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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 1989-08-23, Page 19assified FAST___________ DEPENDABLE HIGHLY VISIBLE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE RATES 20 words or less only $3.00. Additional words 12c each. Extra billing charge 50c will be added if not paid the following Wednesday. DEADLINE 2 P.M. MONDAY IN BRUSSELS. 4 P.M. MONDAY IN BLYTH. TRAVEL THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 23, 1989. PAGE 19. BAILEY CANAL CRUISES ON SCENIC Trent-Severn Waterway and Ri- deau Canal aboard Kawartha Voyageur; private staterooms, all meals, free brochure from Captain Marc, Box 1540, Peterborough, K9J7H7. 34-lp ‘Suddenly it's sokT^^f REAL ESTATE LTD. 82 ALBERT STREET ■ CLINTON, ONTARIO. MASON BAILEY ■ BROKER 482-9371 [24 hour service] NEW LISTING: Auburn, 11/2 floor home, 4 bedrooms, large corner lot, can be used commercially. NEW LISTING: Blyth, new home on Morris Street, electric heat, attached garage, ready for occupancy September 1. ONE OF A KIND: railway station, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, large workstSV acre nicely treed lot. CROPLAND: 210 acres, Colborne Township, 2 miles from Goderich. BLYTH: King Street, 11/2 floor frame home on large lot, with garage, close to stores. BLYTH: brick bungalow, Hamilton Street. Like new, many extras. HULLETT TOWNSHIP: 6.2 acres with Victorian home, lots of barns. 50 ACRE FARM: Near Auburn, good frame home, lots of buildings, ideal for part time farming or horses. 100 ACRES: 90 workable, East Wawanosh, all in fall wheat, vendor will finance. THANKSGIVING IN NASHVILLE, October 6th. $369/person plus tax. Includes return air, 3 nights accom­ modation, car, Opryland pass, Opry matinee, cruise, Brenda Lee show, Nashville tour. T & S Tours, 1-800-265-9365. 34-lp Crime Stoppers Crime of the week VEHICLES FOR SALE Vandalism is an ongoing com­ munity problem that costs a lot of money to rectify and effects the safety and beauty of your surroundings. Signs are damaged and have in the past and no doubt will again in the future lead to accidents. Property is physically damag­ ed and the attractiveness of the area destroyed when windows are broken and buildings are painted. Crime Stoppers of Huron County and your local police departments ask for your help to stamp out these costly viola­ tions. On June 26/89 vandals in the village of Brussels spray painted six parking signs with red paint and two curve signs with yellow paint. The perpetrators then painted the East and North sides of the arena with a red line and numerous comments. Suspects for this crime which took place between 2 o’clock in the morning and 6 o’clock in the morning are believed to have been in the area in a Ford F-150 with a 302 engine and 1988 Chevy with a 350 engine. If you have information about this or any other crime call Crime Stoppers toll free at 1-800-265-17777 or locally at 524-6851. If an arrest is made you will earn a cash reward. Crime Stoppers pays between $50 and $100 in cash rewards. You will never be asked to reveal your identity and you will never have to testify in court. Remember crime doesn’t pay but Crime Stoppers does!! SERVICES CLASSIFIED ADS^ f PAYOFF! 1977 NOVA $200 AS IS. 1981 Monza, $200 as is. 1983 Renault Alliance, $500 as is. Walton 887- 9247. 34-1 FOR YOUR PLUMBING NEEDS. Specializing in softeners and re­ pairs. Check our low fixture prices or supply your own. Call Tom Duizer Plumbing 523-4359. 29-tfn TENDERS HOUSEKEEPER - WILLING TO work 1 or 2 days a week in Brussels area. Contact by calling 887-9751. 34-2p DON’S PEST CONTROL AND Landscaping Ltd. Don J. Car­ michael, Manager. Phone 529-7917 Licensed by Ministry of Environ­ ment. 31-4 1978 DODGE B200 MAXI VAN - auto, air, cruise control, 3 way fridge, couch/bed, furnace, dinette. Motor is excellent, needs some body work. $4,000 as is, 887-6912. 34-1 WANTED REQUIRED IMMEDIATELY OR sooner - single, male new teacher at Brussels has two dogs, two cats and three horses, requires to rent/board living accommodations. Non-smoker. Save your nickel, please call collect Dale 1-416-878- 3453 anytime. Thank you. 34-lp ORNAMENTAL RAILING, custom welding, bale thrower racks, trailers, custom hitches, machinery repairs and fabricating. Call Peter de Jong, 523-4816. 32-tfn CUSTOM ROUND BALING - HAY and straw. Phone Richard Harris, 887-9463. 32-3p HANK’S SMALL ENGINE SALES and Service, Highway 4, Londes- boro. Complete service for small engines. Dealer for Canadiana, Bolens, Weed Eater, Poulan and Badger Farm Equipment. Call 523-9202. 25-tfn ’Purifiner. & WATER SOFTENERS •Iron Taste & Odor Removal Filters •Sales. Service & Rentals CALL: HERMAN RAMAKER 482-9948 No Sunday calls, please. COUNTY OF HURON TENDERSFOR RENTALOF20,800KG. G.W.V. CHASSIS SALTING AND SANDING OPERATIONS& SALTHAULING SEALED TENDERS on forms and in envelopes available from the office of the undersigned will be received until 4:00 P.M. local time on: THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER7.1989 for the following contracts: 1] Rental of 20,800 kg. G.W.V. Chassis for salting & sanding operations in the Wroxeter Patrol 1989-1990 season. HC-89-502 2] Rental of 20,800 Kg. G.W.V. Chassis for salting & sanding operations in the Auburn Patrol 1989-1990 season. HC-89-501 3] Hire a truck tractor and dump trailer to haul road salt from Domtar Chemical in Goderich to thethree patrol yards [Wroxeter, Auburn and Zurich] in Huron County HC-89-504 The lowest or any tender not necessarily accepted. FAMILY WITH 2 CHILDREN looking for house with outbuilding of approximately 600 -1,000 square feet for workshop. 