Clinton News-Record, 1973-06-14, Page 12• --- _
Monarch - Vitamin ,Enriched
CAKE &
Pastry
Flour
79c
Peas 141:.
C Green
Top Valu Choice - Cream Style
CORN 01;1
HERE'S WHAT MEAT IDENTITY LABELLING DOES FOR YOU
Our new improved meat identity labelling tells you Cl a glance the type of meat, the primal cut and the specific portion of
the primal cut. Simply use the recommended cooking method in our "Meal Explained" Folder.
I. NW H Meer. Every label shows the type al meat - beet, pork, Iamb or veal
T. Novel Cet. Chuck, rib, lain, or hip - tells where the meat comes from.
1. Simile Forties. Blade roost or lap round steak • tells you exactly what port al the primal cut the meat comes from.
TOP VALU VACUUM PACKED 1 lb. pkg. ROUND BONE CUT • From the Chuck B3if
Skinless Wieners 69' Shoulder Steaks lb 1 II 1 8
9
REGULAR CUT
FROM THE CHUCK
BEEF
BLADE
STEAKS
lb.
6C
.111011.
Meat Identity Label
TOP VALU VACUUM PACKED 1 lb pkg, ...n FRESH CANADA GRADE 'A" - Whole Cut LI.6
9c Sliced Side Bacon 1 n .u5 Frying Chicken ..... ....... lb. *
TOP VALU Sliced - 1 lb. pkg. Minced Ham AI5
c
TOP VALU FULLY COOKED 2,2 to 3, 2 lb
1.39 Variety Pack Ie. V
FROZEN KNIFE CUT 10 lb. ctn.
Chicken Legs ... ..... on 6.88
FROZEN BONELESS
73` Haddock Fillets .. „ ...lb. 1.19
99c
OMSTEAD FROZEN 12 oz. pkg Cooked S 59c C AN2 N.,D+40%:1, A, DLEB ."A "
COLEMAN'S 2 lb. average Summer FRESH
Skinless Wieners 75c COLEMAN'S VACUUM PACKED 1 lb. pkg
Sausage Chubs
SWEET PICKLED • BY THE PIECE • END CUTS
FEARMAN'S
Peamealed Bacon „.1b. 1.25 Italian Sausage
SCHNEIDER'S 2 lb. pkg. SCHNEIDER'S 2 lb. ,each
Sauerkraut "Bucket of Chicken".. .74.0V
GRADE 'A' RED RIBBON BEEF
Our meat identity program makes your shopping easier
TAKE THE GUESSWORK OUT OF MEAT BUYING WITH THESE
INFORMATIVE PURCHASING ADIS.
INFORMATIVE COUNTER CARD
Clinton
TABLE MEATS
wrIreiT I PAT l rr
1.00 55°
FRESHFRYING
CNICI(E89 I
takes the guesswork out
of buffing ground beef!
1 ,. •
IGA NQW GUARANTEES THAT THE GROUND
BEEF YOU BUY WILL ALWAYS BE OF THE
SAME CONSISTENT QUALITY. FLAVOUR AND
GOODNESS, WEEK AFTER WEEK. A GLANCE
"t 'i Al"b'OR LAG'ELS WILL SHOW YOU THE FAT '
CONTENT IN EACH GRADE OF GROUND
BEEF, SO THAT YOU CAN CHOOSE THE BEST
TYPE FOR YOUR PURPOSE — AND YOUR
BUDGET. NO MORE GUESSWORK . . .
GROUND BEEF
AT !GA YOU CAN BUY A WITH CONFI-
DENCE!
now you can tell at a
gime the maximum fat
content with these 3
informative labels!
Dinner Hams
DAVERN
Breakfast Sausage I b 77`
FEARMAN'S FULLY COOKED • SMOKED
Picnic Shoulders Ib
DAVERN VACUUM PACKED 1 lb pkg.
Sliced Side Bacon ......... Breaded Smelts . pkg.
.1.49 FRYING
v 95' CHICKENS . l
m. 69' lb. 55c
Lean
GROUND BEEF
MAXIMUM
FAT CONTENT 15%
FAT CONTENT
LESS THAN 1.59 .
Extra Lean
GROUND BEEF
100
COLEMAN'S
1 lb. pkg.
BIEMAN
Frankfurts
lb. 99c
Fresh
GROUND BEEF
APPROXIMATE
FAT CONTENT 25%
FRESH DUCE
U.S.A. NO. 1 CALIFORNIA
Tomatoes... ...
Vine Ripe
2 lbs 69c
U.S.A. NO. 1 FLORIDA
"w 79`
Red or White
Grapefruit .... .
