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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Citizen, 2005-08-11, Page 14PAGE 14. THE CITIZEN, THURSDAY, AUGUST 11, 2005. Classified Advertisements Real estate Real estate Real estate Real estate S1ALB0T RR#4 Goderich 524-4473 or 524-2520 PRIME CORE AREA COMMERCIAL BUILDING located in the "Heart of Downtown" Blyth Ideal for retail with large showcase window & over 2000 Sq. ft of show­ room & stock area. Improvements include new gas furnace & central air (1998), refurbished orig­ inal pine floors & tin ceiling, new awning, 2 new windows on upper level, "cooler” room for flowers. Design room with lots of lighting. Parking avail­ able at rear of store & town parking at front. Present flower shop may be purchased at addi­ tional price. $120,000. #137 - Heartland MMMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIini ROYAL LePAGE a nursery, )hen with windows , LONDESBORO $114,900.: Excellent starter family home in rural village of Londesboro. Featuring 3 bedrooms i updated opei^jfi^epl lots of replaced^^-OTTOod floors on main level, 2 bathrooms, sun porch, living room and den on main floor, detached garage, fenced backyard and country view from rear deck. Call Rick or Fred. MLS#050760 □ 482-3400 REALTOR 1 Albert St., Clinton Fred Lobb, Broker/Owner 279 MORRIS ST., BLYTH $119,900.: 3 bedroom brick family home in Blyth on a large lot with a detached garage. Updates include replaced windows (02), updated hydro service, back kitchen has been insulated and attic insulated (00). Home has spacious main floor that includes laundry room, large living room, large family room and kitchen. Deck on rear of home overlooks 84' x 134' lot. Call Rick or Fred. MLS# 051510 AFFORDABLE FIRST INVESTMENT A GREAT STARTER! $79,900. English cottage style home. Detached garage. 3 main level bedrooms. 1190 sq. ft. of living space. Living room/dining room accented by natural woodwork & french doors. Upper loft storage VC1 ZONING in BLYTH convenient to schools, arena, theatre & downtown amenities #31 Land Exchange Ltd. ANNOUNCEMENT RE/MAX Land Exchange Ltd. is pleased to announce that Jocelyn Logtenberg Sales Representative has joined our Residential Sales Team in our Goderich Office Hi, I am Jocelyn Logtenberg and I am very happy to be part of the RE/MAX Family. I live with my family in Ashfield Township. I have spent the last nine years working in Goderich and Clinton in the Healthcare field. I am excited and pleased to be able to help you find the perfect property for you and your family. So, give me a call and we will work together to make your dreams a reality. Please contact me at: (519) 524-1900 Office ■ (519) 524-0970 Cell email:jazlon@hurontel.on.ca RE/MAX Land Exchange Ltd. offers Real Estate Services in six locations. Goderich (519)524-1900 Wingham (519) 357-3332 Clinton (519)482-9100 Kincardine (519) 396-8444 Port Elgin (519) 389-4600 Hanover (519) 364-4747 www.RemaxLandExchange.ca View all our listings on www.rlpheartland.ca Services CUSTOM COMBINING ALL crops. Call Rick McDonald 887- 6570. 30-2p FAXING SERVICE. WE CAN send or receive faxes for you. The Citizen, 404 Queen St., Blyth, 523- 4792 or 541 Turnberry St., Brussels, 887-9114. tfn Vacation properties FOR RENT - TWO-BEDROOM cottage with bunkhouse at Point Clark, includes fully-equipped kitchen, gas barbecue, fire pit, horseshoe pit and much more, close to lighthouse and beach. To find out more or to book your holiday call 519-523-4799 after 6:00 p.m. tfn PHOTOGRAPHY - GRADUATE of Humber College’s Creative Photographer program — specializing in commercial shots and portraiture. Call 887-6353. tfn Wanted CUSTOM LARGE SQUARE BALING Also Available Acid Application & Raking CALL TIM DEVEREAUX (519) 527-0406 519-440-8498 519-440-6910 TUFF-CONCEPTS • Lawn Care • Sweeping • Rolling • Aerating Gardens • Patios Warner - Owner 519-887-8493 . Cell: 519-357-0179 VANMAAR Square Baling • Accumulator • 3x4 Bales • Rotery Pre-Cut • Acid Application • Competitive Pricing • Serving Clinton, Blyth Seaforth & Area Calf Jake at 482-3396 or 525-6395 WANTED TO BUY: SCRAP cars and trucks. Bill’s Salvage, 43579 St. Michaels Rd., 887-6510. -. ■ 30-9 BUYING CENTURY OLD BRICK farmhouses, schools, churches, etc. for wrecking and brick salvage. Ross Lumley (519) 383-2024; wrecking people’s homes (62 last year) all over southwestern Ontario since 1969. 31-lp Websites northhuron.on.ca Northern Huron's foremost source of information when you: • Need to check the weather • Need a plumber • Need to see what's on at area theatres • Need to build a barn • Need to find the money to build a barn • Need to read reviews on theatre presentation • Need a lawyer • Need to rent a crane • Need to order take-out food and don't have the telephone number • Need to find a real estate agent • Need an accountant Check it out at www.northhuron.on.ca (an online service of The Citizen.) FROM CRANBROOK Services resume at Knox Church services and Sunday school in Cranbrook have resumed after a month of holidays. Rev. Theresa McDonald -Lee announced that the board of managers is having a salad supper in the Monkton Presbyterian Church later this month with donations at the door. Jim and Dona Knight hosted a gathering of Jim’s brothers and sisters and their families at their cottage on July 31 with over 30 able to be present. Joanne (Knight), Weldon, Andrew, and Allison Black have returned to New Brunswick after spending time visiting relatives and friends in the area. Elisa Knight, daughter of Gerald and Twyla spent a few days on vacation with Leslie and Yvonne. Frank and Kathy Workman have returned from their trip to Iqaluit to visit their son, Peter. They flew from Ottawa to Iqaluit (which means, “place of many fish” in Inuktitut) on the Canadian North airline on Friday, July 29. Iqaluit is the capital of Nunavut with a population of 7,000 of which 61 per cent are Inuit. They stayed in a modern home where Peter was “house sitting” while the owners were away on vacation. Most days the weather was sunny/cloudy and with a temperature of 8 - 12°C. The Workmans fished for Arctic Char, hiked on the tundra and rocks in a national park and around the old American Dew Line site. There is an amazing variety of delicate flowers and mosses in bloom from mid-July to mid­ August. They checked out the museums and visitors’ centres where Native carvings and artwork are sold. Midweek they flew in a 10-seater plane 250 miles further north over Cumberland Sound to the community of Pangnirtung, with a population of 1,000. It was originally a whaling village and is built in a mountain fiord with a short gravel runway. The country is breathtakingly beautiful, but rugged and stark with snow and ice clearly visible on the mountain sides. They saw icebergs from the plane as they flew over Cumberland Sound. Both the native Inuit and the people from other parts of Canada go out of their way to speak to strangers and are particularly interested in how they feel, as Continued on page 15