The Huron Expositor, 1978-11-23, Page 14••
November 1540 t [Serviced area ONLY] .t
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14 THE HURON XPOSIT0,11, NOVEIVIBER 23, lep .
Perth bOtird plans renovations to
St.Mary'S. schools
McKinley reports
From visit to
United Nations
FRESH ONTARIO
TENDERLOIN PORTION
PORK lb. $
LOIN ROAST
- 'LARGE JARS
KRAFT
MIRACLE
WHIP
32oz.SIZE
DUO
REA.
1 37
PEAS CORN - WHOLE BEETS
AYLMER
VEGETABLES .
REG UP TO 49'ea.
19o7
TINS
FOR
$
1 lb. o .1
N
FOR YOUR BATHROOM.
LADY SCOTT
• TISSUE , 5 COLOURS - REG.'.1.33 •
pRaGii g
CONVERTED
UNCLE BENS RICE . 5112, ' $2.99
BEEF, IRISH OR CHICKEN
CORDON BLUE STEWS • ' 24oz.TIN '1.09
RE DY CUT MACARONI, SPAGHETTI OR SPAGHETTINI
C EMOTES 907g. 79e
ZEHR COOKIES
SHO awns
McNAIR
BUNCHED PEANUTS
McNAIR
10 oz. 89c
3600, $1 'Nig
MIXED NUTS 360g 1.89
FRESH CASHEWS 13oz. '3.39
ORANGE PEKOE
RED ROSE TEA BAGS 60's 1.79
iiiiiiTSWABS 180's 89°
EXTRA• STRENGTH
INTENSIVE CARE LOTION 400m1 $2.19
ZEHRS
BRICK OR COLBY CHEESE lb. 1.85
ZEHRS
MARBLE CHEESE ,
lb. 1.85
BURNS HOT, OR SWEET (PREVIOUSLY FROZEN) .1
ITALIAN SAUSAGE 1 lb. .29
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT'PURCHASES TO
REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY.REQUIREMENTS
BONUS SIZE
FIVE ROSES
FLOUR
10Kg.+11(g.FREE
'S
OUR 3
111
4.79
'
0111g/SA101:0001
;40141MA9.10A:
ZEHRS COUNTRY OVEN
FRESH BAKED
CHEESE OR ONION
BUNS
4.01 ti
KENT FROZEN
ORANGE.
'JUICE
OUR REG, 69'
12 Eoz.
TIN
59. B oz.
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IDEAS FOR
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AT •THE
SUPERMARKET
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ON HOW EXPERTS PINCH
---PENNIES-TO-SAVE -DOLLARS---- -
ON THE FOOD BUDGET
AVAILABLE NOW AT ALL
CHECKSTANDS
6 LITRE 2.4K5.
OXYDOL
" DETERGENT
DUR RED. '3,35
HOSTESS REG. OR DIP
POTATO
CHIPS
11114 BEG. Sse
225g.
ZEHRS PRIVATE LABEL
SNACK
CRACKERS
OUR REG. 63'
PROD. OF U.S. CAN. NO. 1 GRADE
SPANISH ONIONS
POOH. OF U.S. 'MILD TENDER
GREEN ONIONS BUNCHES spoOgg-
F rine
PROD. OF , .
-RED-RADISHES_
H10% WHOLE WHEAT ,
WITTICHS.
BREAD
EXAMPLE
Doe, William P.
R.R.b Walton,
Ont. Dec. 1-0-9-8
C
NEILSONS
FAMOUS
ICE CREAM.
OUR KEG. '2M1
Please watch the date on your
label and renew before your
subscription expires.
4ht 11-1011 (gxpoitor
527-0240 - 'Sea-forth
Howddr, the committee
which recommended the
expenditure at Central .had
never considered the possi-
hility that the school might
not be needed some day,
according to the 'chairman,
Trustee Earl Oppenhauser;
Director of Education Ken
Self added that North Ward
couldn't begin to handle the
populations of both schools
in the near future.
The changes approied for
Central include a JIM'
heating and ventilating
system, gymnasium and
.changercoms ds well as
renovations throughout the
school.
St. Marys Trustee Jim
Loucks responded to the
discussion as to whether or
not spending money on'
Central was wise by telling
under the 400 mark by 1986 if
something isn't done to stop
the flow of students from
the Mitchell attendance area
to high schools in Stratford
and Listowel,
shop and renovations to
provide adequate wood-
working and machine shops.
drafting room. practical arts
shops. an art room plus the
necessary equipment.
With the addition of an
expanded technical program
at Mitchell, the board hopes
to 'attract students back to
'the school and to maintain
the enrolment around 500.
