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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1977-03-03, Page 11• Goderich Twp. native heads ,giant U.S. John The February meeting for the SS no. 4 Community Club was finally held at Norene Tebbutt's home. The mem- bers met at 12:30 noon for a "Pot -luck" dinner. After a well unplanned meal the afternoon was spent quilting. The meeting was opened'by the president Linda Jones with the Creed and The Lord,s Prayer. Dianne Lobb read the minutes of the December meeting and the correspondence. The secretary's annual report was read also. Norene Tebbutt read the treasurer,s report and the annual report. Roll Call was answered by 11 members and four visitors. Linda had completed her term of office and the new president Milena Lobb was put in charge, The March meeting will be held at Phyllis Thompson's home. "Tunnel" vision Just what the weatherman will bring from day to day no one knows but the people who travel the roads know it certainly is nice to be able in most places to meet another car and pass without having to backup to a wide spot. One spot .in this area was the hill which must have given the school bus driver the "willies". It wasn't wide enought to open' both doors and even after the plows worked on it one felt hemmed in. Then the big blower arrived *and left us with some nice high straight banks. If seeing groundhogs is a sign of spring we. are in luck. as Doug Feagan has—seen' several. The Don Lobb family will be glad to see spring. They have had two children in the hospital,Laurie in Clinton and Sandra in London. Glad to be able to say Sandra got home after 21/2 weeks in St. Joseph/ s Hospital. Peter Bartlett is still recuperating from his hospital stay. Hullett Happenings Volleyball Tournament On February 26, Hullett's boys and girls volleyball 4 team went to'C.H.S.S. to play in a tournament. The teams had been playing preliminary matches against Blyth and Clinton before the tour- nament. Results of the tournament will be given next week. M Heritage Week Celebration Grade 8 celebrated Heritage Week (Feb. 21-25) by having a display of pioneer Implements and articles on Wednesday, February 23. The Huron Pioneer Museum at Goderich con- tributed to the good display. Constable Wilson Constable Wilson paid us iok another visit on Wednesday, February 23. On that day he spoke to the pupils about vandalism. He brought with him an informing film and some photographs of vandals' work. The pupils discovered that it is very wrong to destroy property, and they enjoyed' the presentation very much. Public Speaking Public speaking is again under way at Hullett Central. Pupils from grades 4 - 8 compete first in class and then in the auditorium. There are two divisions, junior division (grades . 4-6) and senior division (grades 7 and 8). N 0 w 0 ORGAN SPECIAL PER DAY gives you the use of a com- plete home organ, with 2 manual pedals, rhythm, autochord, in your home plus free lessons during the five week trial period. Here's your chance to try before you buy, with no obligation. SEE OR PHONE PULSIFER MUSIC SEAFORTH 527-0053 The competitors this year in the auditorium are: grade 4, Jeff McNarin, Susan Van Egmond; grade 5, Bill Million, Mary Lou Anderson; grade 6, Bruce Vincent, Janice Daer; grade 7,. John Lawson, -Cameron Moon, Karen Farquhar; grade 8, Deanna Finch, Christine Carter, Brenda Millar. The competition was to have been held on Thursday, February 24, but the sleet storm postponed it until Monday, Feb. 27. By Hilda M. Payne For more than 25 years, the people of the town of Hensall have had the devoted services of Dr. John Goddard. Dr. John has delivered their babies, attended them at home, .stitched up their hockey injuries, attended with them at church 'and performed all those services for which one looks ., to a ,doctor. At the same time he has been a friend to all. Now, very shortly, Hensall will have to say, "good bye" to Dr. Goddard as their physician. So, before you go, please accept a big "thank you" from us all. Change and progress go hand in hand. Now Hensall is to have 'a Medical Clinic on King Street. The house has been bought and it is hoped that renovations will be completed in the latter half of April. Dr. C. Wallace from Zurich and Dr. W.D. O'Connor from Grand Bend, with the help of Mrs. A. Visscher, Kippen, a nurse practitioner will be running the Clinic. Dr. Wallace will be in attendance on some days and Dr. O'Connor will see patients on other afternoons. The rest of the time Mrs. Visscher will be using her skills to aid those in need. This