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The Huron Expositor, 1975-01-23, Page 14LUMBER AND BUILDING SUPPLIES LOOK FOR THE BIG ORANGE BUILDING 0 "`ts. C 'man Wilfred Shortreed, representative of the board on the • Board of Direelors of the Ontario Public School • Trustees'- Association for 4975 said he had ' attended a director's• meeting and' had been appointed' to the " executive committee from zone 4 • to fill the vacancy on the council.) I when Teary Ferris„; London, retired as a truete,e,iu Pecember. Commenting on the filial 1974 ,, billing from Harvey Dale .'of Clinton'for • pumping' art removing services resulting from the de-activatiOn of Blyth Public School septic system for a total cost of $5,125, Trustee Alex • Corrigan said, "I don't think we 'should be pay-ieg out this kind of money." Asked when he thought Blyth 'might have a sewage system, John Elliott of Blyth said the word is 'still 1976 but added' "I and doubtful, I predict another .two T' SAVEWAY MONEY SAVERS . . . STAINESS. . „ . -L' , ..,, _ -...'. - ... , 32" Conial' wisksx r. • STEEL ' . , Clie6k' Pe' r complete tine et faucets. .. . • rt. LACK or 2 6. 4,1 '5' ,.:. . SINK... Top quality double , bowl unit uV0 clean with a stainless steel strainer arid ledge to, make mounting faucets easier.' ' per unit ` 5 1:AUCE1---- Features bright, easy to , 'chronic) finish. Swivel , spoutiAeratOr and 8" hoo- 'up to water pipes are in- eluded,h , AIR DEFLECTOR • Plastic warm& deflector. is heidon by magnets. Ad-, , justabie Iron 10" Pith - pr to 14-. lengths of 72'', KITCHEN .c ' .. COUNTER TOPS First quality at - an economical ice. ' In . 96" and 120". 9- 251/4 " . wide. Plastic lami- nate surface., ' Lin. It. HUMIDIFIER 1 gallOn per hour ca- pacify. 1 year war- tarty on transformer 59..95 and motor. . Model No. 200. • ' . 69 Economical, thrOw-aviay sizes.' , 15" x 20" x 1" , 16" x 20" x 1:' 16" x 25".x 1" . 20" x 20" x 1" -20" x 25" x 1" • FURNACEFILTER '' furnace filters in five each. • , , . DUCTWORK Constructed. of sturdy 'galvanized /-1....LI . steel. We stock . a complete line of , f ' i'..7.rii.:i ductworkC including lake-off, boots, '°Ma smoke pipe, elbows, etc., Available '-'7.-LT,TX in a variety of diameters and lengths. . 1- .04' \ -fr':„. ik ,,,,,,, eii ,i /..;4• ' RANGE HOOD :, ...411,4" Available in tour dedorata Woe's: /4 White, Copper, Gold, and Avocago, . White. Charcoal filters are stocked at 30 ..2 speed ' 29 20 Saveway for the two speed ductless •--„,.., ducted model. a'-' 30-.2 speed ducness.0 s 36.° .---4.41) SWEDISH BALL LIGHT FIXTURE White enamelled glass, tin- , I. had in polished chrome. 8" in Uses one 100 watt ulb.. . .., • tIA " each . ..• KITCHEN LIGHT FIXTURE White enamelled glass . finiOadln chrome. 81/2" stem: Uses one 100 watt ft .8v sides,' • diem- bulb. 1111, COPPER PIPE, &FITTINGS Top q ublity 1/2" copper , , p,,x, aroiniee , we carr y. ,.,- x 12- a complete line of s/4" pipe Type M Pipe • . 3.95 and fittings, too! .1.9. ./'-'. , , 2" 90.Elbcw ' '...2"-Tee • .33g 1/2" couplings .12. LAUNDRY- TUBS inciudes the -tubber stopper. snap-in = lieovrilaiilv screws anda mourning , Single 19.9,8 BoWl We 38.98 . , %It_ ...4141! Apt °•%.4114:,bm , - PLUMBING , - REPLACEMENT PARTS Keep a supply on hand fot those plumbing emergen- ties. Saveway has all you need when you need theni. No. 7K16C Slip Joint Washer Assortment 30 Each ^N. . NO. 7731C Flat Washer Assortment '1 1 /2 " Each ,. \ 59c. ' ABS PLASTIC PIPE & FITTINGS We stook a complete line 01'11/4 ", 11/2" and "ABS3 .. pipe and fittings anti our. rices are hard to beet! _ , 1 1/2" * 12' • A , 64c .. length .. .7.29 11/2 Tee - ' ' 1 1/2; 90. Elbow.. „ .42e coupling , .. ..28c 4 241votmet J u121 11C14.74 SOIS • 11 Mon. - Thurs. 