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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1985-07-17, Page 18269 B WE PUT IT ALL.TOGETHER FOR YOU!!! QUALITY SELECTION PRICE MEAT DEPARTMENT GAINERS VAC PAK PORK SHOULDER SMOKED PICNICS TA is 9 1.KG. SCHNEIDERS IN THE PAIL 743 BBQ READY, BACK ATTACHED FRESH CHICKEN LEGS LB. 'GREAT ON THE GRILL' FRESH WHOLE 129 CUT-UP CHICKEN LB, NEW FROM SHOPSYS DELI GOLD CHEDDAR FRANKS &old style frocks FRES 5 soo MEDIUM GROUND BEEF 1 49 450 Gm PEG will be available this Thurs., Fri., & Sat. 169 LB BY THE PIECE END CUT SWEET PICKLED PEAMEALED BACK BACON 199 SCHNEIDERS ASSORTED BACON 500 Gm 299 FREEZER SPECIAL GRADE 'A CHUCKS OF BEEF 19 CUT • WRAPPED • FROZEN LB. C THIS ORIGINAL DOCUMENT IS IN VERY POOR CONDITION A10 — THE HURON EXPOSITOR, JULY 17, 1985 A WORLD TRAVELLER — Lisa fieuttenmiller, 19, is just back from a five-week vacation to Europe. Her favorite town was one In Norway, she says. Her tour group also got the chance to go 300 miles Inside.the Arctic Circle, where they experienced three straight days of midnight sun. Lisa is the daughter of Bob and Betty Beuttenmiller of Seaforth. (Till photo) No changes in school board representation There will be no changes to the school electoral districts in Huron County. Huron County council recently passed a bylaw setting the school districts. County council reviews theboundaries in the year of a municipal election. The boundaries lump municipalities se that, based on assessment, there is equal representation across the county. There is a total of $1.3 billion equalized public school assessment in Huron County. This is divided up on a percentage basis to determine the number of trustees. to serve thilt area. e combined municipalities of Seaforth, McKillop Township and Hullett Township is ' 10.67 per cent of the public school assess- ment while W Ingham, Turnberry Township and Howick Township with 11.36 per cent each have two trustees. John Jewitt and Graeme Craig now represent the Seaforth area while Art Clark and Murray Mulvey are from the W Ingham area. All other areas have one trustee. Stephen Township is on its own with 7.96 per cent of the equalized assessment. Harry Hayter is the trustee. The combined municipalities of Exeter and Usbome Township equals 9.81 per cent of Huron's assessment. Clarence McDonald represents this area. Hay Township, Zurich and Hensall coo- ., make u t 7.13 per nt of the .d.: • •. sme se : the area. Robert Peck represents the combined municipalities of Stanley Township and Bayfield. They make up 7.45 per cent of the assessment. Clinton and Tuckersmith Township com- bined make 7.52 per cent of the equalized assessment. Frank Falconer is the present trustee. an Vanden Broeck now represents the to ships of Goderich and Colborne. To- gethertheyhavea 10.39 per cent share of the assessment, just .28 per cent below the Seaforth and municipalities which have two trustees. Goderich makes up 6.33 per cent of the equalized assessment. Dorothy Wallace is the present trustee from the county's largest town. ' Tony McQuail is the trustee representing Ashfield and West WawanoSh townships which have an equalized assessment of 8.43 per cent. The townships of East Wawanosh and Morris and the Village of Blyth have an equalized assessment of 7.47 per cent. John Elliott is the trustee from the area. Donald McDonald represents the smallest area, that being Brussels and Grey Township which have an equalized assessment of 5.48 per cent. All together there are 14 public school representatives on the Huron County board of education. There are also two trustees who represent the Catholic secondary school supporters. Dennis Rau represents such supporters south of Highway 8 which dissects Huron County. Current board chairman Eugene Frayne represents the Catholic secondary school supporters north of Highway 8. re - Fr4Huron . xpositor 527-0240 McKILLOP ` MUTUAL INSURANCE COMPANY 91 Main St. South, Seaforth FULL COVERAGE Farm & Urban Properties