HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 1992-07-29, Page 19Obituaries
MURRAY ROBERT
RAYMOND
Peel Regional Homicide
Detective Murray Raymond has
died after a lengthy battle with
cancer. The 17-year veteran was
38.
Born and raised in Brussels,
Murray completed his elementary
and secondary school education
here.
Early in his life, Murray sought a
career in policing. To prepare
himself, he enrolled and graduated
from a Law Enforcement course at
Seneca College. On August 25,
1975, Murray was sworn in as an
officer of the Peel Regional Police
where he has served as a respected
member and enjoyed the reputation
of an accomplished Detective in
criminal investigations.
Murray has been a resident of the
city of Brampton since his move
from his native Brussels.
He is survived by his wife
Margaret and two children, Jaime
and Matthew. He also leaves to
mourn his loss his parents, Bob and
Doreen Raymond, Brussels; his
brothers and sisters, Bruce and
Gwen of Brussels, Keith and Loree
of Lucknow, Colleen and Doug
Smith of Keswick, Carol and
Roland Glitz of Brampton; parents-
in-law, Gladys and Bert Wood;
brother-in-law, Michael Wood and
12 nieces and nephews, who will
sorely miss their Uncle Murray.
Murray will be remembered by
his family, Brampton friends and
police colleagues, and his many
Brussels friends.
Bible
groups
meet
On the evening of July 13, three
different bible study groups and
their families got together for a
time of food and fellowship at the
Blyth Lions Park.
The Coffee Break/Story Hour
group, Men's Life and the Coffee
Break group held at the home of
Russell and Marion Cook, put
together a joint effort to enjoy the
unity of being Christians by having
this potluck supper and fellowship
evening which was attended by
approximately 100 people.
After a delicious supper a sing
song was held, led by song leaders,
Joanne VanAmersfoort, Darlene
Vander Veen and Donald Bakelaar.
Then it was entertainment for the
children. Les and Jackie Cook
along with daughter Katie delighted
the children (and adults) with
stories, skits, balloons and puppets.
It was such a good evening that it is
anticipated it will become a yearly
event. The Bible Study Groups will
resume meeting in the Fall.
JAMES W. RILEY
James W. Riley passed away on
Sunday, July 19, 1992 at South
Huron Hospital, Exeter. He was in
his 87th year.
Mr. Riley was the loving father
of Beverley Riley of Ingersoll,
Wayne Riley of Brussels and Phyl
lis Gower of Centralia. He will be
remembered by his 12 grandchil
dren and 11 great-grandchildren.
Mr. Riley is survived as well by a
sister-in-law, Gladys Locking of
Brussels. His wife the former
Verna White predeceased him in
1982.
Mr. Riley rested at Betts Funeral
Home in Brussels on Monday from
7-9 p.m. Rev. Carolyn McAvoy
officiated at the funeral service
which was held at 2 p.m. on Tues
day at the funeral home.
Interment was held at Brussels
Cemetery.
LANGTHON VOGAN
Langthon Vogan died on Friday,
July 24, 1992 at Listowel Memorial
Hospital. He was 86.
Mr. Vogan's passing will be
mourned most deeply by his wife
the former Elva Brown of Living
stone Manor, Listowel. He was the
loved brother of Gibson Vogan of
Harriston and Grenville Vogan of
St. Thomas. Mr. Vogan will be
missed by his many nieces and
nephews. He was predeceased by
one brother and one sister.
Funeral services were held at 2
p.m. on Sunday at Betts Visitation
Centre, Gorrie. Rev. Jeff Hawkins
officiated at the service. Pallbearers
were Gerald Brown, Joe Brown,
Peter Keil, Lloyd Vogan, Ray
Vogan and John Harris. Carrying
floral tributes were Bill Keil, Tim
Keil and Les Watkins.
Interment was held at Gorrie
Cemetery.
WEST WAWANOSH
TWP. COUNCIL
Wishes to express its
sincere thanks and
appreciation to the chair,
co-chair and all mem
bers of the committee of
Warrior Days for a
tremendous job of orga
nization; to Master of
Ceremonies Murray
Gaunt; to the entrants in
a super parade and all
events; to the chair
members and pianist
who practised faithfully
to contribute so capably
to the Sunday worship
service; to the
Reverends Garth &
Orillia Bogart, Sandra
McNee and Father Joe
Lupo for leading the wor
ship; and to any and all
who participated and
assisted in any way dur
ing Warrior Days. Finally
a sincere thank you to all
who attended, and made
Warrior Days such a
success.
THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JULY 29,1992. PAGE 19.
Ministry sets rent guidelines
The Ministry of Housing
announced recently, the rent
control guideline for 1993, the first
to be calculated under the new rent
control act, will be 4.9 per cent, a
reduction from the 1992 guideline
of 6 per cent.
The guideline is the amount by
which a landlord can increase the
rent for a unit once each year. Most
tenants in Ontario receive a recent
increase no greater than the
guideline.
The guideline is based on
increases in the costs of operating
rental housing averaged over three
years. These operating costs, of
which property tax is the largest
portion, accounts for 2.9 per cent of
the guideline figure. The guideline
also includes two per cent to cover
the cost of repairs to the building.
In some cases, landlords may
receive an increase of up to three
per cent above the guideline for
necessary, legitimate repairs or for
very high increases in utilities or
property taxes. To receive an
above-guideline increase, a
landlord must justify the costs at a
rent control hearing.
The Rent Control Act was passed
by the government in June, and
takes effect on August 10.
By August 10, the Ministry will
have reorganized its offices and
procedures to administer the new
system. Until then, the current rent
review system remains in place.