U S.A. NO, 1 NEW CROP
Crisp Cello
Carrots „x ,29`
U S A. NO. I
NeW Crop Tasty
5 tda 79` New Potatoes
U.S.A. ND. 1
New Crop Yellow
A5C Cooking Onions
--er Lot
WITH PORK IN
TOMATO. SAUCE .
Pride Pack
a. Beans 4' this
MAXWELL HOUSE
Instant
$ 88 Coffee laor.
Kraft Regillar Process
CHEESE SPREAD
Cheez sot. Whiz in
E.D. SMITH
Tomato ilifika
Ketchup Ittr Ult"
MIRACLE WHIP
KRAFT
Salad Dressingl:rt
WELCHADE
Grape
Drink tr.
KRAFT PROCESSED
SINGLE
Cheese a oz
Slices pkg..
ASSORTED VARIETIES
Peek Frean 118C
Biscuits31,1:U
BANQUET FROZEN
APPLE OR
Cherry
Pie
PANTRY SHELF.
Light Flake
Tuna evz tin
# f' AND
\ THESt AIUABL - SAVE
COUPONS
,vv-vVvi'vPv°4
BONNIE
COLOURED
MARGARINE
I lb. 1 (IC
pkg.
Limit 2 lbs. per family
with $500 purchase and this coupon
Effective June 13.19, 1973
/ A1111111111111 111111111 \
V VUVVVVVVVVVV
ASSORTED COLOURS
WHITE SWAN
BATHROOM
• TISSUE
WE SPECIALIZE IN WEEKLY SPECIALS !
U.S.A. NO, 1 CALIFORNIA
SUNKIST VALENCIA
ORANGES 2 ISA 69 C
dos.
•••••••
••••••
WHITE SWAN
White
Serviettes
ALCAN
18 Inch
Foil Wrap
ASSORTED FLAVOURS
Prime Packet
Dog Food
GLAD PLASTIC
Garbage
Bagt .
CLAD PLASM
Garbage
Bags
69e
69c
6 ,!'.711.00
,!Ni, 550
.ag1 .09
PRICES EFFECTIVE UNTIL
WHITE SWAN, 2 Ply • ASsoried corours pnem REGULAR, - G B 0 , OR DACON
Facial
ox. Luncheon
Tissue ... .... . airsID Utic Meat. •
DERNARDIN FREEZER DADS
Quart...,......
Pint 3 pkgs of 25
7 OZ. HOT/COLD
Picnic Pak
i= 59c Drink Cups .
FRENCH
Prepared 69c Mustard . ....... .1.Tat
... r lot
SQUIRREL CRUNCHY on PLAIN
Peanut LT, 95c Butter
liUMPTY DUMPTY • REGULAR on ninntr
4 1.2u Chips 7g 59C a„, Potato
VANILLA OR CHOCOLATE
Sara Lee Frozen IS at IV 50 59c Layer Cake . . Ohl s till
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES
HIGHLINER FROZEN I W
Perch
Fillets .
KRAFT VELVEETA
Processed
Cheese Loaf
000111An DRY on off Y
Halo 5% More
Shampoo
BEEF. IRISH. OR CHICKEN
Cordon Bleu
Stews
I or 49c
89'
;:n1.77
'Tr, 77e.
..5 vo 59, L
TOP VALU FANCY
TomatO
Juice .oz 39` ,„
COCO PUFFS. 111C00 11110Pms, TniX rilANKENnt.finY
or COUNT (110Otili
General Mills
.3n 88c Cereal . ..... ...V4hIg° 39c
DANQUET FROZEN . ASSORTED VARIETIES
Meat
Dinners .....
WHITE SWAN. ASSORTED COLOURS
Paper
Towels .. Iran 55c pk,),
g, 57c
TANG ORANGE FLAVOUR 4 3'b of pkgs or
Lemonade
Flavour Crystals .514 79c
PINE SOL • LIQUID
Household
Cleaner
IVORY
Liquid
Detergent
NADOB . ALI. PURPOSE
Ground
Coffee
MAXIM
Freeze Dried
Coffee
CLOD HOUSE
Garlic 9 oz. or
Onion Salt 91/4 oz..
