HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1974-10-17, Page 9Women'st Day OutExecutive
There's a Women's Day Out Program begun in Goderich for
women vitho want to get out of the house for a littlewhile each
week. The organization offers something for everyone and
plans are for activities ranging from crafts an fitness classes
to lectures. Pictured here are the members of the executive:
(back row, left to right) Edwina Allen, chairwoman; Hilde
Maurer, treasurer Pat' Hamilton, Fun and. Fitness convener;
Christine Bryant, babysitting committee; Isobel) ,MacDonald,
program convener; (front row; left to right) Joan Van Den
Broeck and daughter Lisa;; Barbara Desjardins and daughter
Paula, babysitting committee; Mary 'Carroll and son Karsten,
communications officer; and Nancy Pond and daughter Kelly;
secretary. (staff photo)
Huron -Perth SS Board
Seaforth offices to remain open
BY' WILMA OKE
Huron -Perth County Roman
'Catholic Separate School
Board will continue to main-
tain its administrative offices
in the same location on. Main
Street, ---Seaforth; for• another •
year.
At • a meeting of the Board
- Tuesday night in' Seaforth,
--authorization was given, for
renewing the lease until
January 31, 1976, with the
owner of the building, Richard
S. Box Seaforth, at a rental of
$390 per month. This decision
was reached in committee of
the whole at a !beefing which
lasted until about an hour after
midnight.
Answer to quiz...
names of school students
Each and.. every _week the Florence Johnston and Ruth
Signal -Star pubzlishes an - old Foster; (fourth -row from left)
picture and the staff are . Evelyn Dougherty, .Charlotte
amazed by the memories of our Dougherty, Miss Long
readers ‘•as they• name the (teacher), Ida Hawkins,
people in the picture. Last week Mildred; Dougherty and Bella
two pictures taken of the 1912 Green (caretaker):
and 1915 graduating 'classes of The lower • picture, the, 1912
'Sheppardton School were put 'graduates `are (front row from
in the paper and all the left) Johnny Bogie, Harvey
students, the teachers and -the Sillib, Tommy Bogie, George
caretakers were named. Dougherty, Harold Tigert,
For any readers who know . Florence Johnston, Harold
most of ttie people but are Johnston and Frank Hawkins;
stumped on one' ortwo, here (second row from left) Marion
are the names .of the students Tigert, Laura Graham,
in both pictures. Florence Dougherty, Margurite
In the upper picture, the Johnston, Mary Wilson,
graduates of 1915, the 'people Christina Bogie, Rita Graham,
are (front row from left) Frank Bertha Foster and Reuben
Hawkins, Johnny. Bogie, Jack Bogie;: (third 'row from .left)
Ryan, George Dougherty,, Ethel Graham,. Mildred
Harold•.Tigert, Elmer Bennett Dougherty, Charlotte
and Walter Tigert; (second roW Dougherty,. Miss Barkley
from left) Rita Graham, 'Edna (teacher), Ida Hawkins, Leona
Bennett, Florence Dougherty, Young, May Menary and Med ,
Christina Bogie, Lillian' Newell, , Graham.
Margaret. Johnston, Marion If anyone has an old picture
Tigert and Mary Wilson. (third of some local people'or events,
row from left) Laura Graham, bring it out to the Signal and
Frank VrooMan, Clarence Ben- see if anyone Van name all' the
nett, Harold Johnston, Harvey people' involved. You may he
'Sillib, Tommy Bogie, Bryden surprised just how much people
Vrooman, Hector Tigert, do' remember. • '
•
Pa •
ge U3ahaz s of ejod r'icli
invite you to 1
6
(9/6en Rouse
\f'nac1Xay Ekon, clot erich
12 noon -,5:3#1)4m.
d
followed b
evening ruifjx, i'be J)olr.ai's
b
al 8:3o .
cel aturclay, )dobe' 19, 1974
�33
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RESOLUTION ENDO' SED
In other business the Board
endorsed a resolution from the
Roman Catholic Separate
School Board of the District of
Sudbury • calling for legislation' •
CO give the right to a 'separate
school board, as well as to a
board 'of education or to a
public school board, either to
organize and maintain classes
for mentally retardedd'children
or to purchase from another
board if desirable, and that
grants .applicable for such
classes be •also made available
to'separate--schzio1 boards..
BOARD SCHOLARSHIP
The Board will again con-
tribute a scholarship to the
Stratford Kiwanis Music
• Festival,. increasing the value
to $100 from $75 for 1974-.7'5
term,
Perth . County Humane
Society was granted permission
to canvass the students in the
separate schools in Stratford
for volunteers willing t•o par-.
ticipate in a .Tag Day ca y_a:;s
to raise money for the Society.
It . was confirmed that Vin-
cent Young, Goderich; and
Francis Ricknell, Seaforth, are
the . Board representatives on
the Family Life Committee.
FAMILY LIFE PROGRAM
. The committee is scheduled.
to meet on October 30 to decide
whether to reccirnrhend con-
tinuance of the Family Life
program in the schools , this
term. They will study the data
from the pilot project carried
out last' spring..
Howard Shantz, Stratford,
who is in favour of the program
being continued and expanded,
expressed concern that the,'
Family Life Committee had not
already' met to' consider the
data and that a recommen-
dation might not be ready for
the next hoard, meeting on
November 12.:
"It' seems like a lung, long
time. I feel they are not pushing
hard enough to get this under
way'', Mr. Shantz slated.
Hallowe'en will he
celebrated. in Stratford this
year on Wednesday,• • OE tober
30,. rather than on the Friday
.n'ight nearer 'Hallowe'en.