HURON COUNTY COMMUNITY
CHILD ABUSE COORDINATING COMMITTEE
(CCACC) is seekmg a Coordinator
for
Kids on the Block, a physical and sexual abuse prevention program, presented
in the County Public and Separate Schools, with use of puppets.
The successful applicant will be responsible for coordinating and training vol
unteers for the program, arranging and facilitating presentations and speaking to
interested community groups.
This is a 2 day-a-week position. Sept. - May. travel allowance included.
Interested applicants should have good organizational and public speaking
skills, the ability to relate well with a variety of agencies and good reporting
and documentation skills.
Please submit resume in writing to:
Debbie Selkirk, president of C.C.A.C.C.
P.O. Box 456
Goderich, Ont.
N7A4C7
Deadline for application is July 29/92
CROSS CANADA MARKETPLACE
IT'S FAST - IT’S EASY! ONE CALL, ONE BILL DOES IT ALL.
COMING EVENTS
COUNTRY CONCERTS: Garth Brooks, Clint
Black, Allan Jackson, Doug Stone, Hank
Williams Jr., Billy Ray Cyrus. For ticket
packages, call Great Canadian Tours 613-546-
5997, 613-384-0796.
CRAFTWORLD ARTS, CRAFTS & COUNTRY
Collectibles October 16-18. Metro East Trade
Centre, Brock Road, Pickering. The largest
show of its kind in Canada! Information (519)
351-8344.
HAVELOCK COUNTRY JAMBOREE PARTY
with Ronnie Hawkins, Good Brothers, Mac
Wiseman, Jim, Jesse, Anita Perras, Terry
Sumsiom, Aug. 14, 15, 16, 705-778-3353 days,
705-778-5206 nights.
ST. JACOBS GRAFT SHOW AND SALE:
Saturday August 22,9 a.m. - 5 p.m.; Sunday
August 23, 10 a.m. - 5 p.m. Adults $2.50.
Arena full of crafts! St. Jacobs Arena, follow
Hwy. 86, north of Kitchener-Waterloo.
STEEL BUILDINGS
BEST BUILDING PRICES - Steel Straitwall
Type - not quonset - 32x54 $7,344; 40x72
$10,276; 50x90 $15,882; 60x126 $22,972 -
other sizes available - Final summer clearance
- Paragon - 24 Hours 1-800-263-8499.
THE BEST BUILDING OPPORTUNITY OF
THE YEAR. DON'T MISS IT! Ontario
Manufacturer Direct...Many types and sizes.
LARGE SAVINGS on models 30 feet wide to 60
feet wide. GUARANTEED LOWEST PRICES.
Example 46x80 complete with ends = $2.71 per
square foot. After July 31st = $3.28. SAVE
$2,098. BUY FACTORY DIRECT and
save....Call BUILDINGS 'R' US 1-800-668-
5422.
STEEL BUILDINGS. A cheap Building offers no
flexibility, may even cost more money. The
answer, Future Steel. Thousands of people
can't be wrong. Call 1-800-668-8653.
CAREER TRAINING
LEARN, AUCTIONEERING at the Southwestern
School of Auctioneering. Next Class: Nov. 21-
27. Information, contact: Southwestern Ontario
School of Auctioneering, R.R. #5, Woodstock,
Ontario, N4S 7V9 (519) 537-2115.
TRUCK DRIVER training AZ and DZ courses,
also air brake, dangerous goods, defensive
driving, log book and border crossing. Rodgers
School, Ontario's oldest. Call 1-800-668-0031.
AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
GOVERNMENT SEIZED/SU RPLUS
VEHICLES U.S. and Canadian low as $100.
BMWs, Cadillacs, Chevs, Fords, Mercedes,
Porsches, trucks, vans. Amazing free 24-hr.
recording reveals how. 1-416-631-4666.
BUSINESS SERVICES
GOVERNMENT GRANTS, LOANS &
assistance programs (Federal & Provincial) for
your new or existing small business.
Information (514) 937-2422 ext. 98.
EMPLOYMENT OPPORTUNITIES
WE NEED A MORTGAGE BROKER or real
estate broker to act as mortgage agent in this
area. Call Intransicon Financial Group 1-800-
268-1429 ask for "J.R."
KLUSKUS SCHOOL, REMOTE AREA.
Kindergarten - grade 10 preference. Category
4-5-6. Certified any province in Canada.
Deadline: August 10, 1992. Send resume by
fax: 1-604-992-3929 or phone: 1-604-992-
8186.
MORTGAGES
MORTGAGE MONEY FOR HOMEOWNERS.
Pay Off Bills, Credit Cards! Start New
Business. Example: Borrow $10,000, Repay
$100.00 Monthly. No Qualifying Hassles.
Intransicon Financial Toll-Free 1-800-268-1429.
HELP WANTED
We need you to sell toys & gifts for C & M Gifts.
NO INVESTMENT, NO DELIVERIES, no
collection. Call 519-258-7905 or fax 519-258-
0707 for free info.
SENIOR REPORTER FOR LARGE EASTERN
Ontario weekly. Preferably 2 years' experience.
Good compensation. Call Chris Must, Smiths
Falls Record News. (613) 283-3182, fax (613)
283-7480.
VACATION/TRAVEL
SOUTH CAROLINA-MYRTLE BEACH
RESORT. Oceanfront condos, housekeeping
included. Indoor/outdoor pools, whirlpools,
saunas, tennis, putting green. Summer rentals
from $505/week. Free brochure: 1-800-448-
5653.
BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES
Importer of BLUE LIGHT BLOCK sunglasses
seeks energetic agents, distributors, retailers
for best-selling, popular line of sunglasses. 3-
year warranty, newspaper advertising support.
Active Accessories Inc. (416) 338-2422.
Your ad could appear in community newspapers in Ontario, or right across Canada,
or any individual province. Space is Limited, so Call This Newspaper Today!