HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1972-06-29, Page 15BUNDREPHIRE.
FORT LAUDERDALE'S
FINEST FUN RESORT
6catemialilefttotet
3200 gall Ocean Or., Fort Lauderdale 33300
• 800 FT. PRIVATE OCEAN REACH •
TWO HEATED POOLS, SUN DECKS •
LUXURIOUS GUEST ACCOMMODA-
TIONS • GOLF PRIVILEGES ON 3
CHAMPIONSHIP COURSES • FREE
TENNIS ON PREMISES • SUPERB
DINING • NIGHTLY DANCING &
ENTERTAINMENT •
Visits to
fabulous Disney World available.
FOR MORE INFORMATION CONTACT:
INNKEEPER
382.7637 212 KING ST, TORONTO
si
Apl 7 8 thrt; Ono Di eociler:berars: 56 daily ooerrooQemrsso, nt, udrbo ncepu
Modified Aitiericen Pi
lan
iiYiSh ditlflEr 4 break '144
STERLING FUELS
DISTRIBUTORS
OF
CHAMPION FUEL OIL,
CHAMPION GASOLINES &
VALVOLINE LUBRICANTS
• ARE
PLEASED TO OBTAIN THE SERVICES
OF
MR. FRANK MacDONALD
ERIE ST., CLINTON •
To do their customers annual furnace clean-out and
to handle all burner service
MR. ROSS JEWITT
STERLING FUELS AGENT
WILL CONTINUE TO MAKE ALL DELIVERIES
FOR ALL DELIVERIES PLEASE CALL 482-9411
FOR FURNACE REPAIRS& CLEANING PLEASE CALL
482-7600
EAT PROTEIN FOR POISE
When you look into the new findings in the field of nutrition
these days, you find explosiveness! No field of knowledge is
growing faster and changing more rapidly or holds more prom-
ise for the human race.
lid you know, for example, that depression can be caused by
a lack of niacin? Niacin is pow called the "morale vitamin."
One way that you can make sure you're getting your share of
niacin is by having fish often, also liver.
Some peotile, can't eat Wheri'they're tense; others eat more.
Tension is the inability to relax and is often responsible for
the terrible habit of bolting one's food quickly, taking big
\mouthfuls, hardly chewing; washing it down with gulps of
whatever there is to drink.
In my experience,' found that people who eat this way
usually consume two or three times the quantity of a slow
eater. It's a scientifically established fact that when you eat
quickly, it takes more food to give you the feeling of being
• full.
What you eat can also make profound improvements in the
glossiness of your hair, the brightness of your eyes, the fresh-
ness of your skin-tone.
For poise and self-confidence, nutritionists say, feed yourself
plenty of protein as well as calcium. Many studies prove
that poise and protein go together,
It's true in that the protein you eat builds the solid parts
of your body . . . your skin . . . your nails . . the muscles that
hold your bones in a good (or poor) posture.
With six months of good eating habits, you'll see a dramatic
improvement in your looks and life. You'll have a clearer skin,
brighter eyes and hair, better muscles and posture and infinitely
more energy, self-confidence and fun.
(AiiklayepiinielsisFouoRr&Directorof WeightWatchers ofOntarioLimited.)
ADELAIDE
DANIELS SAYS
NOW OPEN
Eric $ Kathe Krehmer & Family invite everyone for a
FREE COFFEE
Saturday, July 1
Taste our. Delicious Dinners pies & cokes oar specialty
BAYFIELD
And RESTAURANT
HIGHWAY 11 SOUTH
HAYFIELD
CLINTON
ONE 1972 FORD PINTO GOLD TUDOR SEDAN WILL SE GIVEN AWAY
EACH WEEK FOR FIVE CONSECUTIVE WEEKS, TOTAL RETAIL VALUE
APPROXIMATELY $11,475.00.
EASY TO ENTER! EASY TO WIN!
CONTEST RULES: roof of purchase of one of our popular bonus brand products or any
Attach p entry forms, which are available at the cash register, local iGA store. One
be taken as shown. Contest ends Saturday, July 1
WEEK OF MAY 29
ou
of five
beautiful gold Tudor sedan Pintos will be won by some lucky IGA shopper
I
and deposit same in the ballot
to ou box at the front of y reasonable facsimile
each week for five
consecutive weeks. Everyone who enters iS eligible to win.
Winners must onswer a skill testing question. No substitutes,
prizes must
you wish. FIRST WINNER
Mrs. Jean Jones
ONTARIO GROWN
GRADE "A"
FRESH Size
FRYING CHICKENS lb.
I PARTLY SKINNED BLUE BRAND I I BLUE BRAND GROADRE A •
I SHANK PORTION I (For Your NW (For Your BBQ) FROZEN TOP VALLI
FRESH i READY TO E--AT -1 r RED OR —1 r— F15 7R ONTARIO GROWN
1972. Enter as often aS I TURKEY I SMOKED RIB CHUCK
BROILERS I I HAM I I STEAKS I I STEAKS
II
../OMM OIMiet •••.. • .00 ••••0 •ml• ISIMO 1••••• 4•11.0
WE SELL ONLY CANADA'S FINEST RED'S! BLUE BRAND BEEF!
