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Inland Real Estate Auctions to Auction Model Home and 14 Home ...

OAK BROOK, Ill.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Inland Real Estate Auctions, Inc. announced today that it will be auctioning 14 one-acre home sites and a brand-new, luxurious model home located in Oak Ridge development in Oakland County, Mich. At least five of the home sites, originally priced as high as $95,000, will be auctioned without reserve and sold regardless of price. The model home, originally priced at $479,900, will sold subject to a minimum bid of $295,000.

"This is one of the finest subdivisions we have been involved with in the greater Detroit marketplace," said Paul Rogers Senior Vice, president of Inland Real Estate Auctions. "There is a surplus of available inventory on the market, and developers are finding the auction process is the answer for accelerating sales and gaining a competitive marketing advantage."

Inland Real Estate Auctions will coordinate third party financing with Fifth Third Bank as the approved lender for the auction, offering buyers a convenient, streamlined process not only to acquire the property in one day but also to swiftly obtain financing.


Buy and Sell Items Online at Finditt Auctions, the Featured Company on

Buy and sell items online at Finditt Auctions, the online auction site that is appearing as the Featured Company on TransWorldNews.ca.

Finditt Auctions is the newest online marketplace to the world. The popularity of auction sites and the traffic generated from Finditt.com provide a perfect environment for buyers and sellers. Buyers have the advantage of being part of an international marketplace, while sellers are provided a global customer. After a product is listed in the Finditt Auction people can bid the same way they do on Ebay, Ubid and other auction sites.

Finditt Auctions has created an environment that provides a free store with no monthly fees for individuals selling products. Along with a free auction store and no monthly fees, Finditt Auctions is offering Free Listings for a limited time.


Examining corporate bids, bottlers' claims

In the 2000 movie "Return to Me," a customer insists that the waitress, played by Minnie Driver, bring her bottled water because she prefers it to tap water.

Out of the customer's sight, the waitress pours a bottle of water down the drain, refills the plastic bottle with tap water, sticks a straw in it and takes it to the woman. The customer then remarks:

"Ah! Such a difference."

A similar but real episode played out in Cleveland on a bigger scale last year. Documentary filmmakers Alan Snitow and Deborah Kaufman and journalist and film critic Michael Fox detail it in their thought-provoking new book, "Thirst: Fighting the Corporate Theft of Our Water."

In an ad campaign, Snitow, Kaufman and Fox write, Fiji Water boasted that its water was "purified by island trade winds" and free of pollutants.


St. Francis Co. delinquent land auction sale nets $26719

The State Land Office collected close to $28,000 in revenue during the recent sale of tax-delinquent St. Francis County properties.

According to a press release from the State Land Office, Commissioner of State Lands Mark Wilcox conducted the auction of tax-delinquent properties at the St. Francis County Courthouse. According to the press release, a total of 25 interested bidders attended the sale, which is held annually by the state to dispose of land on which the taxes have been past due for over four years. Ninety parcels were sold, collecting a total of $26,719.57 for St. Francis County and state government.

The Land Commissioners office conducts one tax-delinquent land sale per county each year. A small percentage of certified parcels make it to public auction because a majority of the properties certified to our office are redeemed, which means that the back taxes are paid by the original owner, said Wilcox in the press release.


MoH to shift focus of drug bidding procurement supervision

Shanghai. March 26. INTERFAX-CHINA - China's Ministry of Health will change its management of the drug procurement system, and will focus on the use of medicines by hospitals instead of organizational aspects of the bidding process, a MoH official said Friday. .



 

 

 

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