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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1970-03-05, Page 8Parkway Hairstyling. ONE NIGHT ONLY Friday, March 6 FROM 6:30 P.M. Come Early For Best Selection First Quality T 100% Synthetic WIGS '19" Parkway Hairstyling Main St. Parkhill REG. 29,95 SHOP117111 BARGAINS fin 71 ROASTIN G CHICKENS b.4 1C4P— GROUND CHUCK all Lean Beeflb.69 ' COTT .... AGE ROLLS c„ovac lb.69' Colemans Sweet Pickled 3 lb. average OPEN FRIDAY; 'Tit_ 9.00 P.M..';1 PHONE 235-02121 BUYS-OF-THE-WEEK PORK LIVER k. Kitchener Packers n 49 WIENERS, lb Vac Pak Maxwell House 10d off 6 oz. Jar. COFFEE $119 Lucas-Arthur Rindless Bulk Pack SIDE BACON lb.. Lenten Special .Frozen Highliner Individual Servings Minnettes TOMATOES 28 oz. tins 29 COFFEE MATE11oz.J.13 8 oz. Pkge. Buy a Carton of 12 . . .2.25 Toilet Bowl Cleaner SANI FLUSH BRY .LCREEM Large Tube d Snowflake SHORTENING 214astic l Pl b. McCain Fancy Frozen GREEN PEAS 21,Pbly Giant Blue Bonnet Coloured Margarine 31b. ° 5 Pkge. White or Coloured 59' PRODUCE Sunkist Navel ORANGES Size 113's Dozen 69' Controlled Atmosphere Fancy McIntosh CASCADE for Dishwashers 9 89' 49' 99' Yum Yum or Sweet Mixed PICKLES 15 oz.Jar 2 /63 Vegetable Soup 7/$1.00 Christies GRAHAM , WAFERS 1F11./(2g:.z• 2/87 iJe ' tiTHROOM TISSUE 4 Roll Pkges. Nabisco SHREDDED WHEAT 10 O.;. 2/49' KIST or Mountain Dew 4/89' Gingerale, Pepsi 2a or. No Return BottfeS OA I ruin SIN ling Drugs 7 Riq Values New F rush Sr put ASPIRIN Quick or Instant 44 o2. Pkge. QUAKER OATS 63 CAKES O range Chiffon Each 49' LYSOL 1 OD s Fresh Daily Hostess 81g- &' Pie APPLE PIE Each 4 9 51)rd \, Deullutuer Illsonf,,r rant Robin Fled Minced Red Sockeye Salmon 9' tin aer 13WWVMS'AVAMNIMMOWASA APPLES 31b,39' U.S, Fresh Washed SPINACH 10 oz! cello Pkge. 25' Ontario No, 1 Washed POTATOES 10lb.bag49' Heinz Mushroom or Chicken Noodle' SOUP T7' .ft Page Times-Advocata, March 5, 1970 ‘1110104.444114,4441414,104I1444441444444411,44p4uolli4}440q144411444p0144440144$144144101,MIlli4 4,114".1114411111A4 Recipe Box FQC iS N Fancies By Gwyn 'Wetar/efif Pwatea When Susan. McAllister was being interviewed last week she served Orange .Cake made from a recipe handed. down from. her grandmother, Mrs. L. Rae-burn Gibson, Exeter. It is. a delicious Inoist.eake and Mrs. McAllister happily shares it with, us. 1 orange 1 tsp. butter 1 egg beaten 'In cup white sugar Cook until thick. Cool. Ice cake with cream icing made from icing sugar. ORANGE CAKE 1 orange with rind put through chopper 1 cup brown sugar Vz cup butter 1. egg pinch, of salt 1 cup sour milk 1 tsp, soda mixed in with Milk until it foams 2 cups flour 1 ts0, baking powder Cream butter, sugar, eg' and add dry ingredients and milk. Bake at 350 degrees for 40 Minutes in buttered layer pans. ORANGE FILLING The rind and juice of Serious accidents can anu occur in the kitchen, To reach high shelves, use a solidly based stepstool, not a chair or other makeshift, Keep pot handles turned inward so they do not project Over the edge of the range. This reduces the risk of scalds from upset pots. Keep kitchen floors dry, glistening ripe wheat bending gently before a breeze on a hot, sunny summer day; The first view of the rocky mountains as they rose in majesty and glory towards a brilliantly blue sky , . to suggest only a couple. There .can be portraits too .. no Gainsborough ever did loviler things. Two that I treasure is one of niy grandmother with her white hair piled high and crowning her soft, gentle countenance and the face of an elderly neighbor who told me wonderful stories and made me delicious hot green tea when I was a little girl. There are pictures of events that stand out in our memories as great moments in time. One I shall never forget is driving with — Please turn to Page 9 we hang whims on the walls of our homes so we are always hanging up pictures on the walls of our minds, We choose what kind of pictures to use in the decoration of our houses and we also choose what Mrid of pictures we will have in our heads, They can be horrible and obscene, or they can be beautiful and serene. Many people have a whole gallery of gloomy, miserable pictures which they may title; `My quarrel with my neighbor ; 'My idea of the Present Generation'; "The time I was slighted at church; and a host of other sour pictures.' They could be lovely pictures of nature or scenes from our childhood: A mile long field of YOUTHFUL COOKS AIDING CRIPPLED CHILDREN — For the third consecutive year, a couple of local girls have joined forces in a cup-cake selling campaign to aid crippled children. Shown above mixing up their goodies are Debbie Parsons and Valerie Flynn who earned Si 2.50 for Bunny Bundle. T-A photo Your purse is safety hazard if left within children's reach The pocketbook started life as a useful bag or pouch .. for holding money. As women began to move further and further away from home in their daily activities . the pocketbook graduated. It became an annex to the dressing table. Women filled it with all kinds of cosmetics. And money. When more and more medicines became available for quick relief from various pains and aches, the pocketbook became a kind of portable medicine cabinet. So now it holds medicines, cosmetics and money. As a result, says the drug. industry-sponsored Council on Family Health in Canada, a non-profit public service organization working to counter. On the bed, a chair, the couch or table. So easy for little hands to open, to discover the mysterious containers of pills and capsules, lipsticks, eye makeup. Naturally, being curious, the child will want to taste one or some of the objects, maybe even swallow them. If you carry medication and cosmetics in your purse, says the Council on Family Health in Canada, always make sure it is placed in a drawer or on a high shelf, where it cannot be reached by small children. encourage family health