8:30: 6:0Q Friday , 8:30 - 9:00 .a s r. ushies ileage ile eff travelling on board trustees will receive a „„. Ilowance of 15 cents per etive January 1, up Vont (By W.G. Strong) An Americaaychiatrist recentlystated that the deepestproblems of peopletoday are , loneliness and isolation. To feel completely alone and and leads to mental disintegration and eventual senility just as physical. starvation leads to deterioration and.ultimate death. Most of us have had some experience of the pangs of loneliness. This fear drives many down strange avenues, anywhere to escape the haunting pain of aloneness. fortunately our twentieth century has made available a multitude of outlet's and facilities through which we can dispel man y of our moods of ,isolation. Radio and..telexisjon are our modern constant companions. Movies and theatres provide amusement " and entertainment. Clubs and organizations have widened our social opportunitie.s. Automobiles bring us together are rapidly and more frequently. Yet all these outlets do not constitute antidotes for rinclines,s. In spite of these convenieuees, man is 'still plague( with a feeling . of isolation in his advancing and declining 'years. The human being was never created to play the role of a self-imposed hermit. .Leisure has been defined as the time when yotf can do what ytiu please. 1'ou have time available 'for certain activities, time away from work, time relatively free from compulsion. LeisUre should spell out contentment, happiness, an' absence of conflict and anguish, a time for one to be his real self: Teclay,'leisure has spread its influence over the whole population and our senior citizens must share in this modern sociological'development, Many -Sided Re ng.constitutes the greatest leisure- time rsion for most perions. It is a man ided delight, an intense. 'instr-u-e joyful, 'soul-satisfying •pleasure. It is' the sole means of communication with the great minds of the 'past and of the present. Burns read at his meals aridIS said to have carried his books into the field behind the plough. Fr ankling "'Was apprenticed to his brother, a printer. -"and' benefitted therefrom. Lincoln -read by the firelight ,in the log cabin, often to the distress of his'parents. This list could be enlarged at length to prove that intelligent curiosity, that essentialof human greatness, finds its growth in books and avillrnot be denied. Some read for the pure pleasure derived crom the printed page while, for others. 'reading opens the mind to the full possibilities of human 'achievement and human understanding as 4iiithing, else can. It is not to be suggested that such modern means of expression as films and '. television are without value. They have their use and their place. Radio and television take us on amazing excursions, in ,IiiinerltflgeondArnagieration .hut the spoken- homes. word and the picture program lack. the "Around the globe I have not travelled But in my mind what place5 I have seen! 'I-Stay at home and still .1 journey far With good companions though I am, alone, Down roads found nowhere save in ' drenins. I am a wanderer in Wondershire." • eseeli ce of the printed S h CeT:'--giti rid a n d — sceneare essential mainly for the moment.'-- • These daily streams of sound and • sight flicker to their close when the button is turned or pushod. The printed word, however, does not vanish as it passes but stimulates our minds by a rich profusion of , infOrmation as wide as life itself. properly used, the above media should not interfere with reading but, on the other hand, should supplement and encourage it.. Though television may 'have a more immediate 'impact than words on the printed page it does not offer the intimacy, the scope and the sense of participation that the reader. finds in good botika....„ The • reader experiences ' an immediate sense of pleasure as he or she delves into the, knowledge and idea's which books and ,' magazines offer or marvelS at the pictures and paintings that take him or her to many exciting worlds he never knew before. - Enjoyment spepers .and magazines provide d a ditional enjoyment for people at all as. T1 colymns of the newspaper, whether or weekly, present events' and happenings in more ample form than the clipped confines ''' of a newscast. Newspapers do more than report events. hey have a greater capacity than radio or television to set events-in clear and proper perspective, to illuminate them by the judgment of authorities informed • in particular' fields and to supplement superficial facts with knowledge diStilled- from competent study, Newspapers invest the news with larger dimensions of meaning. The newspaper brings so much besides news by stimulating our minds with the rich profusion 'of information in a range as aide as diversified as life itself. The printed word does not vanish as do the scraps of memery from yesterday's broadcast. The panted Iword should rreVer he superseded •'6y the electronic %/Mee or theanimated _screen. Reading should never be displaced by listening and Watching. Magazines help us to talk knowingly and interestingly' err a whole range of thrilling subjects that make yesterday's'and today's world ,so exciting for' us all. They present instant. authoritative and authentic information oe almost every conceivable subject, topic, study or 'field of human 'thought. riq They provide consta companionship with hundreds of the world's great minds. They 'help us t'Zi- discuss many subjects ; that bear ort the :daily life of happy, successful men and women. When you brouse through; them it is like tak,ing an armchair trip around the world. You become a Marco P o who sees the world from his ow,n fivin -roo may ciplore the most picture c s on earth and make pictorial visits to world landmarks of breathtaking beauty. You may view art treasures in famous museums, You may look in wonder, at the ,hundreds of photographs brought to you in gorgeous full colour. You can stand beside miners a mile below the earth's crust, share die intense drama of the test pilot as he shatterte'the sound barrier or walk with the astronaut on the mpon's -dusty, cold J----Tirface. Current magazines bring a wealth'- _relaxation and enjOyment into countless .Tr • (To be centinuedf) (Qontlnuedt onl1)44:0, government. ..and between 0.1,0 board and representataives of the news media. 'Mrs. Dorothy Wallace and t. Cayley Hill, both of Goderieh. were appointed to attend a public meeting on Wednesday, Februarys 5, in Goderieh regarding, the proposal to-widen Highway 21 from a two-lane to a four•lane highway in Goderieh in the Victoria Street --Britaltnia Road Bayfield Road area. ' Mrs. ,Wallace and Cayley Hill pr had eaeHessed their concern at an earlier board megtipg that the school crossing at Victoria Public School over this widened highway and the changes in the. present traffic pattern a'-'5uld make the pre.a extremely dangerous. They 'had) requested some safety' improvements , for Victoria students be considered. Clarence Ball, custodian at Central Huron Secondary School will be retiring effective January' 31. and Kenneth C. Bridges,. audio-visual technician, South Huron DistriCt High School, will retire effective June 30.Mr. D. Gower will be promoted to the position of night supervisor to fill Mr, Ball position. , David .Jefferson 'submitted his resignation from Goderieh District. Collegiate Institute effective Decembel 31, 1974, and Mrs. Janice Brouillette to Robertson . Public School and Ran al Smith to Student Services, have been engaged on probaticee4Y . contracts effective January 1. Miss • Janice Bonthron has accepted a transfer to Usborne Central Public from Robertson Memorial, effective January 1. Liaison bus driers' remuneration' was raised to $25 per bus per year effectiveianuaLy 1 in addition to their regular salary. They had received $15. Liaison drivers weak out of the following schools, - Brookside,' Grey. Howick, Stephen and Turnberry. Components fit 'together into a custom made kitchen., The precision built, factory finished kitchen cabinets are ready to be installed. 411.11111SEVklciltEK'S AL SIG OMPONENT KITCHENS,. If the high cost of remodelling is. keeping ,you from making those much tieticied changes in your kitchen; come in to Safeway to see how inexpensively "'you can do-it- yourself with Hanover kitchen corn- ponels. • Come in today to view the Saveway sample kitchen. Bring a room layout of your kitchen for a free estimate. ANOVER a • ..,•••••••••• and John Murphy as hav,ing the best all around beard; Dr. John Underwood, the-straggliest; Larry Dale. "the bushiest; D'Orlean Sills, the most colorful; andjee Cferwinski, the most novel. Saturday afternoon Main Street was, lined by spectators for the parade of floats from the Seaforth Recreation Park to the Agricultural