Gordon Ball reported three
street lights are being installed
at Holy Name of Mary School
in St. Marys -- on the north
Side of the' school on Egan
Avenue.
ANNOUNCING....
a change of
name: Ilt ownership!
June apt] Coby Amsing
wish to announce the
sale' o1 their business to
Freda and Henk Snieder.
We would like to take this opportunity to thanleall of
our customers fortheir loyal and friendly patronage
over the past 13 years: We hope you continue to
patronize Freda. and Henk as they continue _the
business.
.
AMSINGS STORE:
,. 55 ALBERT St. CLINTON dinton's Knitting Centre
WILL NOW BE KNOWN
AS
THE
Dutch Store
55 ALBERT STREET ., -
CLINTON. ' • 482-7307
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t,OiM R1(l SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, ocToakti 17, 1914 ,A0E, 9
AIGIE
•
PATEN' MEDiCIN ES •- HEALTH Aid BEAUTY AIDS
\ .
TOBACCO.- CONVENIENCE GROCERIES - BORD'EN M LK a vd. iC CRE M l
100 TABLETS PLUS 20 FREE
ON E -A -DAY
VITAMINS •'2
HAIR COLOUR 2 OZ. .
EASY s1.44
100 ML.
CREST
Toothpaste
BOX OF 180
vromemerommimmemominammimpil
24 OZ.
LOAF
42c
6 OZ.
NOXZEMA $
SKIN CREAM I •
e Oz.
SPRAY
STARCH
(F
0
FURNITURE $
POLISH
AEROSOL
WINDOW
CLEANER
71c
CIGARETTES
REG. 'SIZE
CARTON
KING SIZE Ss.
,CARTON
or1r
•
SALE PRICES EFFECTIVE TIL SUNDAY OCT. 20
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT, TO. LIMIT QUANTITIES 58 THE' SQUARE, GO;DERIC.H
OPEN TIL tO P.M.
7 DAYS A WEEK
CRAIGIE'S
CRAI.GIE'S
CRAIGIE'S
— CRAIGIE'S — CRAIGIE'S — sn
WITH A MODERN MAID MICROWAVE OVEN
Coini1arison Chart
Rolled rib oast (5 lbs)
Baked potatoes (4)
Turkey (12 lbs.) •
Bacon 13 strips)
SloppyJoes (4)
Can of Soup
Scrambled eggs
Frozen -T 'di n ners
30 minutes (mod I
11 12 minutes
90 minutes �,
1 minute 15 secc1P'rds
60 Seconds,.., e;
3 4 minutes
•,.2) 2 ininutes
5 7 minutes
Less Clean. Up ,
Time
Because the oven interior stays
'cool, foods don't burn on. You can
wipe out the oven interior, evert af-
ter cooking a juicy roast - no jnore
scraping and scouring.
G •
It's Easy to Use
You. cook with time, not tem-
perature. You just turn the unit on,
set the fierier and push a button to
cook. An indicator light tells you
When the oveh is cooking; and a
bell timer tells you when cooking.
isndone.
What about Browning
Yes, you can cook a beautifully
browned beef roast in about 20
minutes on your Microwave oven:
Foods that cook for any length of
time (roasts, poultry) will brown
just as In a conventional oven, but
you may still prefer to broil steaks
on •a grill or broiler:
Faster Cooking Time
This full-size Microwave oven is
incredibly fast. Cuts cooking time
about 75%. This "means you can
cook a complete•meal in minutes.
Greatfor working wives, busy
mothers, big families, or people
who entertain. Microwaves mean
instant heat with out'warm-up
time. Cooking starts as soon as
the oven is turned on, and only the
food is heated by ,Microwave
energy. And speed is just one of
• the a `,many advantages of
Microwave cooking.
° Automatic Defrosting
The microwave oven feature& a
spec•i_al cycle for ' automatic
(defrosting of frozenfoods. Saves
hours of defrosting time for big
items like roasts or turkeys. When
defrosting, microwave energy
cycles on and off automatically to
thaw frozen foods'without cooking
them\ It's great for the new frozen
convenience foods, too.
No More. Pots &0Pans
No more pots and pans to•scrape
and scour. You cook in paper
glass or ceramic utensils, cooking
most foods in the same dishes
you'll use for serving at the table.
Cleanup is reduced conslderably.
Fits on the Counter
Engineered with comp'aet com-
ponents to give you one of the
biggest Microwave ovens on the
market, yet deigned to fiteasily
under your wall cabinets. It's shot-
' ter front to bapk to give you coun-
ter work space at the front. The'
swing door opens to the side, out
of your way. Features Posi-latch
action.
n
62 CA IBRIA RD.
F
Microwaves do the Job
Microwave energy is absorbedby
food substances, causing instant
molecular agitation (heat) - but
only in the food.'
Glass, ceramic, even paper plates
can be used for cooking, because
they transmit Microwave energy.
The metal walls in the oven reflect
energy, so they don't get hot,
foods won't stick,and burn on, and
clean-up' is fast and easy.
More Nutritious Foods
Laboratory tests have shown that
foods cooked with Microwave
energy retain.more vitamins, more
color, because they g cook so
quickly. Less moisture is lost•
through evaporation.
Flexibility, Portability
You can use this oven wherever
you want it. No expensive In-
stallation--
n-
stallation•- just set It on the kit-
chen countertop. and plug it into
any adequate 3 -prong outlet.
Place it on a cart to make it por-
table A rolls from kitchen to dining
room - even 10 the patio for out-
door living.
See this Microwave
Noir . .
You'll have
happier Cookingl
• DER$ .
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