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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1984-09-05, Page 254 BAXMONM444 WERNgs 10 oz. TINS FOR 450 g P K HANDY FROZEN the tiz� WHITE SWAN Ittk„..6 .,„1,„,e2.00„.0 4���1�1q;)t{b'�IYIllLfLri7.� �.i h I �f�li6 LdllAi.u:.•, ,r�ic n, - A ywifls $1,000pth.e SID BITS By Joanne Buchanan Mary Jeffrey of Goderich pocketed $1,000 at the Clinton Monster Bingo on August 27. She also split $149.50 share -the -wealth game winnings with Mrs. Hartman of • •Goderich and -Hilda Austin of S atortb. Another ,fGfto,��derich lady, Helen Watson, • ��J'l'�'�'i'IM1r1'l'l Q'ir'•. 1.5.sb'Careit te'VmLL lth ." ize.. ,. -- ; ++ + ASST'D COLOURS 2 ROLL PKG. OrangeJul UFdS�V1 rFNE'. OLD SOUTH FROM FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE OR GRAPEFRUIT JUICE Orange Juke FROZEN 355 mL APPLE, ORANGE, PINEAPPLE, GRAPEFRUIT, NATURES BLEND DELMONTE FRUIT „JuicEsi, 750 mL DIET OR REGULAR SUPER SPECIAL GAIL. PINKNEY Gail Pinkney, daughter of Lyle and Joyce ey of Goderich, graduated from Fan - h we chool of Nursing, Victoria Campus, on on July 21. Gail will be employed at St. Joseph's Hospital in London. She is a 1982 graduate of GDCI. +++ OUR REG. 9.79 ROBIN HOOD ALL PURPOSE FLOUR 2.5.kg BAG PLUS 30¢ DEPOSIT GROUND SANKA COFFEE 369 °3.99 APRICOT HALVES COCKTAIL OR .PEACHES FORTUNE FANCY FRUITS 14 oz. 89 TIN CREAMED VIHITE BILLIE BEE HONEY g° f. 19 4 COLOUR CHOICES, WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASE TO REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS WHITE SWAN PALANDA TOILET TISSUE PLUM TOMATOES 4 , 28 oz. 7� MARJORIE SIERTSEMA Marjorie Siertsema, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Siebolt Siertsema of R.R. 1 Auburn, is a co -winner of the Peter Adamson Memorial Scholarship .for the highest Grade 12 average (88.4 per cent) at GDCI. UNSWEETENED TIDIITS - CRUSHED - SLICED PALANDA PINEAPPLE 19 02. TIN GARLIC - NO GARLIC POLSKI OGORKI ROSE DILL PICKLES SWEET MIXED BREAD & BUTTER, BABY DILLS ROSE PICKLES 4 VARIETIES BETTY CROCKER DELUXE FROSTING MIXES 750 750 mL mL1.79 .29 VELVET FLOUR 3 VARIETIES McCORMICKS WAGON WHEELS °C" 1.69 35" f.49 4 VARIETIES VARIETIES McCORMICK GRANNY SNAPS McCORMICK GRANNY SNAPS ROBIN HOOD PUDDING CAKE MIXES VARIETIES If PRE60 2 VARIETIES SPAGHETTI SAUCE 1.79 urtircxsrixAxr RIGHT GUARD 2.39 5 FLAVOURS SUPREME ICE CREAM 2.59 EXTRA HOLD Specials In Effect September 5 thru September 8/84 DRY LOOK SPICE OR REGULAR SAU SEA COOKED SHRIMP 99 WESTONS 6 PK 2 FLAVOURS DUTTERHORNS 1e9 9 NEILSONS 2 VARIETIES 6 PK SEALTEST 3 VARIETIES 250 g CHIP 99' DIP XltOP SiM�16Mf cSUPlFERMAN FRENCH FRIE WELCHS CONCORD 1L GRAPE JUICE SHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER SILKIENCE REG. OR XBODY GRANNYS BUFTER TARTS 1.29 WELCHS WHi'ME, 1 L GRACE 2.19 JUICE THESE SPECIALS AVAILABLE ONLY IN: HIGHWAY No. 8 GODERICH filmmarkets... of Tne 1oafs MONDAY & TUESDAY 9e6 P.M. WEDNESDAY, THURSDAY & FRIDAY 9-9 P. M. SATURDAY 8:3O®6 P.M. +++ Those young people who live m Colborne Township and who are interested in joining the next 4-H project, Fitness Fare, should contact Helen Riehl at 524-8143 or Mary Lou Clements at 524-2462. The first meeting will be held September 6. Microfiche catalogue to be installed To enable part-time students in Southwestern Ontario to make better use of The University of Western Ontario main library collection, a complete microfiche version of. the D.B. Weldon Library catalogue will shortly be installed in two area libraries. The microfiche catalogue, along with a special reader for its use, will. be placed at the public libraries in Goderich and Sin -woe. Last year, microfiche readers were in- stalled in libraries in Brantford, Sarnia, St. Thomas, and the West Hill Secondary School library in Owen Sound. In announcing the project, Dr. Thomas N. Guinsburg, Dean of the Faculty of Part - Time and Continuing Education at Western, termed it "another step in seeking to ensure that the quality of the educational ex- perience for our off -campus students resembles as closely as possible that which • we provide our students in London." The University Library, Dean Guinsburg says, has for some time provided excellent service in providing materials to off - campus students either by lending them directly to individual students or by placing the materials on deposit in out-of-town libraries. Western has a special librarian and staff to fill the numerous requests from its out-of-town students. However, until now students had little or no notion of what the Western Library holdings indduded, and, unless they lived close by, were unlikely to be able to use the main catalogue. "Now that the library catalogue in London is itself on microfiche," 'Dean Guinsburg notes, "it is technologically possible at a ' reasonable cost to provide the part-time students who live at a distance from the campus access to precisely the same catalogue facility that students use in Lon don. As a result, the out-of-town students will now be able to conduct their research and request material much as if they were on campus."