DIRECTORS Liken Ca1•nochan evern Godkin John McEwing Stanley Mcllwain Donald McKercher Kenneth Moore J.N Trewartha Stuart Wilson Paul Rock AGENTS • E.F. "Bill" Durst 'Bob McNaughton Graeme Craig Banter & MacE wan Insurance Brokers Ltd. 482-3354 527.1877 523.9390 524-7051 527-1837 527.0508 482.7593 527.0687 345-2397 527.1455 527.1571 887-9381 524-8376 CALL AN AGENT OR THE OFFICE Seaforth woman takes in tundra on her trek across the big pond A Seaforth resident, just back from a five-week trip, to Europe, says the most memorable part of the vacation was her voyage beyond the Arctic Circle. Lisa Beuttenmiller, daughter of Bob and Betty Beuttenmiller, of West William Street says the first question most people ask when they find out she went so far north is, "Was it cold?" The answer, she says, is, "Not really." Next to her trek to the tundra, her favorite part was a small Norwegian town in which she stayed, called Elvrum, about two hours outside Oslo. What struck her most about Norway in general, she says, was its. size. "It would fit into Manitoba," says Miss Beuttenmiller. "But it's like a miniature of Canada." To hersurprise, she also saw snow there on May 17, in spite of the fact she wore shorts the day her excursion went some 300 miles inside the Arctic Circle. • Her next stop was Paris, of which her memories, unfortunately, are not quite as fond. It was as if the Parisians, she says, didn't "want to talk to us at all. We asked them for directions and they would turn their backs." While in Rance, she met a girl from the Cleveland, Ohio suburb of Shaker Heights. The girl was a blond, which caused Miss Beuttenmiller to notice something remark- able. ttttt� "...treated like goddesses..." "Blonds are treated like goddesses (in Europe)," she says. She also found the attitude of French merchants somewhat curious. It was as if they "didn't want our business," she says. "It's not like tourists are going to buy just bubble gum or magazines, "she says. "If you did that in Seaforth, your customers would never come back." Miss Beuttenmiller travelled on a Eurail pass, with hundreds of others doing the same thing wherever she went. "You could spot them from a mile away," she says. Many of her fellow travellers, says the articulate 19 -year-old, had things stolen from them, often while they slept in youth hostels. She knows of people who ' lost wallets, passports, purses, food and cash, she says. "I was fortunate," however. She was not robbed at all. She also found it interesting that although much of the music and television Europeans consumed was American, most of them knew Bob and Doug McKenzie, the fictitious characters from the Second City Television program, who were "stereotypical" Cana- dians. She also got to do some fishing, and on one outing was 100 feet away from a whaling ship. Above all, she says, her trip was a real education, "I learned more in five weeks," says Miss Beuttenmiller, "than in the past 10 years." LB. CANADA GRADE 'A FULL SLICE ROUND STEAK SCHNEIDERS FULLY COOKED VAC PAK HALVES OLDE FASHIONED HAMS 39 SCHNEIDERS SLICED COOKED HAM LB 379 179 L 175 G PKG. DELI COUNTER SCHNE IDERS BLUE RIBBON 23 BOLOGNA LB SCHNEIDERS DELI SERVED THURINGER SAUSAGE 369 LB SCHNEIDERS DELI SERVED LUNCH MEATS Moc B cheese chicken head cheese ,coed hem p'ckle 8 p,men'n ahve Pool MEAT DEPARTMENT $taffen's '1882' [WESTON 00% WHOLE WHEAT 89 READ Reg. 1.22 SPECIALS DAVE STAFFEN WESTON PLAIN OR SUGAR DONUTS Pkg. of 12 Reg. 1,45 99 BAMBY BREAD 0869 /WESTON'TOP SLICED' WIENER BUNS Pkg. of 12 Reg. 1.55 1'9 fBROWNBERRY NATURAL WHEAT BREAD Reg. 1 28 79, ONTARIO No I CAULIFLOWER MIX OR MATCH ONTARIO GROWN FOOD RKETS St. Marys -Mitchell -Mite Forest OPEN SU6 p.AYS 9 a.m. - Nm.D WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES STORE HOURS MONDAY to FRIDAY S o m to S p m SATURDAY g a m to 6 p m SUNDAY • 9 a.m. - 6 p.m. ante etlerhve 1,ll; lo,Ing MONDAY Al 9 P M PLEASE NOTE: Adeertieine done by our St Marys or Mount teroes Stores may &Her Then. Mitchell's • • 0