will be a new set-up in the village of Hensall, a new location, in some cases a new way of obtaining medical advice. Hensall is , a progressive village and welcomes these dedicated professionals to their village. STAY ON TOP OF WINTER PaanaPacrron1 Fitness. In your heart you know it's right. GERRARD'S SHOPPING CENTRE At Least VICTORIA ST. CLIN "ON * Are now carrying GIRL'S CLOTHING - Sites r to 14 * MEN'S and BOY'S DEPT. on the second floor 1O% DISCOUNT on every Rom In the store .R, CLINTON NEWS- RCOR to, THURSDAY, MA1 CI-13,11ri7 PAGE 11 Separate bd. has own curriculum plann n, Curriculum 'planning at the local level is already un- de,way in the Huron Perth ' Roman Catholic separate school system according to guidelines from the. Ministry of Education superintendent of curriculum 13111 Eckert told members of the board at their regular meeting in Dublin -on Monday night. Mr. Eckert said education minister Thomas Wells has said that the ministry will ,°,provide curriculum guidelines that "Make sure kids get the fundamentals" and provide a base for local development of curriculum. The HPRCSSS system will used curriculum guides that are already available to plan courses of study for kin- dergarten to grade six -students and will get - guidelines on grades seven and eight in April from the ministry. Curriculum committees on art and science have already started work and a com- mittee on reading will start next week Mr. Eckert said. Teachers in the Huron Perth system are being asked what curriculum committees they want to sit on and will contribute programs that they've already developed and which are working well. In addition to courses of study already used in the board's schools the _curriculum committees will draw on ideas from other boards Mr. Eckert said. "We re not going to invent the wheel all over again," Mr. Eckert said explaining that developing the curriculum is a matter of consolidating what teachers in the system already know and what can be gained from the ex- perience of others. If the ministry guidelines are as &y Milena Lobb Gerald I. Tebbutt son of Irvine and Edith Tebbutt and well-known to many in Goderich Township, is a young man we can be proud to say grew up and got his early ° education in Huron County. After graduating from CHSS he attended University in Guelph graduating with his BSA. In 1958 he began as a product engineering trainee in the John Deere Welland works. Gerry returned to school after working for the summer and graduated from the University of Toronto with his Mechanical Engineering Degree (BASC). He returned to the Welland Plant and after several years in product engineering he successfully served as superintendent of manufacturing works manager and as general manager since 1974. In December 1976 Gerald was appointed general manager of John Deere Plow and Planter Works in Moline Illinois USA. A farm -boy at heart Gerry his wife Shirley son Gregory and daughter Wendy have spent a lot of time on the Tebbutt home -farm which he now owns. Holmesviile news by Blanche Deeves Church News Worship Service and Sunday School- was held at Holmesville United Church Sunday at 1 p.m. The Annual skating party of the , Sunday Schools of Holmesville and Wesley - Willis United Churches was held Sunday afternoon in Clinton. This was followed by a pot luck lunch at Wesley - Willis. Ladies take note: A work meeting will take place March 8th at 10 a.m. with a pot luck lunch at Holmesville United Church. Personals , Cathy Potter spent the weekend in London with her sister and family Mr. and Mrs. Ken Ashton. School News The Professional Development Day for the teachers which was originally scheduled for March 7 has been cancelled. Classes will be held on this date as usual. Kindergarten registration will , be held in the school gymnasium on Wednesday March 2. Appointments for the registration will be made through the Huron County • Health Unit. Those people who are not contacted by the Health Unit by Monday,February 28th 'can arrange the same by con- tacting the school in the af- ternoons at 482-7751. • descriptive as has bOen in- dicated "a lot of what we need to work with will be there", he said. A system wide professional development day on reading is being held March 7 at St. Michael' s School ;in Stratford Mr. Eckert told the trustees. Trustee David Teahen of Stratford asked if a record will be kept of attendance at the PD day since it is "an important day for all teachers." .