The Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-10-26, Page 9BAECHLER II%/Nht to Iugroar"hw$
and
&KichenS
Presents
KITCHEN CABINET SPECIAL
THIS OFFER EXTENDED BY HANOVER-KITCHENS (CAfIADA) INC. AND PARTICIPATING DEALERS
k EP'THIS! IT'S A $ SAVINGS CER` 1FICAT5'''
BUY A HANOVER CUSTOM KITCHEN
AND
BEFORE NOVEMBER 5, 1983`
WITH THIS AUTHORIZED CERTIFICATE THE PROPERTY OWNER SHO
INDICATED 014 THE PURCHASE OF A HANOVER KITCHEN VALUE
PRICES. THIS IS A SUBSTANTIAL DISCOUNT AND MUST P
$150.00 ALLOWANCE - $1,000. to S1,999
$250.00 ALLOWANCE - $2,000. 10 S2,999
149PO11t ANI
1 Trio promote ....'Weed on lb., 0e.
11.0.1, tonna, be eppb,d to on,
t9Mr purchase and roe, not be
.,,.yrs,° ,r bonder•,.
, Th., ,e., ., good one, when .11
lemma aro corop,.od ...•I0.
1 Solo .n.nyartenIs sobteeI In crc01.
AUTHORIZ PO
HANOVER B
ENTITLED TO AN ALLOWANCE AS
MORE BASED ON HANOVER LISTED
OTHER DISCOUNTS OR ALLOWANCES.
5350.00 ALLOWANCE - $3,000. to S3,999
5450.00 ALLOWANCE - $ OVER $4,000
TEL
SAVE UP TO $450°00
MN:MI ANT
Allowance applicable on
Counters and Cabinets
ONLY.
Ibis otter good from October
9e,
1g83 to and Including
November 5. i 3.
THIS CERTIFICATE MUST BE RECEIVED AT BAECHLER KITCHENS TO BE VALID
{
Remember this great offer expires November 5183
So hurry. Phone us NOW
BAECHLER First,./atnt.ii trio I,rs00141
150 Shoppers Square Goderich 524-8600
CENTRAL HURON SECONDARY
SCHOOL,
Clinton, Ontario
The fire is believed to have started in the
restaurant and spread to the apartments
upstairs, burning through the roof at the
back. Although the buildings are still
standing, virtually everything inside them
has been destroyed and damage may well
exceed $100,000.
DATE
Gourmet
Cooking
CLASS
INSTRUCTOR TIME
Starting
Monday,
October 31
Ben Meritt Chef
Extraordinalre
Formerly
Benmlller Inn
Now Red Pump
EEE
7 pm '25.00
2 hour plus
class a
small
food
charge
DURATION
8 weeks
Registration on the first night of classes.
Fees payable on registration night. If you
are unable to attend the first session
Please Register by phone - 482-3778 evenings
Inquiries - Mel Doherty - 482-3471 9 am -4 pm
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Ontario
Snowmobile
Grass
Drag
Championships
Sun., October 30
Extra Attractions vv..v99p..pvvv.vvvevvlo
• • Water Cross competitions
• ATV Drags
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Racing starts 10:30 (Crate stocks)
12 Noon - mod Stock and Open Mod
2 p.m. - Water Crass (snowmobile skimming over water) r
2:30 p.m. - 3 Wheeler II��
ATV Drags
PAYBACKS
E. Crate stock: trophies 1st to 3rd
al Stock: 75% payback minimum
Modified Stock: 90% payback
=Open Modified: 100% payback
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E.
E.
E. Sports and Recreation. Limited
E Varna, Ontario, Phone 262-3318
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•
" Jnr'
Rck Laviolette of Heath Engineering, Sarnia, applies a finishing coat of fiberglass on a
5,00 gallon fuel tank owned by Edward Fuels of Goderich. The local fuel company recently
fid all theft tanks coated, a process which will ensure that no impurities can enter the
tanks. ( photo by Dave Sykes)
Exci1nt res; Anse sparks
computer training courses
VANASTRA - An excellent response to a
computer training information session for
business and industry in Baron County will
result in courses being started in the
Wingham and Goderich.
