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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News-Record, 1973-05-17, Page 9Low Everyday DISCOUNT PRICES 7,6,0 Weekly "ACTION PRICED" Specials FRESH TURKEY C PARTS & WHOLE WHOLE BREAST or LEGS BREASTS Leg Quarters lb 79% 141.09 lb 78fit HOSTESS (ACTION pxiCED) (PREPRICED 69c( Potato Chips 10.oz pkg 59? 6 VARIETIES Bick's Relishes 312f1 pr , $1.00 Pure, Cheery Penh, Janilistiee• Aptical, v Currant COLONIAL 2 LB. BAG (hoc. (hip Cookies 975/ Beef, Irish, Meat Balls S Gravy, Meat Ball Stow (ACTION PRICED( Puritan Stews f(-oz lin 59? DAVID, EMPIRE PURE (ACTION PRICED) Chocolate Mallows 14 ,,,L,),59sz In Quality! FINE POINT Bic Deluxe Pen AIL VARIETIES Minute Rice MIXES A PP, WHITE . PINK, YELLOW Facial Tissue (PREPRICED 49c EACH) 3 pens $1.00 4 (ACTION PRICED) 3 6-oz okgs $1.00 $1.00 Extra Low Prices Absolutely No Compromise 11 Boxes of 200 40 2-Ply Sheet, E. D. Smith's Jams IMPERIAL (QUARTERS) Margarine i.„ 39 ',' (ACTION PRICE Di 3 lb pkg 96s/ Pi AIN, ,WI EH ONIONS. WITH ONIONS & MUSHROOMS Heinz B. B. Q. SAUCE 3 13 II 1)1' $1.00 MIX A MATCH, DICED BEETS OR CARROTS. Aylmer VEGETABLES 6 " 1 L'Z hns $1.00 C Marshmallows II FLAVOURS Beverages YUKON CLUB 6 (ACTION PRICED) oz ct lio pkg 25? (PLUS EITL DEPOSIli 30-ff oz bits 99 fzi e Bakery Values! Check Then (ACTION PRICED) WH)1E, SLICED, "A PREMIUM QUALITY LOAF" Bread IAN PARKER 3 74,07 loavm 79./ IANE PARKER IDel,,,ow, Plain ow 'toasted) (BU Y 3 LOAVES - SAVE ROiSin Bread 3 ‘6 01 kOsieS 19 ,s,,,,,,,, IAN( PAVER (Piled Ilicits with Juicy Apple Slices)) Apple Pie i, it B Inch,74 0/ Pie 49 / (ACTION PRICED) lANc PARKER \ Spanish Bar Cake 2.19,,, rAes'79, ,s,,,A. ,,,, IAN PARKER Jelly Roll ,,,,, 1 lb 7 0 7 (4, 69 ACTION PRICED) ,ANT P ',QV, { P PLAIN. SUGAR CINNAMON Coke Donuts 31 kg, ,A 0.0.0 0 ACTION PRICED SPECI4AL ANGEL LARGE SIZE3 9 CAKE JANE PARKER (HEAVENLY DESSERT AT score DOWN TO EARTH PRICE!) 101 Mushrooms 310,0z tins • AQUA, AVOCADO, PINK, WHITE, YELLOW (ACTION PRICED) Kleenex Towels MARLBORO, WHITE, PINK, YELLOW, AQUA (ACTION PRICED) Toilet Tissue A&P Briquets pkg of 4 roils 10-16 bag (ACTION PRICED) 7 ALL VARIETIES, MIX ES Robin Hood 3 9 o p g $ 1 0 0 TAB, FRESCA, SPRITE OR Coca Cola case of 24 10-fl,oz zip top tins (ACTION PRICED) 29 (ACTION PRICED) 0 pkg of 2 rolls (ACTION PRICED) Bar- B-Q Favourites-Great on a Grill! SUPER-RIGHT RED BRAND SUPER-RIGHT, RED BRAND GRADE "A" BEEF STEAKS and ROASTS 138 ROUND STEAK ROAST ROUND STEAK :I• 4 ,1 .4 ,a0a.), BONELESS, BOTTOM CUT BONELESS RUMP ROAST "Great on a Grill!" — Full Slice, Boneless RED BRAND GRADE "A" BEEF STEAKS CALIFORNIA or 14 128 CROSS RIB GREAT ON YOUR GRILL (2-LB VAC PAC $1.28) . vac l-Plbac 68/ SX WIENERS Stock Up for The Long Weekend est St Goderich WHERE ECONOMY ORIGINATES ALL PRICES SHOWN IN THIS AD GUARANTEED EFFECTIVE THROUGH SATURDAY, MAY 19th, 1973. MEXICAN, FINEST FLAVOUR Broccoli bunch 39% CALIFORNIA, FRESH, LARGE ORIGINAL BUNCHES Carrots 2 bunches 49% Open Monday May 21 9 - 6 GRADE B EEF. -STEAKS nT r BLADE STEAKS 'FIRST 4 RIBS ONLY -PRIME RIB SHOULDER STEAKS I STEAKS $9 8 ¢ 41.28 Side Bacon SUPER-RIGHT "RAND, SLICED Side Bacon lb 4510 lib vac pac 98? Town Club Brand, Smoked, Cooked, Picnic Style (Sliced lb 780) Pork Shoulders lb 68? Burns Brand, Smoked, Cooked, Dinner Style, Vacuum Packed Boneless Hams lb $1.38 BURNS BRAND Cooked Ham 6-oz vac pac 745i BURNS BRAND, RIND ON, END CUTS, BY THE PIECE FHOPSY BRAND, COLE SLAW :OR Potato Salad 24-oz carton 6851 lOwni CLUB, SWEET PICKLED, VACUUM PACKED Cottage Rolls 3 to 4 lbs aver. lb 98? SX BRAND, SLICED, 3 VARIETIES Cooked Meats 16.oz vac pac SX BRAND, 4 VARIETIES (HOT, SWEET, PLAIN & GARLIC) Italian Sausage lb 98? SAIL SEA, FROZEN Shrimp COCKTAIL pkg of two 4-oz jars 78? RUPERT BRAND, GOLDEN BATTERED Frozen Cod 16-oz pkg $4? C.L.INTON pows-mgcopigi, 1144011151).AY. miky.17, tered politics. m willing to wager you will have to admit that considerable change has taken place in that person .,, and not all of it for the better, Think back to the last elec- tion in your area. Do you remember how the opposing candidates tried to anticipate each other's action, get infor- mation about each other's in- tentions, dog each other's foot- steps, block each other's cam- paign with suggestive reports and maybe even outright lies? Do you recall how some of the more vocal and open suppor- ters would leave their own per- sonal lives behind them for the duration of a campaign and become like living, breathing secret agents smelling out all kinds of gossip and using it, though super subtly, to raise doubt about the other side? And do you recall those sickening pre-election speeches and advertisements? Do you remember the candidates promising the skies and pulling every possible string to deliver by election eve? Can you forget how you were wooed and wangled until you felt something like a mindless idiot about to flip a coin for the life or death verdict? And what about election night when a victor finally was named? Do you remember the bitterness of the losing side and the cutting sneers of the conquerers? Well friends, that's politics. That's the kind of dog-eat-dog life one accepts when one gets into politics. You are either riding high or bringing up the rear. You're either a hero or a hasbeen, Youre either hailed or hung. You may get to the top, but you are never so safe or so secure you don't have to be looking over your shoulder for those mad, crazy dogs at your heels. President Richard Nixon is the most powerful man in the world, some say, To believe that he or any other man of his influence got to the pinnacle without scheming and plotting, without biting and scratching, without pain and persecution, is to believe in Santa Claus. •8111e11, - So, what's so surprising that so,,,,TP)C,P,,4anYJoeal,xnunipipality‘A.Nix9roiPOsbeterthiteol‘te,lousei,vottkoz. you care to focus your sites on. He's a politician and ob- Think of the reeve or the viously a good one. He's not mayor. If you can, remember supposed to be Saint, now is back to when he or she first en- he? News from Hullett Central school Decorators have been painting classrooms, washrooms and halls in the senior wing of the school. As a result, classes have been disrupted, with each of the five classes involved having to move all desks and books out of the way of the painters. The fresh look of the rooms and halls makes all the shifting around quite worthwhile. HOT DOG DAY An innovation at Hullett Central School during the past two weeks is the sale of hot dogs to the students at noon hour. This is an activity spon- sored by the Students' Council, helped -by Mr. Riley, to , try to defray the rising cost of milk to the students. The hot dogs are sold to all pupils, the juniors one week, and the seniors the next. Varna BY FRED McCLYMONT A special Mother's Day ser- vice was held in the United Church last Sunday with the pastor, Rev. Murdoch Morrison in charge. He spoke about "Living together as a Christian family". The choir, under the leader- ship of the organist, Mrs. Doug McAsh, sang a Mother's Day Anthem and the offering went to the Association for Retarded Children, PERSONALS Mr. and Mrs. Bob McCiymont, Michael and Shannon of Guelph spent the weekend visiting relatives here and at Clinton. Misses Edith, May, and Eleanor Davidson of Hamilton called on friends during the past week. It is hoped that all who have a right to vote will do so on Wednesday May 23. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Roy and family attended the wedding of Mr. Rey% brother, Don, in Waterloo on Saturday last, I'm not a scholar of current events. At the best of times, I'm not much more than an 9r- dinary housewife thrown inkr a weekly newspaPer job. I may know my local community and I may know a little about weekly newspapering, but it is a cinch I don't know much about 'world affairs. In recent weeks, I've been listening along with everyone else to the Great American Scandal, the Watergate Affair. I've watched as some of the USA's most influential govern- ment types have been dismissed or replaced upon retirement. I've heard the charges and the countercharges. I've waited and waited for the impeach- ment of President Nixon. And do you know, for the life of me I can't imagine what e pne is so outraged about! VVliat if Nixon did know that the opposition's inner sanctum was bugged? What if Nixon himself had ordered it? What if he'd helped plant the equip- ment? So what? Maybe that's the wrong at- titude. Maybe I should be like everyone else and be shocked and revolted at the thought of such skullduggery in high places. Maybe I should cry out for Nixon's scalp on the nation's belt. But I can't understand why. I know enough about politics to surmise that the only mistake Nixon and his supporters made was to be found out. I'm not so naive as to believe such things have never gone on before Watergate! You think I'm taking this too lightly. You may be right. But that old saying that "All's fair in love and war" has been amended in recent years to read "love and politics" .... and I can understand why. The politics I know best is municipal politics and the longer I'm involved with that racket the more convinced I become that the politics of a nation must be rotten to the core. I'm not blaming the politicians, goodness knows. Dishonesty and underhanded- ness are an occupational hazard of politicians, big and Meet The Teacher Mr, Doug Riley was born in Clinton Public Hospital, and grew up on a farm near Kin- burn. He attended elementary school at S.S,No. 3, Hullett, in Kinburn, and high school at Seaforth District Collegiate In- stitute. He went to Stratford Teachers' College, and has taken • university courses at Queen's University, in Kingston and is presently taking Waterloo Lutheran University courses. He taught for two years at Woodstock, nine years in Scar- borough, and came to Hullett Central four years ago. He presently has a Grade Seven Class, and teaches Literature to Grades Five to Eight on rotary. Mr. Riley, his wife Norma, who also teaches, at Walton, and their children Kim and Greg, live near Winthrop. His hobbies include curling, and raising registered quarter hor- ses. SPORTS The girls' baseball schedule is underway, despite frequent cancellations because of rainy weather. There have been two games played in the grade seven and eight league. The Orioles defeated the Pirates by the score of 6 to 5, In a game against the Red Sox, the Expos won by a score of 10 to 5. Two games have also been played in the grade five and six two-pitch baseball league. The Pitchers were defeated by the Batters, by a score of 10 to 5, while the Catchers defeated the Shortstops by a 4 to 2 score.. FIELD DAY Field Day for Hullett Central School is scheduled for Friday, May 18, Weather permitting, All grades, with the exception of Kindergarten Will take part. PAINTING During the pot week, pain. ter* from D.A. Kay Intetior