Whitby Free Press, 4 Nov 1987, p. 30

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE 30, WHITBY FREE PRESS, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1987 LO Ontario MGS Services JANITORIAL CONTRACTORS Tenders are invited to provide Janitorial Services for 2 years at the Registry Office, 850 King St. W., OSHAWA, Ont. TENDER NO. ORI-87-173 Sealed Tenders will be received until 2:00 p.m. local time on TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 24, 1987. Tender Documents may be ob- tained from the Ontario Ministry of Government Ser- vices, Orillia District Office, 24 James St. E., P.O. Box 790, Orillia, Ontario. L3V 6K7. Note: For further information regarding the Tenders, please call the Tenders Office at the above address, telephone (705) 325-7403. The lowest or aniy Tender not necessarily accepted. MECHANICAL CONTRACTORS Tenders are invited to Repair Trap Seal Primers at the Michael Starr Building, 33 King St. W., OSHAWA, Ont. TENDER NO. ORI 87-165 Sealed tenders will be received until 2:00 p.m. local time on THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 12, 1987 Tender Documents may be ob- tained from the Ontario Ministry of Government Ser- vices, Orillia District Office, 24 James St. E., P.O. Box 790, Orillia, Ontario. L3V 6K7 Note: For further information regarding the Tenders, please call the Tenders Office at the above address, telephone (705) 325-7403. The lowest or any Tender not necessarily accepte. MAKE MORE MONEY! Learn In- A CAREER IN TRUCKING. Transport come Tax or Bookkeeping by drivers needed. Now is the time to correspondence. Free brochures no train for your Class A lîcense. For obligation, U & R Tax Services, 205- pre-screenîng interview and job 1345 Pembina Hwy, Winnipeg, MB, placement information, contact R3T 2B6. Franchises available. B Merv Orrs Transport Driver Training, Brampton. Phone 1-800- PART TIME or full time manufac- 265-3559 turer of patented house and car device is looking for person or per sons to assemble and distribute product ln area. The whole family can become involved. It can be assembled on your kitchen table. Company supplies ali equipment, materials, and training. Your minimum investment of $6,000 protected by contract. For interview please reply to Box 15, Morriston, Ont. NOB 2CO. B GREENHOUSE & HYROPONIC equipment, supplies. Everything you need. Best quality, Super low prices. Greenhouses $175, Halides $115. Over 3,000 products in stock! Send $2 for info pack & FREE Magazine to Western Water Farms 1244 Seymour St. Vancouver, BC V6B 3N9 1-604- 682-6636. B LEARN AUCTIONEERING at the Southwestern Ontario School of Auctioneering. Next class Jan. 16 - 23rd. Box 145cn, Innerkip, Ont. NOJ 1MO. (519) 469-3936, (519) 537-2115. B GROW YOUR OWN Indoors! World's finest high-tech growing systems - Halides and hydropinics free catalogue or $2. information package. Brite-Lite, 2215-C Walkley, Montreal, Que. H4B 2J9 (514) 489- 3803. B WE DELIVERI Flyers, etc. All over Whitbyl. Caîl the WHITBY FREE PRESS. 668-6111. Professional HELICOPTER PILOT Training, courses starting in November. Train for an exciting and challenging aviation career. Call or write for info: Agrotors Canada, En- terprise, Ont. KOK 1ZO (613) 389- 6958. B TRUCKING CAREERS. Driver job training with placement help is available. Complete details can be mailed to you. Phone Rodgers School at (416) 769-3546 with postal code. B "LEARN HOW TO BE CREATIVE, EXPLORE THE WORLD OF ART." Private and group lessons in drawing and painting for all ages. Phone 666-1502. How to play popular PIANO. New home study course. Fast, easy method. Guaranteed! For FREE in- formation, Write: Popular Music Systems, Studio E, 3284 Boucherie Rd, Kelowna BC V1Z 2H2. B FREE KITTENS. Call after 6 p.m. 668- 4560 or 427-3288. -BLANKETL To Reach a Wider Market Advertise throughout the regional membership of the Ontario and Canadian Community Newspaper Associations. Example: Central Ontario Alil Ontario Alil Canada 49 newspapers 185 newspapers 555 newspapers For further information please call: 668-6111 $120 for 25 words $250 for 25 words $718 for 25 words DATES GALORE: for all ages & unat- tached. Thousands of members anxious to meet you. Prestige Acquaintances call tollfree 1-800- 263-9163. Hours Noon till 8 p.m. B BAHAI' FAITH. The essence of ail that We have revealed for thee Is Justice, is for man to free himself from idie fancy and Imitation, discern with the eye of oneness His glorlous handiwork, and look into ail things with a searching eye. Call 668-7653 or 668-8665. LOSE WEIGHT: New California Trim Diet. 100% safe and ail natural. Phone Eric at 725-8508. Also distributors needed. NEED HELP???? Listen to the Back to God Hour! Sunday 7:30 a.m. CHAM 820 Hamilton, 9:30 CKAN 1480 Newmarket, and 7:30 p.m. FM 108 Burlington, or watch FAITH 20 Global T.V. Monday - Friday at 5 a.m. B WOMEN IN ABUSIVE RELATION- SHIPS. For help call AUBERGE Transition House for Women and Children. Toll Free 1-800-263-3725 or 728-7311. Confidentiality assured. THE FAMILY OF Mr. Ralph Mowbray of Brooklin is proud to invite friends and neighbours to a reception in honor of Ralphs 90th birthday, on Saturday, November 14/87. To be held at his home on 13 Queen St. Brooklin. Ralph will receive his f riends and guests f rom 2 - 4:30 p.m. BEST WISHES ONLY. ESSAYS on true reality. Hundreds of short essays that verify