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REAL ESTATE R
REAL ESTATE
Culligan
REAL ESTATE LTD
JUST LISTED: Well built
bungalow with large attached
garage, finished rec room, very
well built, good condition. Blyth
$99,000. Call Gary Walden
JUST LISTED: Spacious 3
bedroom trailer. Insulated truss
roof, good, private lot. Blyth -
Only $45,000. Call Gary Walden
3 BEDROONAcliksplit carport,
private yariM16144 landscaped,
bright and cheery. Blyth $99,900.
THREE ACRES: On paved road
east of Londesboro. Older farm
house in good condition. Large
shed. Listed $119,900.
JUST LISTED: Newer style brick
bungalow with double attached
car garage, fireplace insert,
finished rec room, large shed, 3
acres. Just west of Blyth.
$117,900. Call Gary Walden.
JUST LISTED: Estate Sale - 2
bedroom brick bungalow in mint
condition, new high efficiency oil
furnace, hardwood floors in living
room. Private treed lot. Perfect
retirement or first home. Blyth -
$79,900. Call Gary Walden.
FOR ALL YOUR REAL ESTATE NEEDS - FARMS,
SMALL ACREAGESAHOMES
CALL CULLIGAN REAL ESTATE IN CLINTON 482-3400
REAL ESTATE SALES-REPRESENTATIVES
RICHARD LOBB VIC LECOMPTE
Sales Represemative gr yfletd Sales Rep.
482.7898 565-2844
FRED LOBB DIANNE FREEMAN
Associate Broker Sales Representative
482-3321 482-9500 ,g)
GARY WALDEN
Sales Representative
482-7675
S mes
523-9051
271 Queen St. S.
Blyth, Ontario
Full experience In
snowblowers &
snowmobiles, etc.
New & Used Parts
HELPING THE WORLD
WRITE NOW
CODE
Self sufftciency through
literacy ir) the developing wor41
For information, call 1 8(X) 661 9633
SERVICES
"SUDDENLY IT'S SOLD”
Real Estate Ltd.
Mason Bailey 482-9371
BROKER (24 Hour Service)
REDUCED FOR QUICK
SALE: 4 unit rental property
on 2 1/2 lots, live in one and
the rent will carry. Ideal for
handy person.
90 ACRES: 35 workable,
good buildings, excellent 4
bedroom home, 5 miles from
Clinton on paved road.
BLYTH: All beautifully
done, 1 1/2 storey vinyl, 3
bedroom home, new family
room, new garage, all on
good size lot.
COMMERCIAL AND
INVESTMENT PROPERTY:
Low down payment. Two
apartments, plus store front
on Albert St., Clinton.
Asking $79,000.00.
BLYTH: Priced to sell. 1 1/2
storey brick, 3 bedroom
home with attached office.
Nice corner lot. Asking
$70,000.00.
p3 BAILEY
S
SERVICES
PAGE 14. THE CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 10, 1996
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REAL ESTATE
WORK WANTED: ROOF
shovelling. Call Chuck at 887-
6532. 01-3
BRIAN
R1NTOUL
AUCTIONEER
- now booking
for 1996
R.R. #3 Wingham
(519) 357-2349
MOVING? Complete moving
services, local or long distance for
residential or commercial. FREE
ESTIMATES or do it yourself with
our rental trucks and equipment.
Call Listowel Rental and Moving
Services, fully insured and
licenced, (519) 291-1202 or 1-800-
639-6896. 33-tfn
ALUMINUM AND CUSTOM
welding, ornamental railing, trailers,
custom hitches, pigs/cattle penning,
machinery repairs and fabricating.
Call Peter de Jong, 523-4816. tfn
IN-DEPTH CLEANING HAS
more people to serve you! Anne:
887-6695, Dianne: 887-9914,
Cathy: 529-3352, Carol Anne: 345-
2149. 02-1
LOVING MOTHER OF TWO
looking for a child to babysit in her
home located in the Blyth area. For
more information please call 523-
4531. 02-1
WANTED
SOMEONE TO BIND FOUR
quilts for me. If interested please
phone 526-7589. 02-2p
INFORMATION AND PICTURES
of Brussels vst and present. Drop
off at either office of The Citizen.