01.09174G SATURDAY, JUNE 19,1173
10 iv. 29,
ltiv, 55`
14 or . pop
FAB BORAX,
PREPRICED 1.99
POWDERED
DETERGENT
.101•11•10 11•••••• 11111••• - - MONO
Supplied and Serviced Up M. Loeb Limited
lit V L
1.111111.0
111(0111EG a
BREW PORTION.;
WINGS ATTACHED
FRYING
CHICKEN
QUARTERS
lb. 69C
nEGuLAn CUT Malt
Rill I o r 13110
1st Four Ribs Only
BEEF RIB
STEAKS
lb. 1,26
BONUS DISCOUNTS BONUS DISCOUNTS BONUS DISCOUNTS BONUS DISCOUNTS
WHITE SWAN
White or Coloured
Serviettes J;t25
.•11114.
.11114••
•••••••
4 roll 39C
pkg.
Lune 1.4 tall pkg.
with $500 purchase and this coupon
Effective June 13.19, 1973
1 1 1111 11 1
s',4120j3jR0v99;jv 11 /
Pkg.
Lund 1 box per fah*
$5.00wile purchase and this coupon
EfiectIve June 13.19, 1273
CUT FROM
THE PORK LOIN
COUNTRY STYLE
SPARE
RIBS
lb. 99
c
The rewarding art
of Self-Defence.
Too many men and women
get hurt at work, just because
they don't look after themselves.
The secret is to work
defensively.
Here's one way to improve
your self-defence—tulle safety.
Accidents are less likely to
happen when everyone is alert.
The sure
way to
safety is
Self-Defence.
Your Workmen's Compensation Board
and The Safety Associations, Ontario
•
Sunday is Father's Day and
for all you dads, I have some
special words of en-
couragement., and yes, en-
dearment....for you,
Somehow in today's society,
mother gets all the attention. It
is mother who plays the
dramatic role in child bearing;
it is mother who takes the
lion's share of the respon-
sibility for child raising; it is
mother who appears to have all
the unglamorous duties around
the house; and it is mother who
must be protected by society
should things go wrong in the
home.
And, being a mother myself, I
would be a traitor to my kind if
I pooh-poohed the woman's
function in a family, It
wouldn't be honest, it wouldn't
be kind and it wouldn't be fair.
So I won't take that approach.
But I certainly would like to
draw everone's attention to the
big task that fathers do accept
day after day after day. And I'd
like to throw out one huge
bouquet to the boys who are
husbands and sires.
I'll take my own husband as
the prime example of a man
who deserves a day of devotion
on Sunday. Here's a fellow who
has given up his freedom to
become married to me. He's
given me three children which
are the ultimate in fulfillment
for me. And through it all, he's
remained gentle, attentive and
very, very unselfish.
I think, perhaps, a man has
to be even more unselfish than
a woman if he's going to make
a good husband and father.
You might argue with that
statement, but from the time
boys are just tots, they are dif-
ferent from girls in more than
the obvious ways. Little boys
don't like any fences whereas
little girls seem to drift into
service roles almost by desire.
Think of it. A five=year old
boy wants to run free for ad-
venture and excitement. A gal
of the same age prefers
mothering dolls, slaving over a
hot playstove and waiting on
any little fellow she can con
into her makebelieve house.
I've not yet figured out why
little girls drift towards such
subserviertr' existehce, so
naturally unless it is something
in their chemical structure, but
there's little doubt that boys
are not naturally attune to ties
and demands. They must be en-
ticed by something real. It may
be something as earthy as sex
or something as mundane as
food but a man must have a
need before he will be cornered
into marriage.
Therefore, once the marriage
vows have been spoken and the
home is established with
husband and wife, we find two
people having their needs
met....if the marriage is a suc-
cessful one. But the husband,
bless him, is still in it
somewhat unwillingly he's
really a free spirit confined for
a purpose....so any "extras" a
woman gets from a man come
because he is totally unselfish,
not because he gets any par-
ticular satisfaction from being
a martyr as women usually do.
There's, another thing about
men about which I continue to
marvel. That is the way a man
will work long, gruelling hours
at a job and then come home,
reasonably happily, to turn
their entire earnings over to the
loving woman who pays the
bills. Hubby might get smoking
money....or wifey may even pur-
chase his cigarettes by the car-
ton.
You think that's unlikely.
Think again. Statistics prove it
is the ladies who control the
spending in a house and in
general, it is women who han-
dle the money, too.
And then there's the other
wonderful things that men do
for their families....like
repairing a bicycle in the
pouring rain the night before
junior leaves for the Scout bike
hike; like attending a musical
concert when he'd rather see
the ballgame; like helping
daughter with her pierced ear-
rings because mom's too
squeamish; like catching that
solitary mouse in the basement
so the family can live in safety.
A man can be a roaring
master one minute and a
pliable pussycat the next. He
can be a real he-man on the job
and a pushover at home. A
good husband and a' good
father is a marvellous
creature—and I can tell you
Mrs. Keller apc .her brood' of
three have 'the ino4t marvellous
specimen of all.