100 amp service essential. Phone 887-9793 or 1-741- 5169. . 32-4 WANTED TO BUY: SCRAP CAR and trucks. L & B Auto Wreckers, 1/4 mile south of Brussels. Call 887-9499. 30-10 WANTING TO RENT OR SHARE crop land for fall wheat. Phone evenings, 887-6009, John Gillis. 33-2p WANTED TO RENT 2 OR 3 BEDROOM HOUSE, BRUS- sels or towards Atwood and Lis- towel by September 30/89. Phone 887-6180. 33-2p OLDER PAINTINGS AND WORKS of Art. One or entire collection. Karl Mearns, Box 1266, Caledonia, Ont. N0A 1A0 (416) 765-6782.34-lp Advertise in the NEWSPAPER for results that are music to your ears! Denis B. Merrall, P. Eng. Huron County Engineer Court House Goderich, Ontario N7A 1M2 RunningOut Of Ideas? Head For The Classifieds! Couple tells of life in New Guinea Continued from page 14 cents. There’s coconuts, straw­ berries (much to our delight), pineapples, cauliflower, broccoli, cabbage, and various New Guinea mystery fruits and vegetables (we’re not sure what they are). Everything is fresh, and always in season. Socially, this is a place where you have to make your own entertain­ ment. On Wednesday and Friday evenings, we go to the “Aero Club”. It’s basically a pub, where the people Glenn works with, and associates, gather for an after-work drink. Beer costs about $1.30 and tastes like a Molson product, so it’s not hard to adjust to. The Aero Club is very informal, and open to all expats that want to stop by. There’s also a tennis and squash club, and a golf club in town. However, joining is pricy, and with a two month on, one month off deal, we won’t be here a third of the time, so we haven’t signed up yet. There’s also plenty of barbe­ cues, and social functions that get us out and about. We have three channels on our TV, two from Australia and one national. Em TV (the New Guinea station) has a new show starting this week, called, “Star Trek”, it’s on just before the “6 Million Dollar Man”. TV here is a trip down memory lane. The Aussie channels have decent docu­ mentaries and information shows, and a week isn’t complete without an episode of the “Flying Doc­ tors.” We’re looking forward to doing some travelling, and have been planning our ‘escape’. We’ll hit North-eastern Australia first. We’re hoping to see most of Australia, and New Zealand during our stay. We’re also hoping to get to Asia at some point too, but in typical Lisa and Glenn fashion, nothing is certain until we do it. When we are travelling, the plan is to buy a cheap vehicle, and have enough camping equipment to be pretty much self sufficient. All indication so far, is prices are pretty reasonable, so it looks like a month of holidaying shouldn’t be too much of a strain. Well, that concludes our first Papua New Guinea Report. Lisa typed it, and you can see why she isn’t holding down a secretarial position. We hope you have a great a smart thing to do for himself. summer and you can write us. Speaking of communication, we don’t have a telephone at our house, although there is one at the compound. We don’t really miss a phone either. For language, it’s an interesting place. Most people here are from Australia or New Zealand so you hear a lot of that accent. The scary thing is we’re finding we can understand that dialect, and it doesn’t sound strange. In fact, I find myself thinking in that accent some times. The good thing is we can speak “Canadian” to each other, and the other Canucks we know. There’s about 10 or so Canadians we’ve heard of in the country. The nationals speak English and Pidgeon mostly. Pid- geon is a cross between English, and native languages. It sounds like pig latin, where you can almost understand it. I’ve been studying it a bit, but haven’t got to the level where I can read a newspaper in it yet. Our favourite term in Pidgeon is the one you use when something doesn’t work, or has been broken. It’s “buggerum up”. Best wishes, Lisa and Glenn. Mabel’s Continued from page 4 taxes but now they’ve found a way to get you even when you’re gone.” THURSDAY: Ward Black was say­ ing there’s an easy way to get around all the money we’re spend­ ing these days on psychiatric services. Instead of putting people through months of analysis to see if they’re nuts, he said, you could ask them one simple question: If it was offered to you, would you accept the job of Toronto Maple Leaf s coach? Anybody who says yes, you quickly lock up in a rubber room. FRIDAY: So much for those old Polish jokes that preceded the Newfie jokes, said Julia this morn­ ing. The smartest politician around seems to be Lech Walesa, head of Solidarity, the union in Poland. “Everybody else wants to be leader of his country. He just wants to pick his best friend for the job. It may not be a nice thing to do for his friend, but in that country it sure is 99 CALL CITIZEN CLASSIFIED AT 523-4792 OR 887-9114 24 HOURS A DAY