Times-Advocate, 1978-09-28, Page 15 (2)K
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Times.Advocate, September 38, 1978
Page 15,
1
SL�° 11.•
9" Motorized
Tilting Arbour
Saw with stand
224s$
E
Hundreds of Town 8 Country
Specials -
HURRY...ENDS THIS SAT.
• 7/4 HP direct -drive, 12.6 amp.
3450 rpm, 115V. thermal over-
load -protected motor.
• 22 x 32" table (with extensions)
• Max. depth or cut 2",154" at 45'
• Rip capacity 15"
• self -aligning rip fence
Includes rip fence, guide bars, table
insert, mitre gauge, blade guard, 9"
blade, wrenches, stand and exten-
sions. Rockwell Beaver. 547-579
Heavy Duty
Tool BoxEa
2888
Mechanic's tool box has 2 drawers with
sliding trays. plus full-size tote tray with
double socket compartment. Mar -resistant
baked Red enamel finish. 21 x 8'2 x 934"
size. 547-616
t1F
18 -Pc. Metric/Std. '/s"
Drive Socket Set 6377
By "Gray" Ea
Incl. 6. most popular 6 pt. sockets (10 mm to
22 mm), 8 most popular 12 pt sockets Onto
1'/e"), ratchet, Johnson bar, 5" extension,
Blue metal box. Quality. Canadian -made
547-120
mEct SGttIw ,vtp sf r
40Y At
4
-
r a
/SO/ IN
drIa 4/47
A SKATING ACROBAT — Before Saturday's skateboard
competition at the Exeter Fair got ,underway, Dove
Underwood displayed some of his acrobatic tactics. T -A photo
Board sets policy
for emergency calls
By ieff Seddon
Huron County Council
learned Friday that it may
soon be responsible for the
co-ordinatiop, planning.
delivery and fundilig o1y
children's services now be-
ing offered_ in the county.by
Family and Children's Ser-
vices (FACS).
John Penn, director of the
Huron FACS. told council -
that the'provincg is in the
process of turning over the
administration. of children's
services to.local
governments. Hesaid the
transition is being made in
five municipalities in the
province now and the
problems and successes en-
joyedlli those areas will be
monitored to make the
switch in the remainder of
the municipalities_ much
simpler.
Penn said the move is be-
ing made to streamline the
delivery of children's ser-
vices offered by• the
ministry of community and
social services through
FACS. He said the ministry
created a new branch, the
Children's Services Branch.
that will coalate services
now being offered by as
• many as five different
ministries. ' •
Penn said the main reason
the province wanted to co-
ordinate services was to en-
sure that the greatest
benefits from resources.
staff and funds are spent on
children needing the ser-
vices rather than have it lost
in a shuffle of papers in
rninistry.pffices. ' -
' He said last year the new
children's services division
assumed responsibility for.
all services to children. He
said prior to that those ser-
vices were shared by the
ministries of the Attorney
General. community and
social services. health and
correction representing a
total budget of $300 million
spent on about 115.000 kids.
Penn said the county will
be given the task of es-
tablishing a local children's
services committee that will
identify needs. plan future
programs. assist in the hard
to place or hard to serve
child. ensure the
accessibility . of service to
the community. monitor and
-evaluate service. review
budgets and funding and
allocate funds to services es-
tablishing spending
priorities.
He said the funding may
tie the 'most _important
aspect of the new com-•
mittee's job. He told council
the committee could be
composed of elected of-
ficials, FACS staff, citizens
and consumers to give it
broad representation, it
could be made up of FACS
workers to give it
professional expertise or it
could be a standing com-
mittee of council to give it
maximum accountability to. .
council. -He added. that
whichever system council
chose the committee would
be required to report to
council.
The director said he felt
the local committee needed
professional expertise and
for that reason -he favored .a
committee that consisted of
at least one FACS worker or
a social worker from
another organization. He
said he felt the funding could
be -a stuml3ling block. for
FACS workers if the com-
mittee in charge of
allocating funds was not
made aware of problems
facing FACS 'workers or
gaps in services.
Penn said the new system.
merely reduces' paper work
and does little to change ser-
• vices provided to children.
He said the same amount of
money will be budgeted in
Huron and the same ser-
vices provided but pointed
out that -through the local.
body FACS could have a
louder voice with the
ministry to have policy
changes made to letter con-
ditions for hildren here.
Council seemed un-
concerned with the added
responsibility being handed
it. No councillor -questioned
Penn about implications or
problems the switch could
have for Huron. Warden
Gerry Ginn said he was sur-
prised by the lack of
response from council con-
sidering. this change "looks
a lot like district health
councils that were so con-
troversial here two years
ago".
"However," added the
warden. "I can see the needs
and benefits of this change."
Principal gets okay
for job inquiry
A 'request from Central
Huron Secondary School
principal G.U. Phillips for
permission to be nominated
for Department•-ef Pfaiionaf--
Defense work was granted
by the Huron County Board
of Education Monday night
but not.without some subtle
criticism by Goderich
trustee Dorothy Wallace.
Phillips sent a letter to the
board asking it to nominate
him for a two-year stint in
one of the DND schools
overseas. Phillips said it was ,
his understanding that the
DND schools would be in
need of principals in the near
future and he wanted per-
mission from the Huron
board to apply for a post.
