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."