Presente by:d THE OAKVILLE CHILDREN'S CHOIR Music Director: Sarah Morrison Associate Music Director: Janet Stachow Conductor: Jeff MacLean Accompanist: Cheryl Duvall Carol SingCaro Sin CommunityCommuni Sat., Dec. 4 7:00pm Sat., Dec. 11 3:00pm WHERE St. Andrews Catholic Church 47 Reynolds Street. Oakville, Ontario In Person: Atelier Grigorian (Oakville) By Phone: 905 337 7104 Online: www.oakvillechildrenschoir.org Or: At the door TICKETS Adult: $25 Child/Senior: $15 WHERE St. Cuthberts Anglican Church 1541 Oakhill Drive. Oakville, Ontario TICKETS General Admission: $25 Family: $50* * Includes 2 adults + 3 children or seniors Special Guest: LIANNE TAN. 0rganist FOOT PAIN? Roger D. Newell, D. Pod. M., & Associates over 30 years in practice former teacher, Toronto General Hospital former consultant, Ontario Ministry of Health CHIROPODISTS - FOOT SPECIALISTS INSURANCE COVERAGE - coverage provided by most extended medical plans. Many services can be billed Direct. e.g. Green Sheild - teachers, autoworkers, etc... Green Shield Preferred Provider DONT DELAY. BOOK NOW. ALL YOU HAVE TO LOSE IS YOUR FOOT PAIN! No referral required. Shin `splints Arthritic & Swollen Joints bent hammer toes Corns & Warts Thick Discoloured Toe Nails Bunions Ball of Foot Burning and Pain Arch Pain & Tightness Heel Pain (Spurs & Fasciitis) Sore Ankles acrhilles tendinitis Heel Bumps cracked scaley skin Recognize These Problems? FOOT CLINIC & ORTHOTIC CENTRE DONT DELAY. BOOK NOW. ALL YOU HAVE TO LOSE IS YOUR FOOT PAIN! No referral required. 905.844.0680 627 LYONS LANE #205 OAKVILLE (OFF CROSS AVE.) HEEL PAIN Usually most painful when rising in the morning - and getting moving after sitting - caused by a weakness of the main arch band pulling on the heel bone. The pain can extend into the arch or ankles - called plantar fasciitis or heel spurs. Generally can be eliminated WITHOUT the need for invasive surgery, painful injections, dangerous drugs or long recovery time. Effective conservative care can include comfort orthotic supports made from state-of-the-art lightweight materials fi tting easily into regular shoes, physical therapy or home remedies. DIABETES SUFFERERS IMPORTANT NOTICE As part of our ongoing commitment to community health, we offer an individual personal Diabetic Foot Assessment and Educational Session to patients suffering from diabetes. A nominal $5 charge is made which will be donated to the Canadian Diabetes Association. The clinic will donate an additional $5. REMEMBER PREVENTION IS BETTER THAN A CURE! Call 905-844-0680 for your personal appointment. * not intended to solicit patients already receiving professional foot care. 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Value $1900* *limited time offer Furnace diagnostic service Only $49OVER 60,000 SATISFIED CUSTOMERS LIMITED TIME OFFER While Supplies Last *LIMITED TIME OFFER w w w . o a kv ill eb ea ve r.c o m O A KV IL LE B EA V ER W e dn es da y, D ec em be r 1 , 2 01 0 1 0 By Valerie Hauch Toronto Star A Wellesley St. E. apartment building fire in Toronto last September that displaced more than 1,200 people has claimed another victim, a pet food bank that helped supply food to the buildings pets is closing. Oakville-based Project Maddie which delivered about 900 pounds of cat and dog food to the Wellesley Community Centre, which had been temporarily set up to help residents who had been forced out of their homes cannot meet its operat- ing funds, says director and founder Kimberley Ford, who lives in Oakville and works as an insurance company underwriter. Supplying food to the pets of the Wellesley apartment residents wiped out the supplies in the food bank, said Ford, who did all the deliveries to Toronto in her 2000 Mazda Prot. Most of the food was donated by a commercial retail- er and consisted of food past its expiry date, which is still safe for consumption but cannot be sold. Ford estimates that Project Maddie helped about 300 pets from the fire and another 200 since she started the organization last April. It helped people at risk of losing their pets due to short-term financial instability, as well as seniors and peo- ple living with disabilities on fixed incomes. People would contact her through the website by sending emails or leaving phone messages asking for help. Ford was able to replenish through more commercial dona- tions of pet food and now has 300 pounds, but there is no money to pay operating costs to cover the cost of a postal box, run the web- site, www.projectmaddie.com or pay for gas to deliver food. A volunteer at the Oakville and Milton Humane Society, Ford started the organization because she saw a need to help people who were having trouble finding money to feed their animals. She esti- mates she has spent about $2,000 of her own money on the project. Its all about keeping a pet in a home where its loved and wanted and secure, she said. Since its inception, Ford says she has raised about $800 in dona- tions, which has all been spent on running Project Maddie. She says she needs about $200 a month. Ford says its possible the pet food bank could be revived if there was an outpouring of interest and donations to make it possible. Toronto apartment fire closes Oakville pet food bank Kimberly Ford