02-tfn
WANTED
WANTED TO BUY - USED
Nintendo games at a reasonable
price. Phone 523-9636 after 5:30.
02-lp
CASH CROPLAND - BLYTH,
Belgrave, Brussels area, any
amount. Cash or share crop. Call
Frank Sanders, 523-9574 evenings.
02-2
WANTED TO BUY: SCRAP CARS
and trucks. L & B Auto Wreckers.
1/4 miles south of Brussels. Call
887-9499. tfn
WANTED: VOLUNTEERS TO
help organize and carry out the
1996 A Taste of Country Food Fair
on July 20 at Blyth Arena. First
organizational meeting January 31,
7:30 p.m. Blyth Festival Admini-
stration Building Board Room.
Please attend or contact Keith
Roulston, 523-4311. 02-4p
Continued from page 1
the libraries was going to be pro-
posed to the library board. "We lost
one third of our libraries in 1992.
Now we're losing one half of the
remainder," he said of the situation
in his township. "When the others
(larger libraries) take some cuts,
we'll agree (to the closings)." He
argues that the cost per book loaned
of running the Gorrie library was
just one dollar while the cost of
some of the larger libraries was
three dollars per hook loaned.
Ron Murray, reeve of McKillop,
wondered why branch one and two
libraries didn't participate in the
cuts. Armstrong answered that the
current cuts are only the tip of the
iceberg of trying to meet the budget
restrictions. At its November meet-
ing the board called for a study of
the possibility of closing "branch
2" libraries (such as those in Blyth
and Brussels) and even branch 1
libraries (in the five towns) in order
to meet the tight budget require-
Plowmen
promise return
to basics
If Huron County hosts the 1999
International Plowing Match it will
go back to the basics to show the
importance of agriculture and
plowing, members of the Huron
County Plowmen's Association
promised when they asked for the
financial support of county council
Jan. 4.
"We in Huron want to promote
what the county has to offer and
bring agriculture up front," said
Gerald Thiel, bid chairman for the
1999 match. The Ontario Plow-
men's Association will officially
decide if Huron will host the match
at its February convention in
Waterloo. Huron is the only county
to have put in a bid for the 1999
match and OPA's site selection
committee has already picked a
Dashwood-area site if Huron gets
the match. Thiel said plowing will
be highly visible at the Huron
match. "We want it seen when you
come to the match not make it so
you have to hunt for it."
Neil McGavin of Walton,
Huron's member on the OPA
board, asked for the county's sup-
port in a loan of money to the orga-
nizing committee. A $5,000 loan
would be sought for 1996, with
$10,000 for 1997, $15,000 for 1998
and $25,000 for 1999. Most of the
upfront cost is for souvenirs, he
said and once these are being sold
they start generating revenue for
the committee. "As soon as there is
money in the bank the committee
pays the county back."
The latest the loan would be paid
Continued on page 19
ments.
Bob Hallam, reeve of West
Wawanosh, argued "the pain has
got to be spread across the county".
Noting his township would lose the
Auburn branch he said "I don't
think the rural municipalities
should bear the brunt of the cuts. I
hope that all municipalities will
have to take cuts."
Bill Weber, reeve of Stephen
Twp. which will lose the Centralia
branch, said he didn't like the clos-
ings but, "I do think it is a neces-
sary move".
When the recorded vote was
taken local reeves Mason Bailey of
Blyth, Tom Cunningham of Hul-
lett, Brian McBumey of Tumberry
and Norm Fairies of Howick voted
against the closures. Supporting the
move were Leona Armstrong of
Grey, Bob Hallam of West
Wawanosh, Ron Murray of McKil-
lop, Bert Elliott of Morris, Bill
Vanstone of Colborne, Don Schultz
of East Wawanosh and Gordon
Workman of Brussels.
W. Wawanosh reeve argues
`the pain has got to be
spread across the county'