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Penetanguishene Citizen (1975-1988), 20 Aug 1975, p. 9

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Steg re Newbu Ail. Redhead St. Ann's Church is the scene of the July 18 marriage of Mary Newburn to J. Penetaniguishene. Redhead both from Courtesy of Photo-Box, Penetanguishene Twitchen - Pilon wedding August 9 at St. Ann's - the date and the setting for the marriage of Debbie Twitchen to Andrew Pilon. Debbie Twitchen is the daughter of Mrs. Smith Oil spill charges are laid Bryan Gauthier of St. Catharines, and representatives of Kilbear Construction Company of Toronto and the steamship the C.P. Edwards are scheduled to appear in Provincial court in Penetanguishene on September 11 following the laying of charges against the three parties over the July 30 oil spill at the Penetanguishene town docks. The charges were made by the federal Ministry of Transport on August 5. All the charges call for a maximum fine of up to $100,000 but they are not expected to go that high should the various parties be found guilty according to Reg Hobman, a Ministry of Tran- sportation official in Collingwood. Gauthier and Kilbear Construction Company each face two charges: one for failing to take precautions against an oil spill and the other for failing to report the oil spill when it occurred. The third charge against the ship itself is for spilling oil. The owner of the ship' would be responsible for any fine which may arise as a {-- Leo} result of the charge against the ship. Bryan Gauthier was in the process of negotiating the sale of the C.P. Edwards from Kilbear Construction Limited when the spill occurred. Work under Gauthier's direction was taking place on the boat when an estimated 50 gallons of bunker oil spilled out of a holding tank of the steamship into the waters the town surrounding Penetanguishene docks. Gauthier and a business partner (although not necessarily co-owner of the boat) Tom McGuire have been unavailable for comment. to this newspaper since July 31. At that time Gauthier / said he would accept liability for the clean-up costs of the oil spill - and the late Ernest Twitchen. John | Pilon is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Pilon. The bride, her husband and their parents are all from Penetanguishene. Courtesy of Photo-Box, Penetanguishene WORRIED ABOUT YOUR COTTAGE OR HOUSE THIS WINTER THEN CALL THE EXPERTS AT FO seven Hluronra ALAKM a SxstEMs Central Static Montoring Please Name.. Donald A. Bryant, Pres Nadress PHONE $27 2638 PENETANGUISHENE ONT Box 1171 Phone. Offering a NEWBeginning R HIGH SCHOOLERS Highly qualified teachers, in a country setting, guide students through grades to thirteen at their own pace. Midhurst College combines the proven Ministry of Education accredited courses. | success of small classes with send full information to:- 33 Robert St. W. Residencies are available } Pitan NOG cence oneac hospitals and offices. We drive snow- your environmental rights. ° The irony is that we have few rights ourselves. Many of us feel we are being used by. the government. Take for example the last budget. The government attempted to woo your vote by cutting back on the civil service. This will save taxpayers a fifth of a cent on their tax dollar. That isn't even a pittance when you consider that the budget calls for over $10-billion of your money. 60,000 voices can't talk back. The Ontario government has silenced its employees. Our job is to provide services to the public. We work in colleges, plows, inspect your food and protect ° You see, to the government we are political pawns. And that's not good. People who work with retarded children, the sick and the infirm, those who run our correctional centres and inspect.our food have been cut back. ~ Public services will suffer. But the government won't let us take part in the democratic' Process to bring about change. For us that is illegal. We can't canvass for a candidate. We can't speak or write publicly on any party's platform. We can't talk about the real issues. We have fewer civil rights than other citizens. All'we want is equality And that won't cost taxpayers a cent. We hope that you will vote for civil rights... equal rights for everyone. We only want to be heard. Whose rights go next? RN The total number of young Canadians who've taken part this year in the all-sports Junior Olympics program has soared past the 150,000 mark. The program, spon- sored by Royal Bank and co-ordinated by Canadian Olympic Association, has in the first seven months DANCE TIME at CREEMORE ARENA SAT. AUG. 23 9til 1 plus music by THE NOCTURNS of Barrié Cabaret with Bar $8. per couple 466-2002 or 466-2547 for table or tickets A Lions Presentation filled half a dozen stadia, not with spectators but with 150,061 actively competing young people, a number that perhaps goes a step towards stiffling the hue and cry that Canada produces nothing but witnesses to sports -- not persons actually taking part. "The way it is going," said Kenneth Murray, COA Director of Programs here and the Junior Olympics' chief co-ordinator, "I see the likelihood that we will have involved something like 200,000 youngsters in the program by the end of the year." A little over a year and a half ago, Royal Bank linked arms with the COA to provide the backing on a national scale the sports participation program which set out with this simple aim: to get just as many Canadians, aged nine to 19, taking part in sports (150,000 participate in sports program activities of their choice. July was far and away the record month for Junior Olympics par- ticipants with a count of 49,519. The count for June of 38,036 had been the previous high. Track and field is the sport most actively engaged in followed by swimming. for you. The new HOMELITE_ 150-Automatic specially priced Easy service -- and less of it, with the 150-Automatic sim- ple design and construction. Easy handling -- with vinyl coated Sure-Grip han- dies. Plus positive action, easy to operate controls. Designed for homeowners, does rough carpentry jobs right up with the big ones. Has features like larger fuel and chain oil capacity, auto- matic oiler, 16' bar, hemispherical combustion chamber for extra power. "suggested retail price AERRY INDUSTRIES ice m DODD'S KIDNEY PILLS | 35's Special 7§ r , i | iy Dodd's Pills I ET ultra brite 3 ULTRA-BRITE TOOTH PASTE 5 oz. Special 77 r GLADE 6 oz. Deodorant Room Air Freshener Spray Special 4 g s LONG & SILKY |¢ by CLAIROL [= 8 oz. ~~ $1.88) If you like 'FINAL NET', you'll love... WEATHER or NOT, JOHNSON"S BABY SHAMPOO 450 mi. $3.39 Value ~ $1.99 A\ \-e-- 4 4 oz. jar. orem $1 9 Q a ESSENCE BODY POWDER 4o0z. Special 8 8 8 MUSK BATH OIL Lemon or Jasmine 22 oz. Special qj q s STERISOL MOUTH WASH 22 oz. ~~ $119 SHAMPOO Regular, Dry, Oily, Gentle, or Lemon. 20 oz. Sugg. List $1.69 Your Choice Special G q 6S NEW ANTI-DANDRUFF BRYLCREEM S anti-dandruff ingredient i as Head-& Shoulders. S$] 2 % 3 oz. Hairdressing. a SS ee cial Contains the same os $1.88 ee NEW ARRID« Anti-Perspirant Spray. 6 oz. Sugg. List $2.19 Special DOUBLE EDGE RAZOR BLADES ~ $1.19 15's 10 Plus 5 Free! WILKINSON ers: Mon.-Sat. 10 a.m. - 10 p.m. $2.49 BS SS SS CSS SSS SSSR FTSSSE0ee0rs 008 GARBAGE BAGS 2 Packages. of 10 for only Special 79 s with COUPON == METAMUCIL x= LAXATIVE % 12 oz. clip coupon Expires Aug. 24th 1975 a LA \ Sun. 11 a.m. -5 p.m. Sale Ends August 24, 1975 HURONIA MALL, MIDLAND We reserve the right to limit quantities. y, RAAAADAAAAAASAAAT AAA DAA AAA AD Wednesday, August 20, 1975, Page 9

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