On Oct. 19, the Huron County Industrial
Training Committee sponsored the session
at the Conestoga College campus at
Vanastra, that saw over 40 business and
industry representatives in the county at-
tend.
Computer literacy courses will be offered
in Wingham on Monday and Tuesdays and m
Goderich on Thursday and Fridays
beginning around Nov. 1. The courses will be
taught by Glen Machan of Logic Aboard.
The computer training information
session was a joint venture with Conestoga
College and Logic Aboard and is aimed at
trying to promote computer literacy with
small businesses in Huron County.
Ian Moreland, the chairman of the Huron
County Industrial Training Committee, said
he was very pleased with the response from
the county's businesses.
"People are more willing to sit down and
listen about training now that the economy
is on the upswing. There was a very positive
reaction," said Mr. Moreland.
The course is 36 hours in length and will
run over a period of two months. At the
beginning of the course the participant will
gain an understanding of the basic elements
of a computer system and some of the
jargon related to computers. The balance of
the computer is made up of presentations of
commonly used business software systems
designed for microcomputers.
Mr. Moreland describes the Huron County
Industrial Training Committee's role in
promoting the training as that of a catalyst.
"We're the catalyst that get businesses in
contact with Conestoga College and
government funding," said Mr. Moreland.
According to Robert Simpson, manager of
continuing education at Conestoga College,
the course is the only one of its kind in the
area. He said businesses use computers for
such things as inventory, sales flierao n13,
upd i` ing price lists and accounts receivable
and payable.
"The course Is designed for pple who
know nothing about computers,'eosaid Mr.
Simpson.
Mr. Simpson said government budget
increases and Training in Business and
Industry (TIBI) grants have allowed the
college to offer this training programa.
Logic Aboard, which is affiliated with
Conestoga College, was started Mr. Machan
and his wife in May of this year. It is a
mobile office facility equipped with a dozen
industry standard IBM microcomputers and
software.
According to Mr. Machan, companies in
Huron County have to go to computers to
compete on a global basis. He said we're in
the conformation age and whether you're a
farmer or a small businessman, "you've got
to know where you're at."
Mr. Machan stressed the computer course
offered is "most definitely not program-
ming a computer." He said office workers
and managers will have plenty of op-
portunity in class for "hands on" experience
on a microcomputer using the software
system. They will become familiar with a
spreadsheet system and be able to use it for
a variety of financial applications. The
participants will also be able to set up a data
file, to select records which meet certain
criteria and to produce a report.
In describing the progress computers
have made over the last 10 years Mr.
Machan said,"If the auto industry
progressed at the same rate as computers, a
Cadillac would sell for $700, would go 1,000
miles an hour and get 150 miles to the
gallon."
Any business groups interested in the
computer course may contact Robert
Simpson at the Clinton Campus of Conestoga
College. Telephone 482-3458.
Ed Broadbent will stop at Pine River for guided tour
Pine River will be one of the stops for Ed
Broadbent when he tours the ridings of
Bruce -Grey and Huron -Bruce on November
9. He will arrive at the Pine River Cheese
and Butter Co -Operative in the late after-
noon and tour guide Barb Farrell and
members of the board of directors will in-
troduce him to the operation and its
employees.
Commenting on the purpose of Broad -
bent's visit, Bruce-Grev President Michael
Lohse said: "The NDP has always nau an to help preventing that. Those takeovers do
interest in and actively supported co- not help the farmers and they don't aid the
operatives. They are as much part of the customer; they just benefit the big corpora-
NDP's policies as they are an important fac- tions and their shareholders. Moreover it
tor in the history of our party. Co-operatives takes jobs from the local economies due to
traditionally are a very important factor in big corporations tending to centralize their
the farming community - where the Co- operation in one or few locations".
operative Commonwealth Federation, the Besides visiting Pine River, Broadbent
forefather of the NDP was born. will be the guest on the CKNX 'open line'
The NDP sees the role of the co-operative show in the morning. At noon hour he will
threatened by the increasing takeover of have lunch with representatives of the local
their role by the big corporations and wants federations of agriculture, women's in -
GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 96,1843—PAGE 9
Treat
someone
special
to dinner!
