The Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-03-09, Page 14•
1.1
Y NW -SW
The 1,7'*,,4*,, • regular general
meeUng of Legion
O9 Was. Ad �n
Ake m
f• the -Oral/04A with 47
meMbera presentlandWesi,
r • :Lifent ,Claire Be4F4 in the
chair.
Initiations were conducted
by Comrades Les -Riley And.
Harold Chambers forthe
fallowing new. associate
members:' Reta Smith,
-Kona Davis, Edna Doak,
Vicki Powell, Rochelle
Whalen, Annette Stemp and
Franclsprofit.
Thirteen new members
were added to the nominal
roll of Branch 109. Ordinary
members accepted into the
Branch were J. P. Shannon,
E. C. Sole, S. C. Batt, R. J.
Hackett, J. Hembruff, K. S.
Vingoe, W. A. Dodd and J.
Wwmink. New associate
members accepted were D.
Bouchard, S. H Clarance, G.
F. Leaman, E. Smith and A.
E. Stemp.
A motion was passed to
pay the expenses of the
president and the first vice-
president who will be atten-
ding the provincial conven-
tion in Niagara Falls from
May 15 to 19 and the district
convention • in Guelph on
April 16 and 17, as delegates
from Branch 109.
A motion was also passed
that all , World War I
veterans who belong to the
Branch have their annual
dues paid by the Branch.
A donation of $300 was
made to the Provincial Bur-
sary Program and $100 to the
Ontario Heart Foundation.
The Ladies' Auxiliary was
given $75 to assist them in
conducting their invitational
bowling tournament.
contest was Westons,' ,4,,,BodPur
yietorini7.01i,
PubliCtstPeetTgatTtinPat thandM. Reed; e FreeB. man d Zone public Well pegdanAhltw:1 vnive
ie11
hs Caelnie341 berg
this'OA liner Was
, r verandah
by the flog/ 0.4‘;
Chairman
P re Ong. e ceillng
tile of the Jubilee Room.
A, motion was accepted
that a retainer fee be made
available if needed to retain
an architect who is chosen to
draw the plans for the new
elevator„
The House Chairman
reported that all of . the
chairs in the lounge have
now been refinished and the
Sports Chairman requested
a strong participation in the
Branch bowling tournament
to be held on March 26.
Youth and Education
Chairman Maurice Wilkin-
son reported that the Etrnnph
.,
, rang sop, 0144. and 4 craffie)..9 .I?, 111.1
,Ways,enft Walls OW is in St Joseph's Hospital
,, ,.,
*We AvPitteka, very sue- and P., Sheard9W4**. wt.: :.
eessful , .Port of Goderich nybrooke. In ' Westminster. f.
the members , of reminded are 40s and William 1Wiehie.
dinner.dan: * and._R. Drennan, J. Kempson '
donee. to he, ilield at the that A motion was . approved
tickets available at the Point, a incoming budget president committee
Branch on April 23 with the
8607. :1 • ,
Briraln:11, o:cicb;.!..,, phoningand
welf5a2;140 ,, fwaoPliii,etilhtwillcompirApA"ree aogbneunyde9agraerit
and
report to
Phampcien, repex,1e4, Po less meeting in ,....
of four comrades dining the The iiestAeOpieltpge
sing
Pet month. Twenty-seven
cards, gifts and/or visite-
of the Branch' wili beheld on
tionkwere made by thiscom- Tuesday, 40'40 with the an-
mittee during that period.
nual Vimy banquet schedul-
Comrades reported
in ed to be held m the. Jubilee
hospital as of March 7 are as Room on Saturday, April 9
follows: in Alexandra and the speaker will be Ed -
Marine and General - H. Hib-
win Bennett, a Dieppe
bert, C. Brownlee, C. veteran from Woodstock.
Primary church choir sings
Worship Service was held
in Holmesville Unit ed
Church and Rev. Bechtel
spoke to the children about
Jerusalem. The Primary
Sunday School sang during
the Service. Mr. and Mrs.
Larry Sturdy's infant son
Jesse George Nixon and Mr.
and Mrs. Ray Bush's
daughter Stephanie Nicole
were baptised by Rev.
Bechtel. Wayne Tebbutt and
Gordon Lobb received the of-
fering.
The Goderich Twp. W.I.
will meet March 14 at the
Comm unity Cent re in
Holmesville at 8:15 p.m.
•
Please come and bring a
friend.