GrOunds, led by the Seaforth District. High School Trumpet Band. Tug of War A highlight of the afternoon events was the tug of war match. In the women's contest the team from' the Chislhurst Women's Broomball ' Club out- pulled the 1974 winners . the Genesco 5N:re Factory team and the 1973 winners - the Fullarton Team. • In the round robin match of five male teatns, the Fullarton men . Were top winners outpulling the anley Township men pho placed second and ,'the Chiselhurst T earn who placed third. Other teams were the Seaforth Firemen and . the Optimist Club teani. • In the Endurance Snowmobile races Douglas Smale of Seaforili won the Oc.c. • 345 c.c. class and Bob Feasey of Arkona won the 345 'c.c. • 800 c.c. class. In the Western pick-up class. . Bill Charters of Kippen was the winner; and John McGregor of Kippen won. both the balloon derby and the ice Cube races with Louis McNichol of Egmondville placing second in the last two events. Homey A- day-long Atom . hockey tournament (boys 9 to 10 years old) was held with teams, frqm Brussels; Milvetton, 'Clinton, *tit, .Listritvel. Hanover, • Miteheil and Seaforth. The "A" WO *41 hy Brusse15 With a s'o're of 2 tO ,t OVer tiSfeWel and the "V &anti by Miltritten with Optim ist inter. Carnival • • W • (C ntinued from Page 1.) a scare of 13 to 2 over Clinton. A curling Bonspiel on Sattfrday and Sunday 'resulted in the First, Draw winners being a t earn with, Bill tobb, skip.,, and Melena Lobb. Don Eastman' and Claudia Eastman; in second place was the team skipped by Robert.' Ste Marc inclu,ding Betty'. Cardno. Ross Coutts and ' trene,.0kahashi. In the second drawl the team of Gould Smith (skip) Nancy' Smith ,and Ronald and Lillian Smith won first place and second place winners were Bill Fleming .(skiff}), Margaret Fleming, Herb Travis and Lorine Denomme. In the snow sculpturing on the High School grounds Saturday morning for elementary school students, the Seaforth Public years. I know 'they are trying." ' He .5.aitra' suitable site had not been found as y 'et that met government approval, Mr. Elliott said memberts of Scho'ol students won first 'Place Blyth council had been down in with Osear,.:the grouch, who'lives Toronto several times and Murray in a garbage can on Sesame Gaunt, MPP had been working on ' Street. A St. Bernard dog' and two getting the ' sewage project pups won second place for the underway but no progress . has students from St. Patrick's School' been made, Mr Elliott suggested at Dublin. . that' the problem at the school In the elementary school sports , should be a matter for study by a the students from St. .,Patrick's committee. School were over-all winners in 11. E Smith, Superintendent of points. These students wen .the ."Education, reported the late crass country run, with Seaforth' school bus .froiti 'Central Hur'O'n' , Public in second place. St. Patrick ..Sebondary School at Clinton to students won the ..junior ski race Seaforth and Winthrop, was and students from St. James working satisfactorily after being , School. Seaforth won the senior started on January 13. He said ski race. . students reques'cing the service Huge crowds attended dances on each of the four days Was as . Friday and Saturay nights. ' follows: , Monday -33; Tuesday including a carnival ball Saturcra night. Saturda y --26; Wednesday -24; and Thursday-27. R. L. Cunningham. transportation Manager, said that while many had signed up only 7 to• 8 students were taking advantage of the service each day. The following secretaries have been appointed to permanent staff: Mrs,. Betty Ross at Huron Central Secondary School effective December 3; Mrs. Joan Pinder. Clinton Public Scho.q1; and Mrs. hill Melhuish„ Exeter Public School. • r _ - Somebody Wants What You Don't Need 16 SAVEWAIN SERNI4 YOU! PRICES IN EFFECT UNTIL 'January 27 SNOOPY SKATES AGAIN — One of the stars of the • Seaforth Figure Skating Citib's/CtOttnnial Carnival Friday night "The Wonderful World of Disney and Scbultz", was cartoon character Snoopy, played 'by Joan Sills. -A large crowd attended the Skating Carnival. (Staff Photo) SELL Thtough Huron Szporitor Clcissified Want Ado Soturda 8:00 - 4:00 At Our EXETER YARD