $684 Six consecutive insertions per word per insertion total $l296 Multiple inser tions may be ordered subiect to cancellation when satisfactory results obtained Method of counting fewer than 24 words count as 24 words Each initial abbreviation set of numbers etc count as separate words ERRORS AND CORRECTIONS All phone insertion orders are accepted as convenience to the advertisers Therefore the Classified Advertising Department re quires advertisers to kindly recheck their advertisement immediately after first inser tion in order that any error or omission may be reported before am in order that same may be rectified for the following day publication The Examiner is responsible for only one incorrectly printed insertion of any advertisement and than only to the extent of portion of ad that involves the misprint Er rors which do not lessen the value of the advertisement are not eligible for correc tions by make goods The Examiner reserves the right to classify revise or reject any want IS BEST MONDAY TUESDAY WEDNESDAY THURSDAY FRIDAY SATURDAY Advertisers frequently ask this question Fortunately there is no best day to advertise Each day new wants arise bringing new readers as old ones satisfy their wants We recommend that you start your ad tomorrow and cancel it when you get results After many years of ex perience will millions of want ads we know tomorrow is the best day to start your ad and every day is the best day to advertise in The Examiner Classified Section Phone 72824I4 EXAMINER WANT ADS 72824l4 LThey enioy simple life TAYUTICA Costa Rica AP When the skies open and the gods cry farmer Marco Tulio Corrales sits on his porch and watches the rainfall He has no broken machines to repair no creditors to worry him His tool is his brain his bank is his mattress Corrales used to be man of the city Like thousands of other Costa Ricans he went to San Jose looking for the good life Instead he found dirty air noisy streets high prices loneliness and confusion coun try folk never have to face He returned to the land Now he enjoys an easy pace He has time to teach his sons what farmer should know about tilling and planting and looking after coffee bushes and garden vegetables and loyal animals He lives without electricity automobile or tractor Water comes from rain barrels or nearby creek His privvy has view of jungle mountain and stream He and his wife Norma built their frame house with their own hands With the family grown to three sons already it is time to add room THE EW BREED Corrales is new breed of campesino peasant man of the field Unlike his fathers father he can read He writes poetry He has travelled far beyond the boundaries of his birthplace hated what he found and came home again Ben Franklin would have lik ed the Corrales familys habits They nse before sunup are asleep by twilight They are healthy moderately wealthy and wiser than most of their former neighbors in the city In 1970 when Corrales was 21 and his bride 16 they left their home ground and moved 145 kilometres southwest to the capital We went because we thought the work wouldnt be as hard as on the farm he recall ed got job in refrigerator assembly plant Soon was making service calls working weekends and nights CONTAMINATED SOCIETY The first two boys were born There was never enough room We spent extra money on movies vice that isnt wor thwhlle Instead of finding place with nice ambiance we found contaminated society My father had chance to buy this land but he said he needed help to work it was wasting my time in the city anyway so we came home Theirhousecost $1250 It sits on stilts to catch the breeze and stymie the termites Rain falls off the tin roof and cool breezes waft into the two bedrooms liv ing room and big kitchen Norma made all the bedspreads curtains and pillow cushions She sewsall of her familys clothes Core meltdown so improbable TORONTO CPI nuclearpower plant meltdown is so improbable that the Atomic Energy Control Board feels there is little use in study ing the consequences of such an accident board president Jon Jcnnckens said Friday No one knows what would happen so you assume that meltdown and melt through wouldnt happen he told an Ontario legislature committee investigating nuclear gencrating plants in the pro Vince Plans party for Skylab TORONTO CP Roxanne Dcnby sales clerk in an art shop is planning home coming party for Skylab and she is already dressed for the event borrowed silvercolored hard hat to protect my head She has sneakers for jumping out of the way of the 77zton space laboratory due to return to earth this month after or biting for more than years And she is wearing coveralls to keep space dirt from getting on her good clothes just want to lighten the heaviness about the worry Now that she knows what to wear to her Welcome Home Skylab party she is seeking place to hold it It will have to be in bomb shelter somewhere He conceded that meltdown in which the core of nuclear reactor overheats melts and burns through the floor of the plant into the earth is not impossible but said it is extremely improbable so the board is concentrating on the effects of less serious accidents which could occur Committee member Jim Foulds NDPAPort Arthur challenged Jennekens state ment saying thepublic fears the unknown If the energy control board refuses to consider the conse quences of the ultimate acci dent core meltdown it is ad ding to public fear he said Jennckens said the boards main concern with meltdown involves prevention and in sisted there was no reason to study possible consequences CANNOT SAY He told the committee that no one can say categorically that meltdown will never occur but that all experimental work so far indicates that if all emergency cooling systems fail the fuel core will never become hot