HOLMESVILLE
NEWS
Blanche Maws., 482-3383
will meet at the Community
Centre on March 17 and will
visit Schilbe's Sugar Bush.
Holmesville 4-H
The third meeting of the
Holmesville II 4-H club was
held at the home of 'our
leader Beverly Van Ninhuys
on February 26.
' We opened the meeting
The Enterprising Seniors with the 4-H pledge. Next we
had the roll call. Absent from
this meeting were Julia
Ritchie, Nancy Thompson
and Lisa DePutter. Then we
formed groups and made
foods. While they cooked we
worked in our books. We also
chose a name for our club the
"Country Cookers." We then
ate our food and closed the
meeting.
Always A Good Selection Of Paperbacks And Children's Books
•BOWDRIE
by Louis L'Amour.
First time in paperback.
*PUBLIC SMILES, PRIVATE TEARS
by Helen Van Slyke
with James Elward.
The magnificent story of a generation of.women who discovered that the old rules
no longer worked. that the old assumptions no longer held true. Here Is Ruth. who
tried to follow the rules... Marian who broke them... and Sylvia who created her
own. Here, too, are the men who loved them. used thein, worshipped them, hurt
them
THE THORNBIRDS by Colleen McCullough.
The epic saga of a family rooted in the Australian sheep country. Coming soon to
television!
*MONTANA!- 10th in the Wagons West series.
*THY BROTHER'S WIFE -.There is much more to this novel than the
love of two men for one woman. There is Sean's journey from a slum parish to Rome, to
Chicago, from conservative to crusader... and the triumphant feminism of Nora.
*NORTH AND SOUTH - John Jokes' sensational action packed new
saga. Twenty years of. turbulent growth and expansion that bound two families and
split a young nation.
*WINDS OF WAR Herman Wouk's monumental bestseller.
*GUINNESS BOOK OF WORLD RECORDS -
upelated 1983 edition.
*WAR CRY - 7th in the White Indian series. A call to battle and a woman's
arms - a bold rebel challenges his legacy and his nation.
New spectacular
*PORTRAIT OPCANADA - by June Caliwood - A sharp and snappy
history presented In lively outline.
FOR THE
YOUNG
AT HEART:
.0.1041
feortgx
"SWEET,DREAMS"
Romances...featuring the latest
numbers and a good selection of
back numbers.
"CHOOSE YOUR
OWN ADVENTURES"
You're the star of the story.
Choose from 27 possible endings.
by Mary Rose Doorly.
Looking after yourself should be an enjoyable
part of your daily activities. With the help of
this book, we can build up some of the good
habits and become more aware of the things
that give us genuine good feelings and a bet-
tor overall efficiency. Keeping healthy Is not
something painful. In fact, It should be good
fun.
*The author is the daughter of Dr. and Mrs.
C.F. Doorly of Goderich.
SOME OTHER SUGGESTIONS
Coffee
Mugs with
Popular
Messages
No. 1 Bowler, No. 1 Mom,
No. 1 Nurse, No. '1 Dad.
No. 1 Coffee Drinker...
plus ' numerous other
sayings.
Cuddly Soft Toys For Easter
\g
•
Many more soft to touch animals In stock.
*GIFTS *CARDS *PARTY TIME THINGS *FIGURINES *WALL PLAGUES *JIGSAW PUZZLES .MOST POPULAR
GAMES *TOYS including FISHER -PRICE end new line from JOHNSON & JOHNSON •TILLEY LEATHER
•BRIGHAM PIPES*
FOR
BOOKS
AND (—
MORE....
16 SHOPPERS SQUARE
GODERICH
374.6901
ALSO ALUMINUM SIDING,
SOFFIL FASCIA AND
YES:MOOING.
Rs,00 PotioirMicotis
oxplictos
New spring.
41.
the arbor
We have a great new
collection of -
Easter Baskets
filled with kitchen gadgets
some with a personal
assortment of fragrances.-
Somethingkelsc that's •
new and different
Paper Tole Art
all framed to enhance their beauty.
New pieces arriving weekly - right now,
see owls, flowers,
small birds and a
fiddle collection.
New arrivals at
the arbor . -
,because
because you like
nice things.
•
•
he arbor
43 Albert Street Clinton 482-3876
•••••••••••••••••••••••••••••• •ofbios
•
Priam In effect MI closing
time Saturday. March 12, at •
p.m. or while quantities
last.
••••••••
1
• •
• MINUTE 121/2 FL. OZ.
