Barbara has been my stylist for over 25 years. She is a colour specialist and is fabulous at developing the right colour for you complexion and liking. She will listen to what you want and also consult with you her suggestions, taking in all factors into consideration. She keeps up with the latest hair styles and I believe she can do any style from her vast experience. I highly recommend Barbara as your next stylist.Read more
Hanover Homes won 2 awards in the Spring Parade of Homes. Condo - Best Visual Interior Appeal and Bronze for Condo. We'd like to extend a special thanks to all those who came out and voted! For those who haven't made it out to our presentation center yet, come check it out! (located at the corner of Leila and Mandalay in Winnipeg).
180 Design offers specialized interior design and home staging services in Winnipeg and Southeast Manitoba, helping clients transform spaces with personalized, client-led design solutions. Their expertise spans colour consultation, AutoCAD design, and luxury room styling tailored to individual preferences and budgets.
The Rural Municipality of Hanover is a populous municipality in southeastern Manitoba, Canada, providing various community services, recreational programs, and governance for residents and visitors.
Providing the best possible alternatives in Economical and Portable FM Radio and Television BroadcastingWANTOK Home PageNote to all past clients of Wantok Enterprises Ltd.: Ron Robbins wishes to thank you for the many years of support you have given him. He has retired from the broadcasting equipment business, but continues to support you through International Broadcast Transmitters Ltd. which he assisted in creating, by providing a transfer of knowledge, information, and technology. For Wantok broadcast equipment, please proceed to www.internationalbroadcast.ca .Our MissionTo make it feasible for every group/organization in the world to own, operate and maintain their own community broadcast station regardless of their socioeconomic conditions.
Grunthal was first settled in 1876 by Russian Mennonites who had come to Canada in what is referred to as the first major wave of Russian immigration. James Urry, in his book None But Saints, defines the three big immigration movements of Mennonites from Russia to America. The first was in the 1870's when Alexander II (then Czar) voided the charters that provided Russian Mennonites from Religious Freedoms and self-determination of their communities. From 1873 to 1884 about 8,000 Mennonites migrated to Manitoba, with another 13,000 settling in the mid-western United States. The second major wave of Russian Mennonites migrated to Canada soon after the Russian Revolution in 1919.