9 SELLING OR ~| MORTGAGING A HOUSE 08 EB N PEERS AJ, »Real Estate «Wills Estates «Company Law Citizens Law Litigation Legal Aid Accepted 314â€"345 Lakeshore Road East Oakville, Ontario 338â€"2555 Deters intruders by barking like a real guard dog! Uses Radar Excel Business Centre 86 Sheppard Ave W 800â€"663â€"3176 Call us for a quote! Bamsters Solicitors «Family Law Protect Life Property ELECTRONIC WATCHDOG Great for Homes, Cottages, Stores, Garages Seniors Discount Visa/MC 416â€"225â€"4121 THE 0/ * Food City « Canadian Tire * Kmart e AP * 1.G.A. * L.O0.E.B. « BiWay * Ticket Master Any day of the week. Anx quantity low as $40.00 per thousand Call Saliya Perera 467 SPEERS RD., OAKVILLE 845â€"9742 or 845â€"3824 Doorâ€"toâ€"Door Fiyer Distribution Oakville Plus Taxes Delivery * Partial Delivery Brian Moreau, public affairs offiâ€" cer for CN North American, said the fire caused damage to 60 railway ties on the bridge. Moreau said preliminary investiâ€" gations by CN engineers indicate "the "There‘s no reason why they did it," said Acting Detective Sergeant Murray Drinkwalter of the Halton Regional Police. "It was just an out and out malicious act on their part." The three youths â€" a 13â€"yearâ€"old Oakville boy, 14â€"yearâ€"old Oakville boy, and a 14â€"yearâ€"old Burlington boy â€" are scheduled to appear in Oakville court Aug. 24th. "The ties were not damaged to the point where they need to be replaced immediately," he said. Halton Regional police said a homeâ€"made Molotov cocktail tossed onto the middle of the bridge caused an estimated $100,000 damage. Three youths have been charged with arson in connection with a fire on the CN railway bridge spanning 16 Mile Creek, Thursday afternoon. $100,000 damage to railway bridge ree youths charged wun arso integrity of the structure is not in question at this point." The fire also damaged fibre optic cable inside steel conduits running along the bridge. The fibre optic cables are used by CN and also leased to cable and communication firms. The fire at 2:50 p.m. caused GO Transit to cancel westbound train serâ€" vice beyond the Oakville Cross Avenue station. During rush hour GO Transit operates trains to Oakville West, Appleby, Burlington, Aldershot and Hamilton. According to GO Transit spokesperson Ed Shea, GO Transit dispatched 14 GO buses â€" "At the height of rush hour," said Shea â€" and borrowed two buses each from Oakville Transit and Halton Board of Education calls special meeting to wrap up sexâ€"education curriculum controversy The twoâ€"month summer holiday for Halton public school trustees has been interrupted to wrap up some unfinished business July 21st. The special summer meeting was scheduled to deal with items left over from the June 23rd meeting of the Halton Board of Education, and in particuâ€" lar, to deal with two trustee‘s motions to revise the controversial Grade 9 Human Sexuality curriculum. Trustees will vote on motions from Burlington trustee Noel Cooper and Oakville Ward 2 trustee Cheryl Reid. One delegation has already been booked to speak to the curriculum issue. Cooper‘s motion requests inclusion of a oneâ€"hour segment devoted to the "virtues of abstinence" and elimination of the game board and question secâ€" tion. Â¥ "I believe that the issue of a more abstinenceâ€"oriented program coupled with the deletion of some of the more explicit areas of this document, will offer a compromise to both sides in this debate while still maintaining an extremely useful and informative course of study for our students," stated Cooper. Reid‘s motions called for reviewing and modifying the information on birth control to include possible side effects; eliminating the arousal material in the Condom section and making the Condom section of the curriculum one of fact, withdrawing the reference to the purchase of condoms being similar to the buying of jeans. Also on the agenda for information is the board‘s implementation plan for Junior Kindergarten. The meeting begins at 8 p.m. at the J.W. Singleton Centre on Guelph Line in Burlington. Burlington Transit. Shea said the 18 buses shuttled about 800â€"900 passengers from two commuter trains to their stops along the westbound line. By Friday morning, both lines were in operation and commuters experienced only minor delays, said Shea. At the same time, Go Transit sent a two trains north to Georgetown and then down to the Oakville West staâ€" tion in order to shuttle passengers from that point to their west bound stations. However, by the time those trains arrived, the bridge had been declared safe enough to handle traffic along one of its two lines.