the futility of trying to convey true reality to humanity $3.75 postpaid first class. Cheques only. David Frazer, Box 63, Gooderham, Ont. KOM 1RO. B LADIES IN ORIENT seek correspon- dence with single gentlemen. Box 5248, Station "A", Calgary. AB, Canada. T2H 1X6. THANKS to St. Jude for favors received. A.V. SOUTH PACIFIC INFORMATION NIGHT at the Oshawa Public library, 65 Bagot St. Oshawa, Monday, November 9 at 7:30 p.m. Tickets available at Park Wood Travel, 111 Simcoe St. N., Oshawa or Phone 576- 2681. ROYAL AGRICULTURAL winter fair. World's largest indoor agricultural fair and equestrian competition, Nov. 11 - 22, Exhibition Place, Toron- to, For information call (416) 393- 6414/15. B 508 EUCLID ST., WHITBY, Kitchen appliances, kitchen ware, books, new framed prints and lots more. Saturday, November 7 from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. STORE FOR RENT, 950 sq. ft. Ex- cellent location, Main St. in Bowmanville. $650.00 monthly plus utilities. Phone 623-7528 or after 5 p.m. 987-5680. PICKERING, December 1 at GO. Renovated bungalo, 3 bedroom & 2 bedroom basement, separate. $850.00 - $550.00 or $1,200.00 com- plete. Phone evenings 286-1163: OLD WRISTWATCHES WANTELI - Mens only - old Rolex and Patek Phillip wristwatches wanted - also wanted Eatons "Quarter Century" rectagular wristwatches (25 years service) will pay $1000 and up for this watch. Phone (416) 365-7240 or write B. Walsh, 173 Queen St. East, Toronto, Ont. M5A 1S2. B Region looks at tax costs of no-debenture policy Regional taxpayers would be hit with an additional increase of more than $55 per household in 10 years time if Durham scraps its no- debenture policy. Documentation of a nine-year forecast, prepared by the Region's finance department, shows what the impact on Durham's finances would be should the Region veer from its pay-as-you-go policy and FROM PAGE 26 Gr. 13 student proceeding to nigher education, Cathal Flynn-Post; Whitby Lions Club Award to three students outstanding in overall academic achievement, lRandall Kapuscinski, Lisa Bowman, Mathew DeVeau; Mayor's Medal for Citizenship to a Gr. 13 student who has displayed autstanding citizenship, Diane debenture two major projects. Should the Region debenture the cost of a new headquarters building, estimated to cost some $15 million, as well as a new garbage dump which could reach $44 million, Durham would have to pay almost $8 million in debt charges in 1997, a cost which would work out to almost $67 per household. Without these debentures, sWamia, W.A. Andrew Memorial Bursary to a deserving student, Janice Boudreau; Anderson Alumni Award to the outstanding "all around" student who combines extraordinary in- volvement in the entire school community with academic achievement, Lucy Haringa, Anderson CVI Student Council Award to the past president of student council, Paul Visser. charges in the same year would be $1.6 million, or less than $12 per household, and most of this cost would be covered through water and sewer bill revenue. Finance commissioner Jack Gar- tley indicated the Region's out- standing debts are now paid via an- nual tax bills, water and sewer bills. Together, they cover the total debt charges, this year totalling $16 million. He said under the current pay-as- you-go system, taxpayers would not have to chip in to pay for debts after 1997, when the per-household cost for tax-supported debt would be reduced to two cents. This would mean taxpayers would not be paying for any debt charge on their 1998 tax bills. This year, the tax- supported debt amounts to $19.78 per household. Durham now has $50.4 million in outstanding debts which average out to $441.57 per household. This will drop to $2 million or $14.45 per household by 1997 under the present policy. But if the Region debentures such projects as a new headquarters building and a dump, the tax- supported debt would escalate close to $70 million in 1992 and decrease to $55 million by 1997, when the household cost would be $385.30. Gartley and chief administrative officer Don Evans have recom- mended that if the Region decides to go ahead with a new headquar- ters and dump before 1991, they should debenture the projects and have a reserve fund established so there would be money available at the proper time. They have also asked that council decide on a priority list for major projects under consideration. Projects already discussed include final renovations to Fairview Lodge in Whitby, the initiation of a 911 emergency telephone system, the headquarters and the dump. Gartley indicated one or possibly two projects could be handled through annual taxes, but added if council decides to proceed with all four, it would mean debenturing. The report also recommends that any surplus from a previous budget go into the special levy reserve fund. Preparing. the food FROM PAGE 24 making within the department and for infection control. She serves on several hospital committees including occupational health and safety and quality assurance. "Our priority is to provide our patients with meals which are an enjoyable experience which will encourage a speedy recovery." she says. "We also strive to provide appetizing and varied meals to the hospital 's staff and visitors." The dietary department staff totals 31. Anderson award winners m

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy