HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1983-09-07, Page 84.0
CUT FROM THE LOIN -GRADE 'A' BEEF
SIRLOIN
STEA
6s9 2•'!
/kg lb
K�o aag°
'tH�9
PAa;E 8 t LIN '!UN N :WS-REt ORD, WE1)N1-.5L)Ai . SEPTEMBER 7, 198:1
There were lots of good bargains available at the Huronview Rummage Sale held last
week. ( Rod Hilts photo)
At Walton United
Sunday Schoolers are back
By Betty McCall
On Sunday morning the
Walton Sunday School
children were back after the
summer break. Before they
went to their classes Rev.
Swan talked with them on
some of his experiences at
the Assembly in Vancouver.
Teachers for the Sunday
School are Dianne Mc-
Callum, Gloria Love, Cheryl
Fraser and Marie McGavin.
Now that we are into . the
fall season, meetings will
start again. This Wednesday
evening the U.C.W. will meet
at 8 p.m. Remember your
tea towels for the church kit-
chen.
Ruth'S
Cusfom Crafts
No. 4 to
,Clanton
No. 4 to : Iyth
•LONDESBORO
County Rood No. 15
a Ruth's
LOOK FOR THE SIGN!
•CUSTOM KNIT
CLOTHING
Sweaters a
Specialty - all
shades, all sizes
available.
Lots of patterns
to choose from
CLOSED SUNDAYS
New hymn books were
dedicated at the morning
service in memory of the
late Mrs. Jean Broadfoot;
who had a particular interest
in young people especially
through the Sunday School.
They were placed in the
front pews that are occupied
by the children.
The Unified Board
meeting is scheduled for
Sunday, September 11 at the
home of Don and Marilyn
McDonald. The Rev. Der-
wyn Docken of Dorchester
will return as guest minister
at the 118th Anniversary Ser-
vice on September 18.
A large number of people
from the village and area at-
tended the Ryan Drying
Customer . Appreciation
night at the Brussels, Morris
and Grey Community Centre
on Friday for a pork
barbecue.
On Sunday Mr. and Mrs.
John Perrie were hosts for
the McCall family dinner.
Those present were Mr. and
Mrs. Archie Young of Blyth;
Mr. and Mrs. George McCall
of Clinton; Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Snell of Londesboro;
Mr. and Mrs. Jim McCall of
Blyth and Mr. and Mrs.
Allan McCall of Walton.
ROWDS ARE JAMMING THEIR WAY IN FOR THIS GREAT SALE NOW GOING ON!
THANKS
FOLKS!
We Deeply Apredate �I
Tau 'baffle lama
T. This GREAT KAU.
PRICE CUTTER'S AX FALLS AGAIN
COL O1'SAL , T' RR/F/C, NERVE-nNGL ING, PRICE -SMASHING VALUES!
OWTTING
Business
MANX ITEMS
PRICED FAIL
BELOW
60 Y
REMEMBER
Our Bonus Buy Is Still in Effect
Buy any 5 yards of fabric at 60%
off and get any 3 patterns of your
choice for only $1.00
Patterns alone - 70% off
LARON:E SeiTTAL
Store Hours Department Store
Daily 9-630. �®.�l 86-57 Main StY Seaforth
.,..rs. Fri 9-4 S27-1960
Three townshi
Council membgrs from
McKillop, Seaforth and
Tuckersmith now know
more about the proposed
new landfill site for their
communities.
They walked to within
yards of the site, now par-
tially planted in corn, viewed
maps and plans and asked
questions of engineers Burns
Ross and George Godin.
Two access roads to the
site are possible, Mr. Ross
told the councillors. One, off
County Road 12, the paved
road north from Seaforth,
could involve expropriation
if the two landowners refiuse
to sell. Another could come
into the site from the north,
off the Con. 5 and 6 road,
across property owned by
John H. McLlwain Con-
struction Ltd., owner of the
38 acres selected for the
dump.
Engineers can list advan-
tages and disadvantages of
each route, Mr. Ross said,
but it will be up to the landfill
site committee to decide
which it wants.
Price?
That committee, and the
price to be paid for the land
were two of the major topics
at the meeting, which follow-
ed the site tour. Tuckersmith
had asked for the meeting
and McKillop had some ob-
jections to a landfill site
draft agreement that all
three municipalities had
received.
When Reeve Bob Bell of
Tuckersmith, who chaired
the informal meeting, sum-
med up that he wasn't happy
about the way the option or
price of the land had been
handled, "initiated by one
municipality and that's not
fair," Seaforth Councillor,,
Paul Ross objected. "For the
record...the offer from Mr. •
McElwain was not received
and approved by the Town of
Seaforth but by the commit-
tee."
"There should be minutes
some- place," commented
McKillop councillor Bill
Leeming. Those minutes, as
read by Seaforth Clerk Jim
Crocker, who acts as
secretary to the landfill com-
mittee, showed the motion to
take an option on the McLI-
wain offer to sell about 30
acres at that price was made
by the Tuckersmith
member, Bill Brown, to
Seaforth council.
Minutes of the landfill
committee ( members are
Mr. Brown, Reeve Bill
Campbell of Seaforth and
Bill Siemon of McKillop
aren't sent to each council
but Mr. Siemon circulates
his at McKillop council,
Reeve Marie Hicknell said.
The lawyer who will handle
the Environmental Assess-
ment Act hearing on the site
says neither an executive
nor motions are necessary,
Mr. Siemon said. But detail-
ed minutes are kept by the
engineers, because every
step of the dump selection
process has to be
documented fully to meet en-
vironmental standards.
Chairman
Councillors from the two
rural areas want a chairman
of the committee, preferably
from McKillop, to call the
meetings and run them, in
Reeve Bell's words, "in a
more business -like way. "
Both the town and McKillop
felt three members are
enough. "The Environment
ministry is calling the shots
anyway," Brian Campbell of
t 'srososed l
McKillop said.
The draft agreement on
the landfill site and formaliz-
ing of the committee was
worked out at its last
meeting, in late June, with
all three clerks attending,
Mr. Crocker said.
The engineers talked
about the tough site selection
standards the environment
and agriculture and food
ministry demand. "We must
go back and analyze every
one of the questions asked at
the public meetings."
"They tell you what to do
at no cost to them," said
Reeve Bell.
The study for the landfill
site will cost $86,000 and
$60,000 has been spent to
date, engineer Godin told
McKillop Councillor John
George. No book has been
written on establishing a
landfill site, Mr. Siemon ex-
plained. The ministry gives
guidelines and then they and
the Environmental Assess-
ment Act hearings "say if
it's okay."
When Reeve Bell criticized
the $3,300 per acre price as
"unreal for that quality of
land", Mr. George replied
that n the seller "knew then
what he knows now", that
the Lot 24, Con. 4 site was the
most acceptable of 19, '.the
price would likely have been
worse." Although Paul Ross
said it's rare for a seller to
get exactly what he asks for
a property, most councillors
agreed there was nothing
that could be done about
price now.
The owner offered the land
at that price back in Oct.
1981, and engineer Burns
Ross pointed out farm land
prices, now "on the down
side", were rising then and
"it's easy to say now, we are
paying too much."
Cost Sharing
The suggested shares of
costs of the project -
Tuckersmith 44 per cent,
Seaforth 37 and McKillop 29
- are based on the number
of people m each municipali-
ty who'll use the dump.
Research shows town people
have 1.4 kilograms of gar-
bage a day each and rural
people 1 k per 'day. Coun-
cillor Bob Broadfoot of
Tuckersmith doubted most
rural people had that much
garbage.
fill site
The figures do not take in-
to account industrial or com-
mercial garbage, but the
landfill committee could
consider that when assessing
costs, engineers said.
Each council will now be
reviewing the draft agree-
ment for the landfill site and
will send its concerns back to
the landfill site committee.
However none of the coun-
cillors disagreed when Mr.
Siemon said "We have to
keep going in the direction
we are going or it's going to
double costs."
X77
Pnnneipnennn,
PER SPECIAL
SUPER SPECIAL
CUT FROM THE LOIN
GRADE 'A' BEEF
MAPLE LEAF
FULLY COOKED
PORK SHOULDERS
SPECIAL PRICES IN EFFECT FROM
WED. SEPT. 7 THRU TUES. SEPT 13
PRODUCE SPECIALS EXPIRE SAT. SEPT. 10
SUPER SPECIAL
FULL CUT
BONELESS •
ROUND STEAKS
540.49
/kg
....R SPECIA ' �• ..
BOTTOM
OUTSIDE ROUND
ROAST OR STEAK
5.492¢0
SCHNEIDERS VACUUM PACKED
RING BOLOGNA
PRIDE OF CANADA MINI ROUND
DINNER HAM FULL Y
MAPLE LEAF SLICE & FRY
SA
SAUGE MEAT ROLL 500
MAPLE LEAF
5.49 /kg 2.491b.
6.15/kg 2.791b
1.59
3.59
1.39
VEAL STEAKETTES
SCHNEIDERS LIFESTYLE -5 VARIETIES
TURKEY MEATS
STORE SLICED
PRIDE OF CANADA ROUND
DINNER HAM
STORE SLICED
SCHNEIDERS JUMBO
750 g
125 g
fPICN
INT
5.49/kg
2.49..
9.46,kg
SUMMER SAUSAGE 4.29..
COIL STYLE
MAPLE LEAF
3.95/kg
POLISH SAUSAGE 1.79.
SPEC AL SPECIAL
INSIDE TOP BONELESS
ROUND RUMP
ROAST OR STEAK, ROAST
5'2" 5'
32 .69
/kg Ib. /kg Ib.
PECIA ,
BONELESS
SIRLOIN TIP
ROAST OR STEAK
.15 .79
/kg Ib.
, SPECtA.
MEDIUM
GROUND
BEEF
2.95 1.79
/kg Ib.
PIAL
BONELESS SWT. PICKLED
MAPLE LEAF
COTTAGE ROLL
j.17 1.89
if /kg Ib
SPECIAL.
MAPLE LEAF
SLICED
COOKED HAM
175 g
PK G.
1.19
SPECIAL
SCHNEIDERS SWT. PICKLED
CORNMEALED
BACK BACON
7.69249
/kg Ib.
SPECIAL
REGULAR OR ALL BEEF
COUNTRY GOLD
WIENERS
454 g 49
1 LB e
SCHNEIDERS-6 VAR.
SANDWICH
MEAT SPREAD
R2 Ott 250 Lg
SPECIAL.
SCHNEIDERS FAMILY PACK
BEEF
BURGERS
£29
COUNTRY GOLD -5 VAR.
SLICED
COOKED MEATS
175 g 890
PK G
BURNS LINK STYLE
PORK & BEEF
BREAKFAST
SAUSAGE
3.73 1.69
/kg Ib.
PER I ECTAL.
CANADA NO. 1 GRADE
THIS YEAR'S CROP
ONTARIO
POTATOES
C61
BIND o`i�
10 Ib, BAG •
9
{
SUPER SPECIAL
CANADA NO. 1 GRADE
CRISP GREEN
•I, ONTARIO
CABBAGE
SUPER S ' CIAL.
TENDER WHITE
PROD. OF CALIFORNIA
PROD. OF ONT. CAN. NO. 1
ONTARIO 05 kg TOKAY 2.62 kg FRESH
MUSHROOMS 1.88,. GRAPES CAN
, 119. CARROTS
PROD. OF 5. AFRICA
GRANNY SMITH,
APPLESANCV
PROD. OF ONT. CAN. N0. 1
1.96kg GREEN SWEET
89! PEPPERS 6/89¢
PROD. OF U.S.A. CAN. NO. 1 PRODUCT OF U.S.A.
SPANISH TYPE 1.08,k9 FRESH
ONIONS 49# SPINACH to 0,
PKG
BUNCH
FOR HOME OR OFFICE
BOSTON
FERN 6 POT
FOR HOME OR OFFICE
DIEFFEN®
89' BACHIA 6 POT
49
16 OZ. SIZE
4.99IBRAN BREAD 59#
429
COUNTRY OVEN
16 OZ. SIZE
CHUNKY STYLE
CHEESE BREAD/IS
FRESH BAKED
DINNER ROLLS 69#