' For a
relaxing
dinner with
a special touch!
Where the vegetables
are given as much
attention as the meat,
salad bar and dessert table.
Luncheon and Dinner
Specials Daily.
Gift certificates available.
132 Josephine St. Wingham
Mon Sat. 6 394.m. - 9 p.m.
LICENSED
UNDER
L.L.B.O.
Riverboat. Restaurant
Wingham. Phone 357-1633
stitute, concerned farm women and other
repreentatives of the farming community at
the Wingham council chambers.
From there he will drive to Hanover
where management and labor represen-
tatives will escort him on a tour of the Sklar-
Pepplar Furniture factory at aproximately
2 p.m.
In the evening the Bruce -Grey NDP will
be hosting a dinner at the Hanover coliseum
featuring the federal leader of the NDP as
their keynote speaker.
UNICEF is the official children's agency
1983 marks the 29th year that Canadian
children will Trick -or -Treat for UNICEF,
the United Nations Children's Fund. Last
year, the UNICEF Halloween campaign
raised over one million and a half dollars to
benefit and protect children in 21 countries.
When you give to UNICEF, the official
U.N. "children's" agency, the world's
poorest children receive the basic
necessities of life - food, clean water,
medicine and education. In many countries
around the world, the very question of
survival is one that children face every day.
The first five years of a child's life are the
most important ones. It is during this time
that ninety percent of a child's brain and
fifty percent of a child's body are formed. If
a child's basic needs are not met he could
die or never develop fully. In fact, last year
40.000 young children died. not as a result
of war or natural disaster, but because of
the combination of malnutrition and
preventable infection. For every child that
died, six more live on, hungry and sick.
This is a "silent emergency". It does not
make headlines, but the lack of food and
clean drinking water, inadequate medical
care and the unavailability of social ser-
vices together constitute the greatest threat
to the survival of over one billion children.
In 1982, over five million children and
their mothers benefitted from donations
made to UNICEF Canada. The lives of
hundreds of thousands of children were
saved and their futures were made brighter
than they would otherwise have been. Each
dollar provided to projects in developing
countries by UNICEF is matched by CIDA
Canadian International Development
Agency ). and this total is then matched
again by the country being assisted in goods
and services.
Thousands of Canadians will volunteer for
UNICEF this Halloween. Join them by
organizing a UNICEF benefit or activity in
your community. Be sure that your children
have their orange and black boxes when
they go out Trick -or -Treating this year - and
remember to have your silver ready for
UNICEF's children when your neigh-
bourhood witches and goblins come to your
door. Everyone working together can make
a world of difference to the life of a UNICEF
child.
Two families left homeless
' BRUSSELS - The Olympia Restaurant
and Turnberry Upholstery were heavily
damaged in an Oct. 15 fire that also left two
families homeless.
It took 45 firemen from four departments
almost three hours to bring the blaze under
control.
s mary's
SPECIAL...THIS WEEK ONLY!
floi
ALL
HENCKELS
KNIVES
We carry both Henckela German Steel and Brazilian Steel
Knives. the finest quality for the money available. Made
n( Friodur high carbon no -stain steel, lee•hardened and
handhoned with Durawood black handles. your Henckela
will last for years ..from generation to generation.
We stock a full *election of Chers Knives with Carving
Forks and Butcher Steels... and with 20% off this week
only. it's a great time right now to start or Pill In your
,,ottection See von today!
Henckela make ideal Chrigtmns Gifts too!
?nary s
LADIES' WEAR & GIFTS
36 North Street, Shoppers Square, Goderich ph: 524-8572