OCR Text |
Show t !; V V IV.. w - : youth vionu pno&nAr.i Jobs are often hard to find, especially if you're a teenager. -AND IF you're under 16 you can't drive. And then even when you reach your 16th birthday and pass the driver's test and all, you may not land that wanted job because you're not 18 and can't legally handle certain machinery, for instance. But Job Service may be able to help you, too, find that much needed or wanted job. Fred Pack of Layton Job Service Ser-vice and Jim VanDeLinde of Bountiful Job Service are coordinating the summer youth program, putting teenagers teena-gers in touch with those having an assortment of jobs that need doing. No, they're not high-paying. And chances for immediate advancement may not be Kevin Johnson applies finishing touches to the spring clean-up of Fred Hennefer's yard in Kaysville. Mr. Hen-nefer Hen-nefer located Kevin through the Summer Youth Placement Program of Job Service. there. But in these times that hare hard for everyone, there are jobs galore. Can you cut grass, haul pipe, dig a ditch or babysit? - PLENTY OF jobs are avial-able avial-able in those categories, and almost any others you can think of in all parts of the county, coun-ty, Mr. Park says. All that's needed, basicially, is a willingness willing-ness to work. Wages start as low as $1.50 an hour, depending depend-ing on the job and the circumstances. circumst-ances. Participants don't have to worry about filling out long forms, Social Security or the like, either, he says. But they can get on the road to earning some extra cash by contacting either Mr. Park at Layton Job Service, 376-1274 or Mr. VanDeLinde Van-DeLinde at Bountiful Job Service, Ser-vice, 292-4451. tb |