and home safety, the useful and innocent pocketbook is now a safety hazard, a potential source of accidental poisoning to small children. One of the most fascinating objects to little children is a woman's purse, especially if it belongs to mother. On many happy occasions, children have ' seen mother open the pocketbook to use money to purchase wonderful treats. At other times, mother has opened her purse to reveal a small store of candies . . . even cookies. Imagine the excitement of a small child suddenly finding that treasure store within easy exactly where mother left it in a careless moment. On a low Make sure your women guests follow this safety precaution, too. Don't overlook the pockets of coats and jackets as places which children like to explore. ..phole by Dolamore MR. AND MRS. ROBERT C. MILLER Chatham winter wedding A white floral arrangement of mums and gladioli formed the setting in the Blessed Sacrament Church, Chatham, for the marriage of Miss Mary Joan Wilcox, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Murray Wilcox, RR 1, Chatham, and Robert Charles Miller, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Miller, W o o dh a m , on Saturday, February 14 at 2 p.m. Rev. J. Doyle of Windsor, cousin of the bride, performed the ceremony. Miss Linda Dieson furnished the wedding music and accompanied the soloist Miss Sandra Arnold of Chatham. Given in marriage by her father the bride wore a white gown of lagoda styled on empire lines with sleeves and mandarin collar of lace. A floor-length veil trimmed with matching lace fell from the shoulders. She carried red roses. Attending the bride were Misses Susan Gordon, Chatham, Ann Wilcox, Weston, Betty Jean Re--01111Y as a friend proudly showed me through tier new home she pointed .out all the well planned features of.each room: the book shelves in the den, the ultra modern kitchen cupboards, the homey fireplace in the livingroom and the spacious bedroom closets, Then, turning with a gesture to include the whole place she said, "Of course, it will make all the difference when I get the pictures hung up!" Of course, it will. But I doubt she really grasped the significance of the thing she was about to. do. She was going to put up her pictures. Had she lived before the fourteenth century, she couldn't have done such a thing . . . unless, of course, she had lived in the Stone Age when she might have had a nice painting of a bear or bull in her cave dwelling. But paintings as we know them now were not possible until after the fourteenth century. For the most' part pictures were executed in fresco and on the walls of churches. Drawn carefully to cover a large area, they were done in a mixture of plaster, pigments and water. The main difficulty of this was that it all had to be finished swiftly and could never be retouched or altered. Then came pictures of tempera . . , a sticky substance added to the known mediums. These pictures were mostly painted on a base of wood and because they could be moved about were an advancement over the fesco paintings. Later, carn,e4„,tbe miracle of canvas... acrd' the discovery of AinseCd oil. Flemish painters were quick to take advantage of these developments and painting began to flourish. * * And now my friend will hang her pictures, which, as she says will make all the difference in the world. Pictures of her own choosing that will enrich her living as all good pictures do that are carefully selected, Not for her the strange subjective works of Picasso or some of the formless things produced by many modern painters which really do not mean much to most of us. We can only concede generously, that the artist was 'expressing himself'. A great deal of the art exhibited at an Art Show I attended recently left me wondering if some of the artists had such a complex of emotions that they were never meant to be expressed by paint and brush! One painting was of the legs of a very fat woman and whatever that artist was trying to say completely bypassed me. Yet people stood and stared at it solemnly and in dead seriousness. I wanted to burst out laughing at the giant hoax I felt the creator was trying to put over, Anyway, I can't imagine hanging anything like that on the wall of my home. Paintings of this type are better left in the art galleries where we can only hope their significance may become more easily understood one day. * * * We need a different kind of picture to live with. Even though the walls of our houses may be bare we still live with pictures. Colerridge said, "My eyes make pictures when they are shut." Of course they do, and just as Miller, Woodham, and Mary and Jane Wilcox, Chatham. They were gowned alike in dark green velvet dresses fashioned on empire lines and they carried matching. muffs with shasta daisies interwoven with gold cord. Best man was Ray Miller, Monkton, brother of the groom. Ushers were Gene Spence, Dennis Webb, both of London, Pat Carron, Tilbury, William Wilcox, Chatham and Randy Wilcox, Bothwell. A reception was held at St. Joseph's auditorium, Chatham after which the couple left on a honeymoon to be spent in Ottawa and Eastern United States. The bride travelled in a coat and dress ensemble of bone and brown weed with matching accessories and white orchid corsage. Mr. and Mrs. Miller will make their home in London. The groom is employed at the M. Loeb Co. and the bride at St. Joseph's Hospital. aX111111111111111111111111H11111111111111111111111111111111111111111111111M111111111111111111111111611111111111MIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIMMI11111111111111110111111111111111111r Er- DISCOUNTS Middleton's A T Drugs ..,,, iiiii 110010011h iiiiii II iiiiii 0 iiiiiii 0 iiiiiiiiiiiiiii l iiiiiiiiii eJIJI iiiiiiiii 111/$1,10,14,1,1110,010010010, iiiiii $01,04 i I iiiii I i = Liquid = 01 = E...:. ..-7. 16 oz. 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