Oakville Newspapers

Oakville Beaver, 27 Aug 2010, p. 3

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www.conceptlighting.caELEGANT DISTINCTIVE 243 Speers Road Beween Kerr & Dorval Oakvill, ON 905.849.LITE (5483) OAKVILLES FINEST LIGHTING STORE CONCEPT LIGHTING GALLERIES LIGHTING FROM CORBETT TROY HUDSON VALLEY STONEGATE DESIGN FINE ART AND MUCH MORE * No Down Payment No Interest, No Payments for 6 Months Financing Available Payments as low as $69*/mth Applies to Purchases of $5,000* or More VOTED BEST LIGHTING STORE READERS CHOICE AWARDS OAKVILLE BEAVER W WOOD N FLOOR We Install All Kinds of Floors, Stairs and Railings Refinish Your Wood Floor Like New Serving Oakville residents for over 20 years Call KAZ 905-338-1881 www.woodnfloor.ca t h S a t u r d a y S e p t e m b e r 1 1 I n d i a n W e l l s G o l f C l u b , B u r l i n g t o n = P r o v i d i n g H o c k e y & L a c r o s s e E q u i p m e n t T o C h i l d r e n i n t h e G o l d e n H o r s e s h o e w w w . m o x a m . o r g g o l f @ m o x a m . o r g ( 9 0 5 ) 6 8 9 - 3 0 6 4 = = T h e M e m o r y o f O n e H e l p i n g M a n y S i n g l e G o l f e r $ 1 2 5 P a r e n t & C h i l d $ 2 4 0 F o u r s o m e $ 4 8 0 C o r p o r a t e $ 3 5 0 = = = T o r e g i s t e r , s p o n s o r , d o n a t e o r f o r a d d i t i o n a l i n f o r m a t i o n P r o u d l y S u p p o r t e d b y : I n c l u d e s G o l f , C a r t & B a n q u e t M e m o r i a l G o l f C l a s s i c J O R D A N M O X A M B u r l i n g t o n P o s t F l a m b o r o u g h R e v i e w O a k v i l l e B e a v e r E a g l e P r e s s P r i n t e r s N e x c a p F i n a n c e C o r p o r a t i o n H a l t o n H o n d a C I I n v e s t m e n t s E m p i r e L i f e - G r o u p P l a n s T r u F i n a n c i a l K i r k M c P h e r s o n , S u l l i v a n F e s t e r y g a L L P B o z e k O r t h o d o n t i s t s W a t e r d o w n D e n t a l = = = = = = = 3 Friday , A ugust 27, 2010 O A KVILLE BEA V ER w w w .o akvillebeaver .co m book or to just say hello. Most of the time he could be seen in front of the store saying hello to people walking by. And if they had dogs, he would stop them and spend a lot of time playing and talking with the pets. He even had a piano set up in the store where he would invite people to come in and play and if they wanted to, a sing-a-long as well. Its all about the people, says Ferrier. Ive had a great time here for 37 years. Its about the people who come into the bookshop and thats what I like about it. Sure, you make a little bit of money, but thats not the main thing, said Ferrier. Its a fun place and its always been a fun place. Some of the books people were looking for dated back hundreds of years, while oth- ers he sold were best sellers, often still on the best-sellers list. We also have a lot of books that are cat- egory, like science fiction, cook books, books on history, books on Canada, very old books. People are looking for books from the 1800s, said Ferrier. Quite often we get old family bibles, which are huge books. You can just imagine people carrying these to church on Sunday and its about a 20-pound book. As of press time, the Beaver was unable to obtain comment from the landlord. Looking back 37 years, Ferrier can remember the first customer that walked into his store. The customer bought a book for half-price, at 50 cents. He still has the 50 cents in a plastic case. My first customer came in on Jan. 18, 1973 and she bought a book, Return of the Native by Thomas Hardy, for 50 cents, said Ferrier. It was half-price (as) it cost a dollar on paperback. As of Sept. 4, customers can look for Ferrier and a small selection of his books to temporarily relocate to Kerr Street Village on Saturdays during the farmers market. He will stay there until Thanksgiving. Most of the books are being packed and will be moved to storage. I will likely be up there with very few books, like maybe 300 or 400 or something like that, if anybody wants to drop by and say hello and missed me at the shop, said Ferrier. I might wear something special to be there for the first Saturday away from here. Hopefully sometime we will surface, whether its in the form of a book fair or (store). Return planned to farmers market Continued from page 1 NIKKI WESLEY / OAKVILLE BEAVER GOING OUT OF BUSINESS: Treasure Island Books owner Bruce Ferrier holds the last edi- tion of the Toronto Telegram, an item he intends to keep as a memento of his store closing. Speak up! You can comment on any story in todays Oakville Beaver at oakvillebeaver.com.

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