Whitbv'q. ost Wldeiy RearI SSI1FIEFD ~GNS IS NOTICE TO CREDITORS & OTHERS IN THE ESTATE 0F AGNES CATHERINE HICKEY IN THE ESTATE 01 AGNES HICKEY, persons against1 AGNES HICKEY, Town of Regionai1 who died on or*about"the 8th day 'of September 1982, are hereby notlfied to sent particulars of same to the underslgned on or before the lSth day of October 1983, after which date the estate wili be distrlbuted with regard oniy to the claims of which the under- slgned shall than have notice and the under. signed wiIl ot be liable to any person of whos dlaim they shai l ot then have notice. DATED at- the City of Oshawa this 25th day of August 1983. BERNARD FREEMAN, Executor of the estate of AGNES CATHERINE HICKEY by her soilcitor ALAN BERK, 650' KING ST. ,E., OSHAWA, ON- TARIO, L1 H 1 G5. MI CATHERINE deceased. Ail having cdaims the estate of CATHERINE late 0f -the fAJax ln the Municipality of CORNEILS AUCTION BARN FRIDAY SEPT. 2 8:30 PM 3 miles east -of<Lttie Britain or 7 miles west of Lndsay on the Lin- dsaylilttie Britain' Rd. Findiay ovai 000k stove, caress back chairs, bunk beds, oak buffet, birds- oye mnapie chest of drawers, wash stand, portable colour TV, dlnlng roomn extension table, chesterfieid -& matching chair, press back rockers, Findlay 2409 eiectrIc stove, oak Highboy dresser, leather top coffee and end tables, 7 h.p. Craftsman rlding lawnmower, l2ft aiuminumn boat wlth 5 h.p Viking motor, Pioneer chainsaw, quantity of crocks, tools and depression glass. DON CORNEIL AUCTIONEER R.R.1 LITTLE BRITAIN 705-788-2183 AUCTION SALE, LABOUR DAY MONDAY SEPT. 5 10:00 AM Brookiin Communlty Hall. For the estate of the late William (Sandy) and Miss Stella Browne, Oshawa. Househoid and workshop contents from this oid Oshawa home. EARL DAVIS AUCTIONEER 728-4455 MOLEAN FLEA & FARMERS MARKET LINDSAY Open every Fr1. 2 to 9 p.m. Sat. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m. Holiday Monday 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Crafts, yard sales, bargains on gifts and new merchandise. Free draw. Vîsit our 60 yen- dors. Informnation 705- 324-2783. AUCTIONEERS - Cal 668-6111 to advertlse your next sale. YOU KNOW THE RIGHT PEOPLE... wherever YOU move the Wei- corne Wagon hostess la the rght person to help you flnd a place ln your new comrnunlîy. Cali 66-843 M (lA PICKERING NUCLEAR STATION- The record speake for ltself- Altbough the Pickering Nuclear Generating Station is a familiar name to the residents of the Durham area, recent publicity bas resulted in, the nuclear station becoming a household Word throughout the province. From thé inception of the Pickering Nuclear Station,' staff have been available to provide Ontarians with a better under- standing of the role of nuclear power., The Nuclear Communications Centre is botb ex- citing and informative and contains a variety of display panels, annnated models, videotapes and computer games for those interested in -the subject of nuclear power. Ontario Hydro takes its responsibility to, the public serlously and bas worked dlligently to keep everyone weil inforxned about the operations of the nuclear station.' The community projeects at Pickering are impor- tant and successful, complementlngý the reputation which the Pickering Nuclear Generating Station bas attained'in the tecimical field. In ternis of lifetime performance, Pickermng's four umits rank in the top 10 in the world, for cumulative reliability and efficiency of commercial size reactors. Nuclear power is a vital element ini Ontario's energy strategy for the future, and we intend to con- Report-from Q ueen 's Park B The lion. (ieorge A4ihe, NI lV (P- Durham West) Miitrof Goverument Services ail. e f h ulc a vr rcie Nmeberadoftthe'publicfhserPrceidg msurbertation or ne d oefrOntherimcer station.oideayohe nal ula stton.,rncer okr.hsý vr"cie Naionydrosne tarwork er bda evr civied a ra in ds ba old edciy lsl.ida ane Picuryn. ula tto heenoeo h Motse Piel nuceaStatstiohas the nadoft most sucessfutheinvtaromoeentsttheaOnain Gyoernmeentrthedentarohe ret, ad otarlo Hydolaveevr mdn the reactorsdhav paid for them-e selesny teeas