Orono Weekly Times* Wednesday, April 13, 1983-11 GOULD PHOTO SH0P<- «MIT ED Phone for appointment Anniversary Wedding and Family Portraits In our Studio, Your Home, Or on Location. 78 King St.W. Bowmanvllle 623-2404 Phone 416-623-3393 Orono Call 983-9547 For prompt, courteous efficient service when buying or selling and for the ' largest selection of > properties In the area. 234 KING ST. EAST WAKEFIELD INSURANCE 983-9438 Steve's Furniture Shop We Have A Large SMIeetion of Antique and Decorator Furniture for Sale, by Appointment or Chance 983-9630 Orono* 1 Mile East of Hwy. 115 9t Taunton Rd, We also do Upholstery & Reflnishing. WORK WANTED • Ear piercing service - $10.00. Phone 623-5747 for appointment and information. information. Hooper's Jewellers Ltd. 39 King Street West Bowmanville, Ontario PERSONAL TAX RETURNS Also income tax and bookkeeping bookkeeping services for small Businesses, reasonable rates. Phone Peter Lammers 983-9472. 23,2,9,13,20,27, a.c. HELP WANTED Female babysitter with vehicle requested for two girls aged 3 and 6. Approximately 10 days monthly at 6:45 a.m. 'at my home. Those interested please call 983-9285 after 6:00 . p.m. for details. 13,20,pd. NOTICES If you have questions, or concerns about your municipality, please feel free to call me at either 983*5505. Diane Harare, Counc., Ward 3 T. of N. NOTICE TREES Maples, Lindens, Locusts, Birch, Mountain Ash -10 to 12' high - $25.00; Blue Spruce, Austrian Pine - 3 to 4* high - $20 to $30.00; Upright Jumpers - 3' high Spreading Junipers Flowering Shrubs r m Orono Towing MECHANICAL REPAIRS To All Cars and Trucks 24-HOUR TOWING Phone 983-5249 -$20.00; -$9.00, -$5.00. Windatt's Nursery, 4 mi. N. of Newtonville on the Newtonville Rd. 786-2546. Open 7 days a week. 6,13,20,27,4,11, a.c. FOR SALE 1981 Oldsmobile Delta 88 Royale. 4 door, fully equipped, equipped, 5100 kilometres. Phone 983-5908, 13, a.c. FOR SALE Used apartment size fridge. $35.00. Call after 5100 p.m. 983-5654 13, a.c. WANT TO RENT Good house, with small barn and" a few fenced acres wanted: Phone 263-2652 30,6,13,20 pd WANTED playpen wanted. Please call 983-5576. OPEN HOUSE The family of Alf and Fosetta Pigott invite family, friends and neighbours to an Open House to help them celebrate their 50th Wedding Anniversary. They will be receiving their guests at the Orono Oddfellows Hall -Saturday, April 16th from 2-5 p.m. Best Wishes only. 6,13 pd PAPER DRIVE Saturday, April 30, 1983 Orono and area. Please bundle and tie papers. Pick up to start at 9:00 a.m. Orono Amateur Athletic Assoc. 13, 27, a.c. COMING EVENTS ST.GEORGE'S DAY ROAST BEEF DINNER St. George's Anglican Church Parish Hall, Village of Newcastle. APRIL 24th, 1983 3 sittings - 4:30, 5:30 and 6:30 p.m. Adults $6.00; Children (under 12 years) $3.00. Tickets available from Fellowship Club members or by calling 987-4221. 13, 20, a.c. COMING EVENTS Registration for Kendal Minor Baseball to take place on Saturday, April 16th, at Kendal Ball Park from 12:00 - 2:00. T-Ball, Tyke, Pee-Wee Anyone wanting further ir formation contact Brian Foster 797-2402. Coaches are needed. Dance for Kendal Recreation, Recreation, Saturday, April 30th, at Orono Arena. Kendal Eagles first ball practise Sunday, April 24th, 1:00 pim. 13, a.c. COMING EVENTS Clarke Township Museum and Archives opens for the Ï983 season on Sunday, April 17th at 2:00 p.m. v Weekly hour's: Tuesdays -Fridays, 1:00 - 5:00 p.m. Saturdays & Sundays - 2:00 -5:00 p.m. 13, a.c. COMING EVENTS Blossom Tea and Dessert Mini Bazaar and Bake Table Leskard Church Hall, Saturday, May 7th, from 2-4 p.m. Admission $1.25. 13, a.c. Church Services] SAINT FRANCIS OF ASSISI CHURCH Rev. Thomas D. Walsh, 214 King St. E., Newcastle Phone 987-5446 PARISH CELEBRATION Saturday 7:00 p.m. Sunday 9:00,11:00a.m. & 7:00 p.m. NO SUNDAY 7:00 P.M. Eucharist Until Further Notice GIANT GARAGE SALE Orono Arena Sat., May 14th, 1983 10:00 a.m. - 5:00 p.m. Box Plants - vegetables, flowers, geraniums. Crafts - Junque Booths available contact 983-5654 or 983-5252. Proceeds for Community Community Service. Mainstream Canada No tears, please, for public service THANK YOU Thanks for the donations for the Euchre Party. Roots Hair Salon, House of J Salon, Gemini Wood Crafjts, Jean Duvall, Lina Shetler from the Orono Town Hall work committee. THANK YOU We would like to thank all our friends and neighbours for their support and help since our son's accident in December 1981. .Special thanks to Bowmanville Firemen and Bowinanville Hospital. Also thanks to the Rebecca Lodge for their fruit basket at Christmas and to Marion West, Mary Clap- dorp, Gwen Forrester, Joyce and Francis Cowan. Kevin is home now and doing well. Ron, Bonnie Talsma and family. 