HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Exeter Times-Advocate, 1975-08-21, Page 10motors
1.AROW
bEPAtitattsit
STORE
FORMERLY
GOULD at
3611tY
GET ON THE
TRACK!
Chug down to The Junction
for back-to-school clothing
for all your students, from
nursery school to college!
Make sure you've got your ticket to selection, savings
and quality by steaming down to The Junction. All
aboard will help you with your selection and you'll
find the schedule to fit your budget.
Featuring
JEANS- FLARES CORDS — SCRUBBIES
• PRINTED SHIRTS • T-SHIRTS
• SWEATERS • TOPS & SLACKS
Use Your Chargex or Masfertharge
FLOOR COVERING a WALLPAPER
FAMILY CLOTHING • DRAPES
• FABRIOS
NOW OPEN AU DAY WONESDAY AND FRIDAY NIGHT
"Your Family
Health Centre"
373 Main St.
Phone 235-1570 or 235-1070
EXETER PHARMACY LTD.
Now Open Wednesdays - 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m.
...Ifni SMITH A Phone
BARGAINS 118 tif IM&H 235-0212
CANADA * PACKERS Week of Meat Specials
This week we are featuring Grade A '1'
Steer Beef from the Canadian National Ex-
hibition as on Display in the Canada
Packers Exhibit in The Food Products
Building. Come in arid try a Steak or Roast
of this choice quality meat at Regular
Prices. Ten Times out of Ten, Tender!
Frozen New Zealand
LAMB LEGS
Maple Leaf Regular or All Beef
WIENERS
Vac Pack
Fresh
PORK LIVER
Maple Leaf (In handy boil bags)
CORNED BEEF 4x2 oz. Pkge
Maple Leaf Ranch Style
BOLOGNA
Maple Leaf Mac & Cheese, Chicken or Dutch, Pickle & Pimento
COOKED MEATS
Burns
•••S
Buys of the Week
Challenger
Cohoe ,m
Red Salmon 79'
Betty Crocker
" Suakin' Cakes 79'
Chocolate Fudge, Date & Nut, Coconut Pecan
Kraft Orange
5 1.29
lb, 79'
lb. 49'
'1.09
lb. 49'
lb. 99'
Whole or Half lb.
WIENERS l0lb, bulk $4.95
eiLei!),Ly ,L o E, LINK SAUSAGE lb. 894
Mapl e
iHOULD ERS 31b. Average lb. $ 1.79
CRISCO
OIL
48 07. Decanter
'2.09
Clover Cream
ICE CREAM
FRESH BAKING
Superior 24 oz. Enriched
WHITE BREAD Fresh bay 3/$1.09
Hostess
APPLE PIE 20 ot, 79'
Hostess
SPICE BAR CAKE 89'
FRuits& VEGETABLES
Sunkist 113's
ORANGES dozen
New Ctop No.
WAXED TURNIPS 000ds;ze 66.
Ctitititia
COOKING ONIONS 2 .lbt,
Aylmer
TOMATO CAMP
Heinz 128 oz,
WHITE VINEGAR
Pink Lotion
VEL 32 az, 1 /3 extra 694
becon Whip
DESSERT TOPPING
Chicken of The Sea
SOLID TUNA
VapOria
NO PEST STRIPS
Shirr! h Regular
JELLY powDet
Middlesex Piro Oracle
BUTTER
EGGS Grade A Medium
4 titre Pails
'2.59
79'
29
49$
15 oz. 2/4 1
Plastic Jug 99*
36z.75'
69'
42.33
2/49'
lb $ 1 .09
D 66 69'
Brights FOncy \
TOMATO
JUICE
oz 4.5Y
Times441vocote, August 21,,1975
Odds Ends New Crediton minister
has western experience
Canada's faces
Commercial canning safe
Driving throagh Roger's Pass
or the Fraser Canyon is an un-
forgettable experience. Wooded
slopes and rocky peaks loom
above the winding highway, and
rivers, fed by Falls from the
snowy summits, churn below.
Farther north, amid the green
mountains appear the Columbia
Icefields, One of my companions
suggested a snowmobile ride en
the glacier. I glanced at my
sandals and said, "No way!"
When I saw the snowmobiles,
though, I changed my mind. For
the information of unknowing
easterners of which I was one,
these snowmobiles look like a
combination of a bus and a
Caterpillar. Most of them carry
ten passengers, and all of them
are heated.
In mid-July, we travelled two
miles over snow and ice, peered
down crevasses and breathed
crisp, fresh air. How we longed
for those Icefields a few days
later when we drove through
Kamloops, B.C. The temperature
reached 105 degrees F., and the
brown hills reminded me of
scenes from western movies.
We finally reached busy
Vancouver and promptly became
lost. A gas pump attendant ob-
served our exasperated faces and
directed us to a park on English
Bay, which included a
planetarium and a mariners'
museum. "It's a good place to
relax and get your thoughts
together," he advised.
Later, we contacted friends
who showed us Gastown's cob-
blestones and unique shops,
Chinatown's lights, the huge
Lion's Gate bridge, Stanley
Park's lawns, gardens and zoo
and the harbours at night. In the
city we noticed the absence of
flies, bugs and screen doors and
windowsit was heavenly!
You haven't experienced
Vancouver until you've heard
By TOWNSfieND
some Indian legends, or crept
across a suspension bridge that's
swaying above a gorge, or ridden
up a mountain road with a B.C.
driver,
Early one morning we ferried
across the channel around the
Gulf Islands to Victoria. This
city's leisurely pace encourages
tourists to take a walking tour.
