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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 1995-10-11, Page 19W755.5555..X5:X55575?.7.•:WWWW, • ,y• 44.3J 'MI; 7 5 g.,47.•FP.W7.415:::: , • .?ZiMMMEiWOWZAraneNeMai:MS.M.IAMMIMMA.,AMPEOWN.MIMON .............................. . . . . . CLASSIFIED MARKETPLACE "Advertise Across Ontario or Across the Country" COMING EVENTS 17th LONDON ARTS & CRAFTS CHRISTMAS Show & Sale, Centennial Hall, London. Friday Oct. 27, noon- 10p.m., Saturday Oct. 28, 11a.m.-10p.m., Sunday, Oct.29, 11a.m.-5p.m. Olga Tra- her 519-679-1810. 14th FALL FOREST CITY NOSTALGIA & Antique Show & Sale. Canada Building Western Fairgrounds, London. Oct. 14 noon-9p.m., Oct.15 11a.m.-5p.m. $3.50. 60 dealers! Olga Traher 519-679-1810. BUSINESS OPPS. TRAVEL AGENCY - $14,995. Full Train- ing and Ongoing Support. Full-time/Part- time, Home or Office. Many travel bene- fits. LIMITED AVAILABILITY. T.P.I. Canada Inc., 1-800-799-9910 or 1-204- 987-3322 - Winnipeg. ARE YOU READY for the next logical step in free enterprise? FRANCHISING SQUARED. $1,000-$5,000 investment. $25,000-$250,000 annual income poten- tial, full-time/part-time.1-800-613-1411. LOG HOME DEALERSHIP OPPORTU- NITY with Canada's leading log home manufacturer. Call or write today. Bill Morris, P.O. Box 9, Bobcaygeon, Ontario, KOM 1A0 1-800-567-0270. BUSINESS SERVICES GOVERNMENT FUNDS. Government assistance programs information avail- able. For your new or existing business. Take advantage of the government grants and loans. Call 1-800-915-3615. CAREER TRAINING A NEW CAREER! Learn Income Tax Preparation or Basic Bookkeeping. Tax deductible certificate courses. For free brochures, no obligation: U & R Tax Schools, P.O. Box 6052, London, Ontario, N5W 5R6. 1-800-665-5144. Enquire about exclusive franchise territo- ries. COUNSELLOR TRAINING Institute of Vancouver offers correspondence cours- es for the certificate of Counselling Stud- ies to begin October 31. For a brochure phone toll-free 1-800-665-7044. EMPLOYMENT OPPS. INTERNATIONAL AGRICULTURAL EXCHANGE - Ages 18-30 with agricultur- al experience to live/work with family in Australia, New Zealand, Europe, Japan. Costs/details - 1-800-263-1827. #105, 7710-5St. S.E., Calgary, AB, T2H 2L9. FOR SALE KARAOKE - Mr. Entertainment, Canada's largest karaoke dealer, has the largest selection of singalong tapes and related karaoke products. Call now for our free catalogues 1-800-661-7464. HELP WANTED COMPUTERS. No previous computer experience necessary. Exciting opportu- nities now available in computer pro- gramming. We will train suitable appli- cants. CMS 1-800-477-9578. SALES HELP WANTED $ATTENTION STUDENTS$ Make a lot of money selling chocolate bars. New prod- ucts available. Nothing to pay in advance. Fast delivery 1-800-383-3589. LIVESTOCK LIMOUSIN SALE, SATURDAY, OCTO- BER 14 at 7:00 p.m., Hickson Sales Arena, Lindsay, Ontario. 65 Quality Bred Females, Top Bloodlines on offer. Call 519-323-9505. PAY TELEPHONE SERV. PSYCHIC ALLIANCE. 100,000+ satisfied customers. September - 5 lottery win- ners. Solve all problems...Answers about love, money, career...$3.49/min...Talk live 1 on 1...24 hrs...18+...all calls confi- dential. 1-900-451-4336. PSYCHIC MASTERS! Genuine Canadian Psychics tell all. Answers on Romance, Wealth, Career, Lucky Numbers. Live and personal. 1-900-451-3778. $2.99/min .,18+, 1-on-1, 24 hrs. I.C.C. HEAVENLY PSYCHIC ANSWERS. Friends of thousands, multi-talented inter- national psychics. Relationships, Future, Finance, Career. Live 24 Hours, $2.99/min. 18+. 1-900-451-3783. PERSONALS WOULD YOU LIKE to correspond with unattached Christian people across Canada for companionship or marriage? S.A.S.E. Free information. State age. Ashgrove, P.O. Box 205, Chase, B.C., VOE IMO. REAL ESTATE GOT A CAMPGROUND membership/timeshare? We'll take it! America's largest, oldest resale clearing- house. Resort Sales International 1-800- 423-5967. Timeshare rentals needed. Call 24 hours a day. STEEL BUILDINGS BUILDINGS ... Some Straight Sides. Round or Peaked Roof. Quonset Style. 20x30 $2,998.00. 25x40 $4,388.00. 30x46 $5,844.00. 35x54 $6,744.00. 40x64 $8,366.00. Others. Ends Optional. Pioneer 1-800-668-5422. STEEL BUILDINGS The last Building you'll ever need. Future Steel is the rec- ognized leader in affordable, top-quality, arch-style structures. For Value, Service, Integrity & Free Delivery call 1-800-668- 8653. BEST BUILDING PRICES - Steel Strait- wall Type - not quonset - 32x54 $9,460, 40x72 $14,233, 50x90 $20,443, 60x126 $31,314 - other sizes available - misc. clearance. Paragon - 24 hrs - 1-800-263- 8499. SPAN-TECH STEEL BUILDINGS LTD. - Exclusive distributors of the MAGNUM series of buildings, Straightwall wood/steel and all/steel buildings, Are- nas, Stables, Workshops, Barns, Etc. Contracting and Financing Available, 24 hours 1-800-561-2200. • tt s Affordable • It's Fast • It's Easy • One Bill Does It All • Northern Ontario $63 • Eastern Ontario $91 • Western Ontario $162 • Central Ontario $168 • All Ontario $380 • National Packages Available • Call this paper for details! BLAKE'S APPLE ORCHARD now offering all varieties of apples • Fresh Cider • Honey • Apple Butter S aid You Pick Windfall Courtlands $4.50 a bushel 2 miles south of Brussels on County Rd. 12 follow the sign east (519) 887-6972 THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1995. PAGE 19. Relationships must meet needs Tractor, sander get council's OK 1986 PLYMOUTH RELIANT, 4 cyl., 230,000 km., burgundy, 2 new tires, one owner, $500 as is. Phone 523-4431. 