The Huron Expositor, 1976-03-04, Page 7Jack H. Gerrits
Construction Ltd.
Now is the time to change
the look of your kitchen, bath or bedrooms
Also plan now for all your farm building
• needs for the coming year.
For immediate service
and reasonable rates
call
482-7290
L,
A LITTLE HELP WITH THE BRUSH -7, Mrs. Perrie,
who teaches painting to night school classes at SDHS
gives e little help to"Ella Jewitt, one of her pupils.
The class is a popular one, held every Monday night
at the school. (Staff Photo)
A VARIETY OF POTS , Dianne Crawford, left, and
Gwen Devereaux work at painting and shading a
variety of things in their pottery class. at SDHS.
Kaaren. Batten of Exeter teaches the pottery class
where studeats use a kiln that has been at the high
school for several years but never used until now.
IROZEN FOODS
High liner Boston "Bluefish
FILLETS
1 Lb. 790
McCain
BREAD
DOUGH
Loaf Pkg. 870
Pepperidge Farms
LAYER CAKES
13 Oz. 93 0
Green Giant
PEAS
N.:, 99 0
Aylmer.
VEGETABLES
Peas, Peas & Carrots,
Green or Wax Beans
3 19 Oz.
Tins •00
Bicks
PICKLES
Sweet M ixed, Icicle,
,Yum Yum,6r13abyDills
15 Oz.
49
0
lar
PRICES EFFECTIVE 'TILL CLOSING
TUESDAY, MARCH 9 /76
STORE HOURS:
1111rAr.
FOOD STORES
AM.
110TH'S FOOD M4R.I(ET
Sea t Ontario •• ••••".. WM:i:KM.' '42
AT PRICES YO LOVE
Mon w , Tues. Wed., & Sat. 9-6 Thurs. & Fri. 9-9
For Your Shopping
Convenience
We Are Open Every
THURS. and FRI.
Night
'Till 9 o'clock.
Old South
ORANGE
JUICE
12 Oz. 39 e
Schneiders Frozen
BUCKET of
CHICKEN .
2 Lb. 3 .29
Blue Bonnet
MARGARINE
White or Coloured
3 Lb.
1.39
Bonnie
Parchment
MARGARINE
1 Lb.
Pkg.
\11.00
Kellogg's
RICE
KRISPIES
17 Oz. 710
Schneiders Frozen
MINI
SIZZLERS
1 61 09
BAKERY SPCCIALS
Westons Cinnamon
B U TTERHORNS
59'
Westons Raspberry
SWISS ROLLS
Westons Apple & Raisin
. PIES
2/9 9'
E.D. SMITH
Ketchup
RISE & SHINE
Orange Flavour Crystals
KELLOGGS
Corn Flakes
HOSTESS
Potato Chips Reg.
RED ROSE
Tea Bags
KNECHTEL
Horse-Radish
KRAFT
Miracle Whip
KNECHTEL
Cheese Snack
FLEECY
Fabric Softener
SILVERWOODS
Novelties 12
• Paks
32 Oz.
24 Oz.
.8.8 Oz, ..•
16 Oz.
16 Oz.
128 Oz,
reg 1.25
4-31/4 Oz.
Paks
99'
89 c
96'
69'
99 0
39 4
73'
1.19
1.59
89'
100
regular or creamed
Schneiders No.
SIDE •
BACON
1- Lb. or 5 •9
Schneiders Vac Pak
CHUNK
BOLOGNA
89 c
THE HURON, EXPOSITQl k MARCH 4v4ft76 rn
A WOMAN'S WORK IS NEVER DONE -- Yee Wah Kennedy of Harpurhey hefts a
powerful router as she edges parts for a bunk bed she is building. The woodworking
class under teacher Ed. Baker, takes advan.tage of the many modern facilities
available in the SDHS Industrial Arts Department.
Who-couldn't use some sunny thoughts
these days?
As 1 vvrite this column, a mixture of snow
and rain is falling. Some muddy patches
show in the fields, but snowbanks still line
the roads. By the time you read this, you
may be either shovelling snow from your
driveway or bailing water ,from , your
basement.
Whatever you're doing, take a break.
Lean on your shovel or sit on your pail.
Forget the weather forecast for March
that you read in the Farmers' Almanac -
cold—unsettled...blustery_storms
moving across Ontario. Skip to June or
July's outlook . clearing
....fair....warm ....hot.
Ingore Stephen Schlitzer's contention
that this is the season of uncert ainty:
"Come now that indefinite weather, when
springtiMe looks in and then waits. Which
means that I never know .whether to
sharpen my mower or my skates."
Close your. eyes. Now, imagine all the
white stuff ,has been replaced by green
grass, Sniff the scent of the scarlet roses
that blanket the trellis against the house.
Hear a robin chirping, and feel the
Odds n' Ends
sunshine tanning your face.
Or, forget that you have to scrape theOce
from the windshield of your car. Prete-4d
instead that you're packing ,some
swimming gear and a picnic basket in the
trunk.
Can't you see the leafy maples lining the
road that leads to the beach? Can't you
hear the waves slapping the shore and the
sea gulls scolding you? Can't you feel the
warm sand slipping under your bare feet?
Maybe you can envision a small lake
port, where the sailboats rest contentedly
at anchor and the water reflects some
clouds, buildings and church spires.
Do the words of Stopford A. Brooke held
'you picture a mountain scene in the
summer?
"A little sun, a little rain,
A soft wind blowing from the west.
And woods and fields are sweet again,
And warmth within the mountain's
— breast.",
Perhaps you agree with Henry van Dyke,
who suggested the things of deepest,worth
are:
'Light of the sapphire skies,
Peace of the silent hills,
Shelter of forest, comfort of the grass
Shadow of clouds that quickly pass,
And after showers,
The smell of flowers,
And of the good brown earth."
In a similar vein, you can maybe picture
a fountain the way James Russell Lowell
did when he wrote:
"Into the sunshine,,
of the lignt
Leaping and flashing ,
Morning 40,0
Into the' .stgoot
RuAizi:*
Happy at IniOnight
lia.ppy by day." •
Caul yOu seethe grass and the rolling
hills of the park that surrounds ,the
fountain? Did you notice the squirrel
scamper down one pine tree and up'
another? Can't you see William Wor4, .
worth's "host of golden daffodils, beside
the lake, beneath the trees, fluttering and
dancing in the breeze"?
Like Mary Dawson Hughes, "I would
like to send you a sunbeam., or the twinkle
of some bright star, or a tiny piece of the
downy fleece that clings to a cloud. afat."
But each of us depends on our own
daydreams to conjure up sunny thoughts:
Isn't it amazing how our minds can
transport us through time and seasons?
Meanwhile, if you're still leaning
yotfr shovel either freezing in your
driveway or floating around your basement
after all these sunny thoughts, you'll be a
snowman. Pont worry. When you're
sweltering in August, you'll .remember,
these days with appreciation.
by Elaine Townshend
Sunny thoughts