CHECKERBOARD FARM FULLY COOKED
BEEF STEAKETTES
READY TO EAT, PARTLY SKINNED, BUTT PORTION
TURKEY
BRITISH COLUMBIA WHOLE
SALMON 3-S tb.
Se
Coleman's Fully Cooked, Skinned & Defatted (Whole or Han'
SMOKED HAM
(For Your 88Q) CHICKEN LEG AND.
BREAST QUARTERS.,
READY• TO EAT
SMOKED HAM SLICES
•
ZIP
DOG
FOOD
MACARONI & CHEESE
KRA
N
FT
IDINER ph9, 15.
FAIRLADY
COLOURED
MARGARINE 16t Pkg.
FRASERVALE FROZEN COD 55oot.
FISH & CHIPS l pkg. c
print
I 9 6
APER PLATES
INK SALMON 49'
.11 88.
(NON-RETURNABLE)
PEPSI COLA 3 2641:
ASSORTED DILLS, SWEET MIXED Ok BREAD & BUTTER
WATERMELON
140.1 RED,AIIIEY
!BURNS SWEET PICKLED
COTTAGE ROLLS
TOP VALU
WIENERS
CAMPFIRE SLICED
SIDE BACON
. Ws
wartime
KIMBERLY CLARK SALE
DELSEY ASSORTED COLOURS
Bathroom Tissue 3 .121,3;; 11 .0
KLEENEX BOUTIQUE. ASSORTED coLot,llis
PAPER TOWELS_ ;to, pkg. of 5
WONDERSOFT ASSORTED COLOURS
athroom Tissue ''4'7.17: Sec
KOTEX PLUS FEMININE
APKINS oft 49` ii
KLEENEX BOUTIQUE ASSORTED COLOURS
FACIAL TISSUE 3 •Itsi 1X00
lb. 49c
16,89c
TOP VALU 1st GRADE CREAMERY
BUTTER
CLOVER LEAF
DIV 9" WHITE
AYLMER CHOICE
GREEN
PEAS'
ABC PREPRICED 1.39
POWDERED
KRAFT CHEEZ WHIZ PROCESS
CHEESE
SPREAD to or. CC
lar *IF
York Foncy FrNen GreenPens, Kernel Corn, or Mixed
VEGETABLES, 2414; 55,
TANG ORANGE FLAVOUR
CRYSTALS
ALCAN 18 INCH
FOIL WRAP
ROBIN HOOD CELEBRATION
CAKE MIXES
PALMOLIVE LIDOID
DETERGENT
TOP VALU HOT DOG OR
HAMBURG BUNS
PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL CLOSING SATURDAY JULY1, 1972
U.S. No.1 cAlotoltum
Salmon Flesh
Cantaloupe 2/69.
ILL NO. 1 CAltIONNiA
CELERY
STALKS
CANADA NO.1 01000
HEAD
LETTUCE 2/4V
CANADA NO. 1 Okt. GROWN
HOTHOUSE
TOMATOES 21.,,89`
CANAOA NO. 1 FANCY ONt
McINTOSH
APPLES "' 49. beg
CANADA NO, 1 ONY CROWN
HOTHOUSE
Cucumbers 21415c
Mt. NO. I SALAD 011iGNY
Fresh Green
ONIONS 21.0..25
BONUS DISCOUNTS
'Clinton Nom-HoPprcl, Thordoy, June 29, 1972—F/
Lambton Youth. Theatre to entertain once again •
The Lambton YOUth TI141re, a
arnia-based group of high
ChooL college and university
heatr.e Arts students, is once
gain operating under a grant
from the Federal. Government's
Opportunities for Youth
Programme and is, oime again
looking for -.audiences. PIA
company was ,Iqrnied the
summer of 1971 to• tour Western
Ontario on summer weekends,
performing plays free of charge
'Wherever the entertainment was
welcome.
During the summer, Western
Ontario residents have few
opportunities to see goed live
theatrical entertainment. In 1971,
The Lambton Youth Theatre
provided excellence in live 'open
theatre-in-the-round performing
a play entitled CH in urban areas
such as London and Whillor;
small towns like Hayfield,
Petrolia, Sauble Beach and
Zuricly, provincial parks (PITiorx,.
Mond au, Long Point and
Wheatley); summer fairs in St,
Marys, Wallaceburg and Guelph;
and in the cities of Brantford,
Chatham, Goderich, Galt,
Kincardine, Port Dover, Port
Elgin, Port Stanley, Sarnia,
'Siincoe, Stratford, St, •Thornas
and Woodstock,
This summer, the nine
participants in The Lambton
Youth Theatre, Clair Culliford,
Adam Giberson, Lloyd Graham,
Jo Lamberton, Bert Pullen, Steve
Simms, Holly and Terry Stover
and Dev Sullivan are developing
the dramatic, musical, graphic
and literary talents of the group
and are providing entertainment
on a high level for their audience,
The Lambton Youth Theatre is
currently working on two exciting
projects with which they hope to
Provide interest and
entertainmont'for young and old
alike. In the interest of bringing
cultural recreation and
enjoyment, the group would like to
come into as many communities
as possible with a series of
participatory creative drama
workshops with which they hope
through the craft of story-telling,
mime, improvisation, mask-
making and dance-drama to be
able to provide learning
.experiences and fun for all. The
continuity of these workshops will
hopefully be of lasting
recreational and educatioaal
benefit to the communities with
the hoped-for possibility of
changing interest patterns in all
people. The Lambton Youth
Theatre will conduct workshops
indoors or outdoors—at
recreation centres, drop-in
centres, old-age homes—in
short, anywhere and anytime in
order to bring a cultural
environment to urban and rural
areas where there may not be any
accessible culture available at
this time.