40-1p WANTED WANTED TO BUY: SCRAP CARS and trucks. L & B Auto Wreckers. 1/4 miles south of Brussels. Call 887-9499. tfn Prov. cuts mean cuts in patrols Expected provincial cuts to Huron County's road budget will mean fewer patrols on county roads looking for trouble spots this win- ter. Huron County council, at its Oct. 6 meeting, accepted a recommen- dation that one set of patrol staff be eliminated this winter as a cost cut- ting measure, leaving one patrol for the north end of the county and one for the south. To assist the patrols' efficiency as they try to cover more territory, patrol vehicles will be equipped with cellular phones so they can call in road crews, if need- ed, directly from the patrol vehi- cles. This will also allow police, who also patrol the roads, to con- tact the county patrols directly by phone. The change will cut 99 hours per week in wages. Planning Continued from page 1 ing its plan anyway. Caldwell said that the process of the plan will include extensive pub- lic consultations as to what should go into the plan and "if it comes down to a conflict between what the public of Huron wants and what the province wants, we want to be on the side of the people of Huron." Planner Cindy Fisher said the process was another opportunity for the public to become formally involved in the creation of policy. "We're hoping all types of groups will be involved through the com- munity action kits." These kits will be provided to interested groups and individuals. There will also be workshops and public meetings to seek the ideas of the public. While the 1973 plan has general- ly worked well, Caldwell says, the concerns of the public have changed over the years. Environ- mental issues are much higher on the priority list than 20 years ago. These may affect such policies at the siting of large livestock opera- tions. The goal, he said, is to mini- mize red tape but give environmental considerations their proper importance. At the same time, the new plan will look at where generating jobs fits into the whole plan, he said. Continued from page 10 speaker Brian O'Rielly whose topic was on relationships. He said that there were five basic needs that all can identify with - a sense of being loved and wanting to belong to someone, a sense of freedom and Continued from page 3 to combined recycling and garbage pickup. *** Clerk Stewart is attending the annual meeting of the Huron Coun- ty clerks and treasurers Oct. 23. He will also be attending the Association of Municipal Clerks and Treasurers of Ontario Zone 2 Fall meeting in Milverton on Oct. 19. Cost is $25. *** A letter had been received from the president of the Ontario Federa- tion of Snowmobile Clubs asking municipal officials to meet with local clubs to discuss ways in which the municipalities could assist. Council said they would meet with representatives of the Blyth Snow Travellers if they wished. ** * Councillor Ron Ritchie is attend- ing the Bluewater Recycling Asso- ciation quarterly general meeting in Grand Bend on Oct. 25. *** The landfill committee reported to council that the tractor would not be used at the landfill site any longer. A motion from the board approved the hiring of a contractor for the site for the purpose of filling and covering. A resolution had been passed in April by then landfill site board to split the cost of replacing the trac- tor clutch on a 50/50 basis. Hullett Twp. did not approve payment of the account. Hullett Reeve Tom Cunningham explained that the township was paying the MTO book price for tractor rental which includes all repairs to equipment. He therefore felt that the township should not have to pay extra for the repair as these costs were built into the rate system. Blyth Councillor Robbie Lawrie said the reason the clutch was dam- aged was due to extra hard work at the site. He suggested that the Vil- lage of Blyth pay 75 per cent of the cost with Hullett paying the remainder. The board rescinded the April resolution and authorized payment from Hullett Twp. in the amount of $455.02 for the repair of the clutch. ** * Blyth road committee had received an inquiry from a ratepay- er regarding a water problem on the south of her property since the reconstruction of Hwy 4. Councillor Lawrie told Rinn to remedy the situation in a satisfacto- ry manner. *** Councillor Gerald Kerr inquired about the new tractor and mower, whether they had been ordered and the cost, as well as why it had not been discussed with council. Councillor Lawrie said that the cost is approximately $18,000. He said that it had not been brought back to council because it was his understanding that council had given approval if the item was within the budgeted amount. Reeve Mason Bailey and Coun- cillor Kerr both agreed the item should have had council approval before a decision was made to pur- chase. Councillor Lawrie said it had been his opinion that council had already given consent, however if council wished they could adopt a resolution on the purchase of a trac- tor and mower and sander for the the village truck. A motion authorized the pur- chase of a new tractor and mower not to exceed $20,000 and a sander not to exceed $4,500 was passed. V VEHICLES FOR SALE power, a sense of recognition and a need for fun. Relationships need to have these basic needs met. Men and women need to learn how to communicate those needs to each other. At the base of all of behaviour is the need to feel good.