13,a.c.' BIRTH NOTICE CLARKE - Jim and Kathy (nee Grady) are happy to announce announce the birth of their son Jensen James on Saturday, April 9, 1983. Proud grandparents are Ruth and Bill Grady. 13, pd. IN MEMORIAM HANCOCK - In loving memory of Robert Hancock. The Lord giveth and the Lord taketh away. Sadly missed by wife and family. 13, pd DEATH NOTICE CARSCADDEN, Fletcher at Strathaven Nursing Home on Monday, April 11th, 1983. Fletcher Carscad- den in his 86th year, son of the late William John' Carscadden and Elizabeth McClung, brother o,f the late John, Harper and bjellie. Resting ,at the 1 Barlow Funeral Home, tirpno. Service Service will be from Lang Chapel# Orono Cemetery oq Wednesday at 2:00 p.m. Interment Orono Cemetery 13, a.c. By W. Rùger Worth During a recession, à great many people suffer,'yet some suffer more than others. This time, public sector workers claim they are not being treated fairly, particularly particularly since Ottawa and most provinces have placed restraints restraints on their wages and, in some cases, denied civil servants servants the right to strike. But is that the case? Are the nation's civil servants rèally being treated inequitably? The first point to consider, perhaps, is the fact that there have been few layoffs in, the public sector, even though hiring freezes are prevalent. Nevertheless, with 1.6 . million Canadians seeking a job (any job^, it seems obvious, obvious, that the unemployed are suffering a great deal more than the civil servants who continué to work and receive a .regular pay cheque. Then there's the matter of salary restraint. While Ottawa actively promotes its 6 and 5 percent program, the past president' of the Treasury • Board openly atimits that for, 40 percent of civil servants, restraint really means raises of 10 percent and-9 percent, certainly certainly a far cry from the advertised advertised 6 and 5 program. Meanwjiile, according to a survey questionnaire completed completed by 14,171 members of the Canadian Federation of Independent Business, two out of three smaller firms have been forced to postpone wage increases for their employees, or limit them to less than the 6 percent federal guideline. What's more, about 30 percent percent of small business owner/ .managers have actually been fpreed to reduce their compensation, compensation, while another 30 percent couldn't afford any increase. Stacked against the substantial substantial increases awarded to public sector employees, it is even more difficult to understand understand why the civil servants are complaining. Placing a moratorium on the right to strike of public sector employees, of course, hits at the very heart of the matter. Yet even the International International Labour Organisation has agreed that the government's government's move was justified. For years, civil servants have used the strike threat to win large salary increases, many times leading the private sector in wage settlements. By dosing down the postal system (and costing business more than $3-billion), for example, the postal unions have managed to win themselves themselves salaries of $23,000 per year for jobs that require little training. What's more, one postal union leader says, his members cannot be laid off, even though mail volume (and work) has plummeted. On all counts, it is hard to support the civil servants' claim,that they are bearing an unfair burden. As it stands, public sector workers are a lot better .off than their private sector counterparts. CFIB Feature Service # FRUIT w MARKET ATTENTION APPLE LOVERS C.A. Macintosh C.A. Delicious C.A. Spy and Mutsu are on Sale Specials Vi Bu. Gee Gr. Mac's $3.95 Special 8LBS. Gee Gr. Mac's $1.98 Special Heritage Pure Maple Syrup On Tap $1.99lb. $4-38 kg. , STOKE SEEDS AVAILABLE Fruit Market Hwy' 35 South of .Orono. Si