The second phase of The
Lambton Youth Theatre's 19'72
activities consists of original
dramatic performances designed
primarily to entertain a summer-
time weekend audience. A
showcase of dramatic
entertainment entitled
HEXASTYLOS is being prepared
in college form which will appeal
to any audience. The programme
will include selections for the
archetypal Greek tragedy
PROMETHEUS BOUND by
Aeschylus; two hilarious scenes
from Sthakespeare's A
MIDSUMMER NIGHT'S DREAM;
the celebrated realistic
humorous tea party from George
Bernard Shaw's PYGMALION; a
one-act theatre-of-the-absurd
play entitled THE HERO by
Arthur Kopit (the noted author of
"Oh Dad, Poor Dad, Momma's
Hung You in the Closet and I'm
Feelin' So Sad"); an original open
theatre free-form dance-drama
emanating from within the group;
and the rather-difficult-to-
describe platonic • parable
ANTHROPOS: OR THE FUTURE
OF ART by E. E. Cummings.
Through this collage of dramatic
styles (comedy, tragedy, absurd,
realistic and fantasy), the
company will attempt to expose as
large an audience as possible to
the excitement of live theatre.
The Lambton Youth Theatre's
director, Werner L. Graf, came
to the Sarnia area three years
ago. Mr. Graf's experience prior
to moving to Lambton County ran
the gamut from operatic singer
and stage director to teacher,
music critic and manager in the
performing arts, While in
Toronto, Mr. Graf was teacher-
director at the Royal
Conservatory of Music's Opera
-School, acted as assistant editor
of OPERA-CANADA and directed
for the Canadian Opera Company
and the New Play Society. In
addition to his activities as
founder-director of the Lambton
Youth Theatre, responsible for
performances of Jean-Claude van
Halite's THE SERPENT, Radovic
and Beckovic's CHE: A
PERMANENT TRAGEDY and
Bertolt Brecht's MOTHER
COURAGE AND HER CHILDREN.
Mr. Graf is Master of Speech,
Music and Drama at Lambton
College,
The Lambton Youth Theatre is
a group of young people with a
wide range of backgrounds and
interests including sculpture,
music, posters, fish, old lamps,
camping, nature, rocks, animals,
records, cartooning, chess, art,
books, clothing design, painting,
poetry, singing, drinking,
babelling, psychology,
witchcraft, the occult and people.
But as varied as their
backgrounds and interests may
be, they all share common bonds
of friendship, talent, love and
enthusiasm for their ambitious
programme.
If any person, group or
community is interested in being
included in the itinerary of
workshops or performances, he
is asked to contact The Lambton
Youth Theatre, P.O. Box 969,
Sarnia, Ontario or to telephone
(519) 542-'7'751, Ext, 64, Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m. to 5
p.m.
molter of prioviple A a
BY 4. CARL HEMINGWAY
A killing FROST June 10th 1974!
ThisIbelieve is a record for this part of the country but like most
records it can be topped. I was told that on. the 14th of July around 1910
there was a frost that killed the potato crop, ruined a lot of hay fields
and the grain crop was only good for hay.
We seem to have oscaped reasonably well this time, but it should
bring borne to us quite forceably that there is a real need for surplus
food supplies. "Seed time and harvest" are assured but not
necessarily good harvests, It is a, rare occasion indeed that there are
good crops around the world and I think it unfortunate that we in Canada
seem so indifferent to our food supply, so unconcerned about the needs
Of others. more subject to the whims of weather than we are,
We didn't suffer much in this community. The first row of corn next
to the fences won't be more than half a crop, some fields of white beans
will have to be re-planted, but serious, wide-spread damage is slight.
Hay is a good crop, mixed grain is looking excellent and fall wheat is
undamaged,
If this frost brings home to our consumers the fact that tax money is
well spent in providing storage space fOr food stuffs and that it is
important that farmers receive an income that will 'justify their
efforts, it may well be a real benefit; '
It was amusing, though rather irritating, to hear one of our city
friends remark this spring how wonderful the maple syrup is and then
end up by saying "and the best of it is that you get it all for nothing!"
I guess we farmers just aren't communicating.
I wonder how many of you heard one of the announcers of one of our
radio station remark "I never realized that a cow had to have a calf
before she started giving milk". As George Ross used to say, "Oh
Boy!"
Our biology classes mustn't be communicating either.
Kneel or sit low in a
canoe, If upset, HANG
ON to the canoe until
help arrives.