\ Director of Education John Vintar told Mr. Teahen that principals are responsible for informing the administration about any absences and filling in any teachers who are sick and unable to attend. The board met in com- mittee of the whole for an hour and a half in public session for two hours and then "went back into committee of the whole at 11:30. One of the items being discussed in private is the feasibility of introducing French in grades other than seven and eight in HPRCSS schools. But the only report out of committee of the whole was a recommendation that the board's Insurance committee study , the possibility of 24-hour accident coverage for trustees before policy renewal in October. The custodians, negotiating team has been formed and has told the personnel committee that they are ready to start meeting Mr. Teahen added. Trustees felt that it was probably no longer necessary to appoint two of their number to go over the monthly computerized cheque list with business superintendent Jack Lane. If you think a bill's too high you 11 want to question it", trustee Mike Connolly said. He's chairman of the board's finance committee which will bring a recommendation on handling the cheque list to the next board meeting. Trustee Ron Marcy asked the administration about an article in Dimensions a magazine on education from the ministry for trustees which indicated that there are more funds available for special education "How much extra has this board been getting?" he wanted to know. Superintendent Joe Mills explained that there isn't an extra per pupil grant available for special ed like there is for French or metric studies just an adjustment in the grant weighting factor that the ministry uses. "There's a kind of window dressing in Ministry reports, HUNTER for MAYOR Provide a New Approach to Council THE SEPARATE SHOPPE MAIN CORNER, CLINTON (NEXT TO CAMPBELL'S MEN'S WEAR) OPEN 1 -6 PHONE 482-7778 PANTSUITS 2 PIECE'DRESSES OPEN 1 -6 ll" IVD44 1 sioupt.cto--VT • • E. -1e "YOUR ONE STOP GLASS AND TRIM CENTRE" WE SPECIALIZE IN GLASS — AUTO & TRUCK GLASS CAMPER WINDOWS VAN WINDOWS CONSTRUCTION EQUIPMENT TRIM — COMPLETE AUTO UPHOLSTERY PIN STRIPING VINYL ROOFS BODY SIDE MOULDINGS VAN ROOF VENTS INSURANCE CLAIMS FREE. MOBILE SERVICE ON GLASS "THE GLASSMEN OF CANADA" , - .356 BAYFIELD ROAD, GODERICH PHONE 524-2136 AT VANASTRA STORE HOURS: MONDAY TO THURSDAY 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. FRIDAY 9 A.M. - 9 P.M. SATURDAY 9 A.M. - 6 P.M. SUNDAY 11 A.M. - 5 P.M. The Management Reserves the Right to limit quantities to normal family requirements Prices Effective 'til closing, Saturday March '5 "Famous for Quality" PRODUCE PRODUCE U.S.A. CALIFORNIA ORANGES DOZ. 79 4' CANADA - EXTRA FANCY D'ANJOU PEARS 1 0I79 4 PRODUCE U.S.A." GREEN ONIONS 4/69° CANADA NO. 1 - 20 LB. BAG P. E.1, POTATOES .89 FLEECY 7 30's FABRIC SOFTENER SHEETS 1.49 FLEECY LIQUID - 64 OZ. FABRIC SOFTENER 98' • SOLID - DEPDORANT - 4 VAR. - 7 0Z. AIR CARE 59° SUPER SPECIAL 2's - 7 OZ. POLY PKG. CRYSTALS TANG ORANGE CUT FROM FRESH ONTARIO PORK TENDER & JUICY BUTT CHOPS OR SHOULDER CHOPS $ 1 �S 4.5 OZ. - HEINZ FRESH & JUICY - PORK BUTT ROASTS --.4 LB. FRESH - PORK 4 PICNIC SHOULDER ROAST b9 LB. •FRESH - STORE SLICED PORK LIVER "4; LB. CAMPFIRE - 1 LB. VAC. SIDE BACON 1.29. HOMEMADE - COUNTRY STYLE SAUSAGE GROCERY FEATURES GLAD DISPENSER - NO: 1 - 10's. GARBAGE BAGS $1.0 9 ECONOMY SIZE - 170 G. - TOPPING GLAD STRAINED FOODS 5/1. DREAM WHIP $1 .29 KITCHEN CATCHERS 594 14 OZ., HEINZ - W. TOMATO SAUCE CHEF BOY -AR -DEE 39 4 BEEFARONI, RAVIOLI, MEATBALL SPAGHETTI BAKED BEANS LIPTONS - 2'S - DRY CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP 454 NABISCO • SHREDDED WHEAT AYLMER - 14 OZ. CHOICE PEAS 3 /894 494 •'28 OZ. - AYLMER BEE HIVE - 2 LB. CORNSYRUP69a 83; 9 FLAVOURS KOOL-AID 10/994 DR. BALLARD'S - 251/2 OZ. DOG FOOD 2/89 4 BURGER - 2 KG. DRY DOG BITS 1.39 GAINES 14 OZ. PEACH SLICES, PEACH HALVES, FRUIT COCKTAIL DELMONTE FRUITS 2199' KLEENEX - 2's - 3 COLOURS PUPPY CHOICE $x•59 ,PAPER TOWELS 64 OZ. - SUPER SPECIAL JAVEX LIQUID 4 9 FLEISC,HMANN'S - QTRS. - 2 LB. CORN OIL $ i .79 BEE MAID - 2 LB. ROYAL - INSTANT - 312 G $ CHEESE CAKE CREAMED HONEY 1.5 9 SUNLIGHT POWDER - 5 LB. DETERGENT 2 99' 4 iELLO 4 VARIETIES - 6 OZ. INSTANT PUDDINGS 3 /$1. FOR 'BAR -B-0 CHICKEN - 'O$I< RIBS , SHAKE '14 BAKE CHOICE TOMATOES 59' AYLMER - 10 OZ. TOMATO OR 5 VEGETABLE. SOUPS CAMPBELL'S - 10 OZ. CHICKEN NOODLE SOUP 5/ 1. RASPBERRY, ORANGE 24 OZ. MARMALADE, STRAWBERRY 98 AYLMER JAMS Frozen Foods KELLOGG'S • DELUXE - DELUXE 'PIZZA 23 OZ. $ Z . Z 9 KENT - FROZEN - 12.5 OZ. ORANGE JUICE 3/1. - AUNT JEMIMA - APPLE CINNAMON OR BLUEBERRY - 10 OZ. WAFFLES 59' ( ., .... ;fir.