• rag., ,
• ORANGE
• JUICE
•
• ficArt 1.0CG. BAG
• FRIES $1 •39
•
_ • LIBBY'S 14 FL OZ.
• BEANS
WITH 844
• HUMPTY DUMPTY
• POTATO CHIPS
J.M. CUTT LIMITED'
FED & WHITE FOODMASTER
91 VICTORIA ST. GODERICH
WE RESERVE THERIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
• • • • • • • • • • • • • • 0* 40 • • • • • • •
OPEN MONDAY TO
SATURDAY
- 8 AM -9 PM
500 GRAM
CHEESE FOOD SPREAD
CHEEZ
WHIZ .?"/ •
KRAFT 500 GRAM
PBEUITT1 $ 1 69
WELCH'S $ 79
GRAPE1 •
JAM OR JELLY
500 MI-
LANCIA 1 KG.
SPAGHETTI
.AND: •
MACARONI .99
BRAVO
28 FL. OZ.
SPAGHETTI
SAUCE.$ 1 39
EXTRA
CANNED LB. TIN
HAMS $2."
HEINZ
KETCHUP
1.25 L.
Z •
PURR a
CAT 170 GRAM FOR
FOOD $1.00"
• HEINZ 10 FL. OZ. 0
6 TOMATO •' FOR
: 1 0 0 SOUP $ 500 GRAM $ 1 9
,
• ROBIN
ALL 1.8 KG. edfilION •
2 FOR DISHWASHER
• CAKE MIXES Q9 q DETERGENT$ 3 .99
• 260 GRAM N
: PURE lPPLIJUICE
• APPLESAUCE 8 94 FRESH
PICNIC SHOULDER °
• 19 FL. OZ. 9 9 4 g DIElLRUNTE24°Z. t ii ,0:
• NuTcHEirs
• JAVEX PORK BUTT CHOPS $1 ." LI. NECTAR /1 • """ :
• -
• 3.6 L
G1;1: M 89" G.ETUNAal It I GUI 4i '
o
• 70P BREED 8 KG.
. $ 1 39 11.1161H MEATS
.
• DOG FOOD SCHNEIDER'S WIENERS 1.' 434 GRAM PKG. 5 ALIVE 6
•
i $7.99 EVOKED HAM G31171:PA $ 2 • "
- SCHNEIDER'S 123/4 FL OZ. 894:
*
$2 99 clioto°6 N A , .,GRAM $1.49 :4C:0:TTTE:AIGE E $11 99:
: BASON D
• POLISH SAUSAGE
• STORE SLICED $ ob 39 MA PLE LEAF
COOKED HAMl • LB. DINNER HAMSLB.• 991.ROLLS 1 • ' •
B. r A rt
• GRAM
• i • CHICKEN LEGS 994 LB. 13NRGENT 6 L. • 694i
II $ 1 39 LL FRESiC ATTACHED
59' 40
0
40
A BAG •
ASSORTED 200 GRAM
CARNATION
DOLE SWEET
PINEAPPLE o 04
19 FL. OZ. u 7
McNAIR
BLANCHED , ,
PEANUTS $I 99
500 GRAM ! 1.
ROYALE ' •
FACIAL
TISSUE eftqw
3piy fort 0 7
LEAVER 0
MUSHROOMS
igif
orAS
BRUNSWICK Aft
SARDINES ;
1" GRAM 2 FOR 894.
LEt GZER A LENPDLUS DEP. 2 FOR 994:
STAFFORD 19 FL. OZ.
TENDERFLAKEoI•
at • CHERRY t go•
LARD 8v.i. LB. PIE FILLER' • •
DEL MONTE FANCY
CHOICE 1/94S 9 TOMATOES 0
PEARS
HEINZ FANCY 48 FL. OZ.
TOMATO JUICE 994*
•
GREEN GIANT
FANCY 2 FOR
WAXoR GREEN 0 9
BEANS 'I
• PRODUCE OF ONTARIO
• 1 GRADE '
• 10 lb. POTATOES NO.
• CHIQUITA
2 LBS. TABLE
• BANANA$ FIR AND WHITE
• 89 4 GRAPEFRU4IL 994 si
ORANGES
PRODUCE OF iisa CAN. NO. 1 GRADE
SPINACH io OZ. PKG.
•
• PRODUCE OF ONTARIO NO. 1 GRADE SMALL it Aig&
COOKING ONIONS I U .. 994
:0 SE INSTANT COFFEE
PRODUCE OF USA
NO. 1 GRADE •
BROCCOLI 9915:
19":
29:
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