and bavn e p o then iselvesro Picantve over sincee th en. mmission s o Psieringbavetner exmcEededtanl liiard sTabheeind bnsheuAti nrgy aCnrolBor wthe ds igtn ad constctisofCndu r noeto twb if builtin safey st eisi ed to nonwesin them ore Notigbilatecandesafaend to lwesa r oem r niiae n safaetandt rea o tem.o o oeidvdul il o h Regaprdlesst ow smeandividueals wiheforthir- owdnpus teitrind ggratintbr'eet.. t- rcdea f the cein ttonIrpat. h rec seaks folr- itself. edeetrct n Safe, c ntinu ear-neatedpsiectrit in wiil cotue obgeaoncte.pstv. trntsi Novices w-in ýOMLA ti'tie BY TOM FRANK The major Novices, sponsored by the Wbitby Op- timists, bave won the OMLA Zone 6 Championsbip held'thîs weekend in Ajax. Zone 6 includes aIl teams between the Beaches in Toronto to Peterboro. The Optimists -won their first game 10-6 over i3eaches. Rob Martin had a hat-trick with pairs by David Wood and Alan Frank and singles by Jason Pitters, Chris Thompson and Matt Shearer. Oshawa forfeited the second game. In the third game, the Optimists were not op- timistic since they had not been able to defeat Scar- boro in regular season play but with some bard work, they had a 4-1 lead at' the end of the first period. Tbey went on to win 8-4. Frank and* Wood had pairs witb.singles by Thom- pson, Pitters, Martin and Danny Ladouceur. In the finals on Sunday, they met Scarbor o again. Close cbecking by the whole team and strong goaltending by Wayne Paddick gave the Optimistsaa convincing 14-3 win for the Zone Cbampionship. Wood bad four, Martin and Shearer eacb had three, while Dennis Directo and Frank bad pairs. The Optimists also found out that they had won the Gold Badge in the SkilI Competition that was beld during tbe Provincials. They bad'the'second highest score among the novice teamns in Ontario.. The minor Novice lacrosse,-team- played-off for the "B" title of the OMLAZone 6. They won the first game 8-3 over Aj».AneWn dover and Jonas Derks had tbre, each wAnoerin by Kelly Vipond and Zacb Hayden. This Wbitby No. 2,team played well but lost 5-4 t0 Peterboro in a penalty filed game. >. Goals were by Vipond, John Emmr,' Sandy Crawford and Windover. In the finals, they met Peterboro again and jum- ped into the lead but Peterboro camie bacïk to win 8- 6., Whitby goals were pairs by Derks and Windover and singles by Vipond and Crawford. In the last season game before the zone playoffs, the Whitby No. 2 showed vast improvement over previous encounters as they bast 8-3 to the Whitby No. 1 novice team. The second team's goals were by Kelly Vipond with two and John Emm. The Optimists'goals were by Rob Martin with four and -pairs by Alan Frank and Dennis Directo. 7>51 BREAK- THROUGH lu NEW & USED CAR BoUYS 1140 ... DUY... SELL .IUSTCALL 668-6111 Why Net Attend An AUCTION SALE Thi WookendI ADVERTISING SALESPERSON REQUIRED Challenging, excltlng work and ffrlendly atmosphere. Experlence plot necessary but transportation Is. Small local Company wlth, good reputation. lnterested parties cali Andy at 668.61 il for further detalis. Timber! Thi hue reeon en St inWbtby a removed as part of a town project designed W ftim and remove PotetialY derostr L thntera aeadrfof Windsor, us pictured here &hlmlng. FÃreePresStaffPhoto IY FR EE PRESS, WEONESDAY AUG UST 31, 1983, PAGE 19 Vinue to develop its potential. After ail, while On- tario bas few fossil fuels, we have an abundant sup- ply of electrlclty, produced through nuclear and hydro power. In light of the adverse pubicity wblch the Pickering Nuclear Centre bas recelved there are a few facts whlch bear repeating: The average cost of a kilowatt-hour of electricity from the Pickering station ini 1982 was 1'.58 cents (the comparable figure at the Lambton coal-fired generating station, bult about the same time as Pickering and otherwise comparable, was 2.37 cen- ts, or about 50 per cent higher) Pickering has produced more electricîty than any other nuclear station in the world'(155 billion kilowatt-hours or nearly 8 times the electrical con- sumption of Metropolitan. Toronto in 1981) and its performance bas been the-best in the world, over- a F