The CHSS principal who
took over as senior ad-
ministrator at the Clinton
school in 1977. told the board
That he realized it was a
surprise move considering
he had just taken over his
present duties. r.
/he board's approval of
Phillips' nomination means
that if he is accepted for a
two-year UND term the
Huron board must guarantee
hifn a-similar--feb-te he -One -
he leaves here. As principal
at CRSS he is paid 837.590 a
year and the Huron .board
must take him back at a
salary comparable to that
when he returns.
The letter from Phillips to
the -board was handwritten
and showed the principal had
excellent penmanship but
was not all that proficient in
grammar. Goderich trustee
Dorothy Wallace noted the
grammatiCal errors In
Phillips' letter.
"Not that it's going to get
me anywhere but I would
like to make note of the
grammatical errors in Mr.
Phillips' letter,'' said
Wallace. "This is a letter
from a secondary 'school
principal and there are three
mistakes in it." _ s
"Yes but the writing is real
goo51," said Exeter trustee
Clarence McDonald.
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Home/Shop
Bench Vise
4" yige features replaceable
hat Iened faces,.permanent -
pipe jaws plus large anvil
24"
and horn. Swivel base.
Screwdriver J 549
7 -Pc. Set. Ea Set
•
Includes pockei riot• ''*.. x•
547-412 4" SIOt: ' 4'" x 5 slot #2.
recessed stubby. # 1 and *2
Robertson and scratch awl
Tarried plastic hardles
547-0'50
/
-1`
Season
n#i-
Freeze
If I 1
All -year protection against
winter freete-up and•summer
boll -otter. Permanent. won't
evaporate or boil away or
foam. Mixes well with other
types. Good from - 64°C to
136°C. . .. ....548.008
34;.
•
gallon
Eclipse Hacksaw 799
With 12" Blade Ea
Tubular chromed frame,
comfortablegrip. Adj. for 10"
or' 12" blades. ... 547-724
•
71.14" Heavy-duty-6fl99
Skilsaw'I Ea.
All ball bearings. 1/16" to 23'&'
cut depth at 90°, 17)e" at 45'.
Features blade' lock,
heavy -gauge steel. foot.
sawdust ejection system.
5200 rpm. , 597-710
• NC Skil • 6288
"Xtra Tool" DriIP Ea
Adjustable trigger speed
control 0 t� 850 rpm. For-
ward 6r reverse operation
.Use it as a screwdriver.
drill or. hammer drill. Ham-
mers 33.750 blows per
minute. ',3 hp motor (115V.
3.2 amoi 597-702
Lufkin' Unilok - t�88
25' Power Tape Q Ea
Stud markings 34 blade
Toggle lock. 524-050
3 metre/16' tape as above
524-051 Ea $6.13( •
.40" Vise Grip'
Locking.Piier
Wrench
C99
J Ea
Two curved aws ,nitr, built-
in wire cutter Double action
lever grip . 547-656
11 -Pc. Combn.
Wrench Set 2599
Sy^' -Gray J Ea Sri
Contains 11' combination
wrenches on -sizes 3', to t In
a handy roll -up storage kit
547-218
ANTI -FREEZE
For All"Sgosons
ANTIGEL
•
WARNING/AVERTISSEMrNT
AUNT
10 oz., 8'h" 488
Ptimp Oiler ' Ea
Detachable flexible spout •
for hard -to -get -at areas
S'eamtets heavy -gauge
metallic blue steel body, all
brass pump. ' 547-700 ,
W L��
-Gas Line Anti -Freeze
De-ices frozen gas lines. re-
duces build-up. Keeps fuel
system condensation -free.
6 oz. bottle Childproof cap.
548-011
!1oo
7
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Potting soil
A precise blend of com-
posted rich loam sod
2'h qt: 270-388- Each -.71
4 qt: 270-387 Each ....88
8 qt. 270-391 Each . 1.52
'h bushel: 270-386 2.42
1 bushel: 270-390 3.58
R
I
An expandedbite size dog
food that gives your dog a
complete balance of needed
nutrients - 438-303
Hi -Boy
Dog
Chunks
SP*
30 amp. battery
Windshield 99� charger with 951?
3Washer Anti -Freeze ea oat 200 amp booster
Effective to 35 C Special anti -smearing Dual-purpose .. boosts car batteries on
formula. Premixed. Rubber preservative coldest mornings or charges overnight. 6
minimizes wiper. blade wear. Safety and 12 -volt lettings. Fast, Slow and Boost
childproof cap. 548-022 settings. Dbl. insui. 572-173
SONIC CHARGERS
6 amp. 572-035 21.55
10 amp. 572-037 29.99
African Violet
Potting Soil
An outstanding growing
medium for all tender rooted
plants.
2'h qt: 270-367 Each .71
4 qt: 270 -366 -Each -..88
8 qt: 270-365 Each . t.52
EXETER DISTRICT CO-OP
EXETER
235-2081
CO-OP
CAT FOOD
482-
10 kg
Nutritionally -balanced food In Q49 1 75
V tees • IQ
an economrcat dry form
HENSALL DISTRICT CO-OP
ZURICH HENSALL BRUCEFIELD
236-4393 2623002 482-9823
•
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