The budget for St:- Marys
was approved after some
discussion by trustees who
wondered whether falling
enrolment at Central Public
School could result in 'the
eventual ' closing of the
school. The suggestion was
raised that the money would
be better spent to expand the
facilities at North Ward
Public School which might
eventually house all St.
Marys students.
the board, "I'm sitting here
wondering which way to
explode.
• "1 think the trustees
should-come and see Central
• and the facilities that have to
be used there." he added.
Loucks stressed the need
for change at the school and'
said he hoped there would be
no delay.
Other projects laid out in
the board's $4.3 ;ahem
10-year budget include a
Plan to spend $402.000 at
Listowel' Eastdale Public
School in 1982 to provide the
school with a gym,
changerooms, library and a
special education room.
In 1986, the hoard will
spend 5213,3592 to fund
library expansion at St.
Marys District Collegiatc'and
Vocational Instsituic.
By Jim Hagerty
The Perth County Board of
Education approved a
10-year capital forecast, last
week, which will see
$542,085 spent eta Mitchell
District High School and St.
Marys Central Public School
in 1979.
Of that amount, $163,529
will go towards the
expansion of the facilities at
the high school in Mitchell in
a program designed to stave
off the effects of the school's
declining enrolment.
The remaining $378,559
will be spent by the board to
update the heating system at
the 'St. Marys school,
among other improvements.
Current enrolment pro-
jections_ indicate that the
present student population of
514 at Mitchell could drop to
A report submitted by a
committee looking into the
Mitchell situation stated that
alm-ost 19 -O'er cent of
Mitchell area studehts
currently receive their
secondary school education
in other centers. At 'the
moment, about 117 Mitchell
area students are enrolled in
technical programs at
Stratford Northwestern
.Secondary School with
another eight taking similar
courses in Listowel.
The budget approved last
Tuesday will fund a project
involving the addition at the
Mitchell school of an auto
EVERY WEDNESDAY NIGHT
6 Gaines Each Week.
7 PM
PHONE. DIRECT
Action Ads 527-0240
EXPOSITOR
THIS PAGE OF SPECIALS
IN EFFECT UNTIL
CLOSING
TUESDAY
• NOV.28
PEOPLE PLEA SER
SPECIALS
FRESH!
'FAMILY PACK
by Bob McKinley, M.P.
The United Nations is a
changing organization, and
when I returned to it this past
October for a week of brief-
ings as a Canadian parli-
amentary observer, I was
looking for signs of change
since my last visit.
In Canada itself, we have
seen an increase of• U.N.
activity in recent years. The
International Civil Aviation
Authority, for one thing. has
long had its world head-
quarters here, in Montreal.
But two years ago there was
the Habitat Conference in
Vancouver, and in 1975 the
Fifth Congress on the Pre-
vention of Crime was
scheduled to take place in
Toronto. Canada backed
away from hosting the con-
ference at that time because
of the threat of terrorism and
international violence associ-
ated with such conferences,
proof that Canada does not
live in isolation within the
world.
At New York, Canada is
active both as a member, of
the Security Council and as a
member of several of the
committees and commission
of the United Nations. In the
Special Political Committee
we have recently made 'a
presentation on the peaceful
uses of space. Here again,
we are directly involved in
the question, for it was in
Canada that the Soviet
Cosmos 954 satellite fell to
earth last year, involving us
in a major operation to •
search for radioactive con-
tamination across our north-
land.
In some areas, the U.N.
has shown signs of progress.
The Fourth Committee,...for„.„„,,
example, set up to press for
. the decolonization of much of
the Third World, has seen
great success, so much• so
that the U.N. has grown from
55 independent members to
150.
And yet, just as the vio-
lence and repression which
characterize the internal poli-
tics of some countries con-
tinues unabated, despite the
Helsinki agreements of a few
years ago, so also does
colonial exploitation continue
in some countries of the
world. The Fourth Commit-
tee has recently, been con-
' cthrned with Namibia,, where
the struggle for independent
self-rule continues despite
the obstruction of South
Africa. Canada has actively
sought solutions to this -
potentially explosive conflict.
External Affairs' Minister
Jamieson recently undertook
a tour • of countries ranging
from southern Africa to
London, seeking in conjunc-
tion with some of the devel ,
oped nations of Europe for a
way out of the impasse. •
In other areas, we, are also
taking the lead. Currently we
are sponsoring a resolution
urging all the nations of the
earth to extend voting rights
to women, as the western
nations have done.
And so it continues. The
world changes, and with it
the United Nations. At U.N.
headquarters the tensions
and the pressures of world
problems hahg in the air.