2111-•CLINTON NEWS-RECORD, THURSDAY, JUNE 14, 1973
From my window
BY PURLEY I KELLER
Optimrs
club
formed
Although the recently formed
Opti-Mrs Club at Vanastra has
only been in existence for two
months, the ladies have already
had two successful projects,
On May 26, the Club spon-
sored a children's Pet Show
that attracted 20 entries of all
sizes. Last Saturday, June 9,
they ran a successful Rummage
Sale at Vanaatra and hope to
add many more youth develop-
ment and community services
projects to their roster during
the forthcoming year.
Meryl Thomas heads the 20
member Club, while Ev
Garland is vice-president. San-
dra Winfield is secretary and
Dianne Storey is treasurer. On
ways and means is Hilda Bross
while Colleen Barnard is the
social convener. Donna
Westerhout is the program con-
vener.
OFA calls
land use
sacrifice
"The provincial government's
land-use plans for the Niagartt
Escarpment and the Parkway
Belt System ringing metro
Toronto ask , farmers to
sacrifice too much," says Gor-
don Hill, President of the On-
tario Federation of Agriculture.
Hill, who is a Varna hog and
white bean farmer from Huron
County said, "we support land-
use planning but not at the far-
mer's expense."
"The provincial government
says it will lock land into far-
ming — then fobs the respon-
sibility onto the federal govern-
ment to make sure farmers can
make a living off this land. Far-
mers cannot survive if they are
governed by such hypocrisy.
"Another major weakness is
the government's refusal to
compensate land-owners for
overnight ,,drops in property
value when land uses are
changed. Certainly, farmers
should not have to foot the bill
for something that will benefit
all of society," adds Hill.
The government's claims that
compensation is too costly are
rejected by the OFA. "We have
already submitted a workable
proposal for compensation that
will not cost one dollar of tax
revenue. We cannot accept such
a weak excuse for inaction."
The Federation also criticizes
the plan for not setting aside
land strictly for livestock and
poultry production. "A land-
use plan that had concern for
farmers would specify certain
areas where livestock and
poultry producers could live
without being continually
harassed by odour com-
plaints."
4ti
Area youngsters dressed as tramps thrilled the parade watchers at the recent Clinton Fair
parade.
Driving in high style is dangerous
We'll teach you
a trade.
The latest fad fashion, plat-
form shoes, might be con-
sidered high style by many but
they are a potential driving
hazard, says the Ontario
Safety League. In fact, one
safety official in Philadelphia
has even urged the recall of
women's platform shoes, saying
that "if car manufacturers must
recall their automobiles for
safety defects, it would seem
logical for fashion designers to
be similarly responsible."
The Ontario Safety League
points out that such shoes,
popular with both young men
and women, are not advertised.
or sold as driving shoes.
Drivers should be made aware
of the dangers and the League
suggests that a comfortable,
suitable pair of shoes for
driving be kept in your car.
It is difficult to shift the foot
from the accelerator to the
brake in an emergency while
wearing a 4- or 5- inch platform
shoe. The sense of touch is im-
paired with the use of thick
platform soles and could cause
the driver to over-accelerate.
High heels, whether regular or
platform, can create yet
another hazzard by becoming
wedged in the base of the ac-
celerator. A heavy foot might
be high fashion, says the On-
tario Safety Council, but not on
the accelerator.
Improper footwear is not
only confined to car drivers,
but has recently become
evident among children. Two
pediatricians reported last year
in the ILLINOIS MEDICAL
JOURNAL on a study of 64
ninjuries suffered by children
who caught their feet in the
spokes of their bicycles. Drs.
Harvey Kravitz and Frederic
D. Burg found that improper
footwear or the absence of foot-
wear were the major cause of
injury. Among the children in
the study, 20 were wearing only
gym shoes or canvas shoes and
23 were barefooted.
Life in the Canadian Forces isn't just interesting, it's
good. Not only do you get a reasonable salary while you
learn the trade you've chosen to learn, but you get fringe
benefits, too. A month's vacation with pay. A better than
average chance to travel. And some of the best pension,
insurance, and health benefits anywhere, In short, we.
offer a lot, but we ask a lot of you, too. Find out the facts.
Talk to a counsellor, or see your recruiter today',
Canadian Forces Recruiting
and Selection Unit
Centennial Square, 520 Wellington Street,
London, Ontario Phone 679-5110
You've got to be good to get in. DRS 72-6
The Canadian
Armed Forces