enough to melt During Thursdays hearings Dr Gordon Edwards chairman of the Canadian Coalition for Nuclear Responsibility said Ontario Hydro should be forced to prove meltdown is impossi ble Edwards said he could con duct study for about $20000 to determine if meltdown is possible Jennckcns told the inquiry Friday that such study is not necessary the examiner Monday July 1979 15 MacPuffins first bagpipe lesson MacPuffin the official mascot of the Cape Breton Tourist Association joins the International Gathering of the Clans in Nova Scofio Friday MacPuffln is joined by Andree Morrison left and Anne MacMullin as he takes his first bagpipe lesson CP Photo Woodworkers union urges pact rejection VANCOUVER CPI peaceful labor settlement in the British Columbia forest in dustry this summer was in danger today as the smallest of the three unions involved urged rejection of proposed agreement Hopes for an agreement had been raised Friday when the In ternationul Woodworkers of America unanimously recomlt mended that its 28000 coastal members accept tentative settlement with the 120 com panies represented by the Forest Industrial Relations group And the Canadian Paperwor kers Union representing 7500 members at 13 pulp and paper mills in the province an nounced it would recommend acceptance of the latest in dustry proposal pending resolu tion of local issues Jagger attends court session bearded Mick Jagger of the British rock group the Rolling Stones leaves the Law Courts In London Friday after closed door session in High Court The hearing was held in connection with his divorce proceedings from wife Bianca AP Photo But the 5500membcr Pulp Paper and Woodworkers of Canada viewed as renegade union by many in the labor movement said the offer from the Pulp and Paper Industrial Relations Bureau leaves out too many issues of concern While the PPWC represents workers at only nine mills none of them newsprint operations union president Angus Mao Phee said his members will throw up picket lines if strike occurs TWO ISSUES LEFT Pensions and costofliving formula remain stumbling blocks for an agreement and MacPhcc says he has never seen the industry more capable of meeting unions demands Members of the union are off the job at MarMillzin Blocdcl operations near Nanziimo and at Port Alberni on Vancouver Island Dick Lester chief negotiator for the pulp and paper com panies said the PPWC should not expect better deal than the other two unions When weve got an agree ment with one union the other cant possibly get any more Lester said They will be out there by themselves In 1973 the PPWC went on strike for eight weeks after the CPU had accepted an industry offer The gains won in that strike were modest Jack Munro western region president of the woodworkers was pleased by the settlement saying it provides for increases in wages and fringe benefits of $305 an hour VOTE NEXT WEEK The pact to be voted on by the woodworkers next week provides pay raises of 90 cents an hour in the first year of twoyear settlement dating from last June 15 In the second year the in crease will be 90 cents an hour or 95 per cent whichever is greater Base rates now are $816 in both the lumber and pulp and paper sectors of the industry The proposed raises for the woodworkers also Will apply to the pulp and paper employees Fallers the highest paid woodworkers will receive $13312 for 12 hour day at the beginning of the contractl rising to $155 daily plus travlsl timc of$25 day Former woodworkers on pen sions will receive 30percent increase in their current pen sions to between $350 and $390 month There also are improvements in overtime and vacations Art Gruntman CPU vicea president said his union had won major View having pensions mzide equ INihilisthose who have already retired and those still in the work force Subject to resolving locatljs sues we recommend accept it HDCC Summer you say What summer TORONTO CP Summer and those hot sunny days we dream about the other nine months of the year have yet to make lasting appearance this year in Ontario Why was Canada Day so miserable Terry Allsopp Climatologist with the Cana dian Climate Centre says ridge of warm air hovering over Western Candu is respon sible Its what we call an at mospheric blocking situation he said which provided cities like Yellowknife NWT with temperaturss about six degrtes above normal while Ontario and western Quebec shivered under trough of cold air The troughs have caused the prevailing winds to blow cold air in from the northwest in stead of warm air from the southwest Allsopp said today in an interview But the ridge out West is dissipating and temperatures should soar in the next few days Allsopp said Longrange forecasts for July show the temperaturs should be almost normal with few rainy days he said June was chilly month but temperatures were only about 112 degrees below normal in Ontario according to weather statistics for the last 30 years and above average in the West Allsopp said what actually in fluences atmospheric circula tion and coldand warmair masses remains mystery But one theory is ocean temperatures and warm pool off the West Coast could be the culprit on this case he said Named to farm board TORONTO lCPl Agriculture Minister Bill Newman named 10 members Friday to the Ontario Farm Machinery Board which has been reorganized to provide broader representation for farmers and producers Producer representatives are Clayton Kargcs of Denfield Russell Rowantrec oi Bramp ton Raymond Cousineau of Cochrane Stewart Mon tgomery of Hawkesbury William Elliott of Florence and William Benson of Palmerston Industry members are Ficzere of John Deere Canada Ltd John Waicot of Sperry New Holland and William Brown of Stratford Farm Equipment Ltd

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