And yet, in the cafeterias at
lunchtime, a sense of energy
also prevails, as people from
all nations mix and learn
from each other.
6 CENTRE CUT 2 RIB PORTION
PORTION & 1 TENDERLOIN PORTION
PORK CHOPS ZEHRS FRESH
FRESH PORK
COUNTRY STYLE
LOIN '
SPARERIBS lb 1
FRESH PORK
CENTRE CUT -DANADA A" GRADE
LARGE ECCS
TOGETHER WITH
DEVON BRAND ,
SLICED ::: • •
SIDE•1110,9N
0447,^, 1
CHOPS $b 1 ii89
LOIN .68 DOZ.
FRESH PORK LOIN
BONELESS
ROAST on
CHOPS 1lb.. lb.
Jo Berry on bo
Ontari
Associ
d of
Hospital
tion
614
SCHNEIDERS FROZEN
BREAKFAST SAUSAGE
SCHNEIDERS CARTWRIGHT RANCH
SIRLOIN PATTIES
SCHNEIDERS SLICED
REGULAR OR MAPLE
COOKED'
HAM .
OUR REG.'1,65
$11 146... 6°z a •
MAPLE LEAF
CORNED •
BEEF
OUR REG. '1.45
1-lb, $1,98
SCHNEIDERS CHUNK STYLE - 5 VARIETIES
COOKED MEATS lb '1.68 MAPLE
gill WIENERS 12 oz. PKG 51.09
;id c-,1+,, of the Hospital
Auxiliary in Goderich. A
member of the 'Board of
Alexander and Marine for six
years, she has also served
two years as Chairman of the
hospital's Management
Committee. Her husband the
late John Berry for many
years was clerk treasurer of
Huron County.
The Ontario Hospital. As-
sociation is the repre-
sentative body of hospitals in
Ontario. It works on behalf of
its members to ensure high,
quality hospital care
Mrs. Josephine F. Berry,
Chairman of the Board of
Alexander and Marine
General Hospital, Goderich,
has been elected to the Board
of Directors of the Ontario
Hospital" Association. The
election took place at the
Association's Annual Me-
eting on November 6 at the
Sheraton Centre, Toronto.
Mrs. Berry. who was born
in Owen Sound, is a long-
time resident of Goderich.
She has' served on the Board
of Huron Children's Aid
Society, and is a Past-Pre-
THREE
2oz... BEEF SALAMI, BEERWURST OR PEPPERONI
SHOPSYS SLICED MEATS.34:_"cr.$.1269 ••
PRIDE,OF CANADA SWEETPIICKLEllBOANC PACKED
COTTAGE ROLL
y
lb. .1.69
BONUS SIZE
ALL VEGETABLE
CRISCO
OIL
1 LITRE SIZE
THIS SPECIAL AVAILABLE ONLY IN ZEHRS MA ETS HAVING
DELICATESSEN SERVICE COUNTER
$ lb.
SCHNEIDERS OWE FASHION
BAKED HAM or
HAM & BACON
OUR REGII
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CABLE (1)
345-2341
BEEF; CHICKEN, TURKEY
YORK
MEAT PIES
OUR REG, SI' Please Check Your
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C
/
fPROD. OF U.S. CAN. NO, 1 GRADE
CELERY- STALKS EA. 58c
.HERE'S HOW
Mr. Doe's subscription
expires'ilW-firgf-01-
\
December 1978. The digit
to the right indicates the
year of expiry.
OUR REG. 60'ea.
P,Ro!')., OF ON' ARIO CRISP TANqY . i
7 .1) .RUTABAGAS
PROD DE:LI:S. CAN,NO, 1 GRADE SWErr
lb. 146
6 EEN PEPPERS-lb. $9
PROD, 00 U.S. 4(400,1
SWEET
.
SWEET YAMS lb.'39° ,,,,,,„..,„,, ,.,„,„E., , .
TANGERINES DOt. * 986 p„,,.„,.v.s. 00, No. 1 GRADE
RED EMPEROR GRAPES_Jk7 c
• .•- \ • •••- • el.""""144.""r1.4*W411"Wirr4,...,40. • " • •
„. t
SCHNEIDEAS
CRISPUFIUST
PURE
LARD
OUR at& is.
PROo. at itc.
PAS D'ANJOU
OELICIoUS APPLEti3ELLAR-og,LPE1-7,---lb409
We will be pleased to serve YOU ln.
HWY. Our manager ,s . Da e McDonald
GODERICH HURON RD., I T'OPEN WED.--HURS.-FR1 -EVENINGS