Within a few blocks, we
discovered a wax museum, a car
museum, a provincial museum, a
marina, the elegant Empress
Hotel and the Parliament
Buildings. Several parks along
the way provided a respite for our
feet.
The British influence was
evident in the architecture of
many buildings and in the
presence of double-decker tour
buses, We spent another day
strolling through Victoria's
famous flower gardens,
The interior of Vancouver
Island shields a virgin forest, in
which no trees have been cut.
Firs, nine feet in diameter,
stretch into the sky. The bran-
ches cluster so densely that little
light filters through and no
vegetation grows underneath,
Only pine needles carpet the
ground.
To make our west coast visit
complete, my friends and I
waded into the waters of the
Pacific Ocean. What a shock! By
the time we snapped one picture,
our toes were turning blue.
Of course, Canada has
blemishes as well as good points.
Commercialism has spoiled some
of her natural beauty; forest fires
have scarred her mountains;
cities contain slums, which the
tourists seldom see, and in some
places, integration is still
discouraged.
An Indian blockade tem-
porarily closed Geribaldi Park,
north of Vancouver, the week
before we arrived. A riot erupted
in Nanaimo the week after we
left, Swift Current's grandstand
blew down a few days after we
sat on it to watch the R.C.M.P.
musical ride. Moods closed some
Saskatchewan highways shortly
after we drove through. Were we
following trouble, or was trouble
following us?
I had heard about Canada's
plains and the Calgary Stam-
pede, the mountains and the blue
Pacific, the bustle of Vancouver
and the relaxation of Victoria,
but I had to see them to believe
them,
They comprise less than half of
our country. Imagine what
surprises the Yukon, Northwest
Territories, Quebec and the
Maritime provinces hold. This
summer's glimpse of Canada
whet my appetite to see more of
her faces.
Commercial canning is one of
the safest methods of food
processing, In fact, canned foods
have a much safer record than
home cooked meals. However an
occasional can becomes spoiled
and a few of these may be
dangerous. How do you tell when
there is a hazard?
1.00K
Check the can for these four
points: '
1) if a can is corroded or rusty,
but is not rusted through, use it
immediately
The new minister of the United
Church in Crediton is an active
family man and Dr* his work "very rewarding,"
"W4 just knew that we would
be interested in Working as a
team with young peop1P," said
Reverend Bruce Pierce, about
the longstanding relationship
between. himself and. his wife
Jackie.
Born and raised in Woodstock,
Bruce met Jackie, an Alberta.
girl, when she was taking a
nurse's training course. He was
leading a Hi C group in Wood-
stock at the time,
"I enjoyed it so much'and felt I
could do so much more that I
decided to enter the ministry,'"
and Jackie came along to make
the Pierces a team effort.
"Although my wife has no
ministerial training, she is in-
terested in people and is a great
asset to me in our church work,"
he said,
After one year at Sir Wilfred
Laurier University, formerly
known at Waterloo Lutheran
University the Pierces moved to
Balder, Manitoba where Bruce
worked as a student minister for
three years.
"We moved then to Austin for
year and then on to Winnipeg,
There I served. as a Sunday
supply on an international charge
at Roseau and Sprague Min-
tiesota,"
Reverend Pierce commented
that he was working in the states
during thelcemedyassassination
and found it a challenge to. ad-
minister to a grief stricken
people and try tq convey the
sympathy of the. Canadian people
for the loss of their president,
Upon his .ordination into the
United Church ministry Bruce.
Pierce was. posted to Alameda
Saskatchewan. There he became
involved in an extensive program
of drug rehabilitation with young
people, '
"In almost 20 years of working
with young people, we haven't
found .a bad one yet and this in-
cludes kids hooked on hard
drugs." said the Reverend em-
phatically. "I feel the youth of
this country are criticized before
they even do anything to deserve
it, no wonder so many get
discouraged and disillusioned
and tune out of society."
Leaving Aletrieda,. after five
years it was on to Abbey,
Saskatchewan, The Pierce
family lived in Abbey for the past
seven years, "We always felt we
would come back to Ontario,
though," added Bruce, "Ontario
is our home."
Reverend Pierce claims that
Canadian people are much the
same everywhere, we really
'don't have a distinctive identity,"
he says.
Be has planned to start a young
after school begins, "It will be
non-denominational, any young
people's in Crediton soon
person will be free to attend," he
Said.
"We like the village of Crediton
and hope fora long and happy
relationship." The village feels
the same way about the
Reverend, they had been without
a minister for a year before
Bruce Pierce arrived to take the
post,
A bore is a person who has
nothing to say - and says it,
Save energy - God gave us only so
much of it!
NEW MINISTER — The Reverend Bruce Pierce is the new minister of the United Church, Crediton, From
Abbey, Saskatchewan, Rev. Pierce is in the 12th year of his ministry. With him is his wife Jackie and children
Howard, 6, Linda, 13 and Mike 15.
2) a bulging can should NEVER
BE USED. If you find one on the
grocery shelf, ask the clerk at the
check-out counter to dispose of it
and report it to the manager.
3) if on opening a can the contents
appear bubbly or moldy, DO NOT
USE, This is probably the result
of bacterial or mold growth.
4) if a can has a broken seam
along the side or at the bottom or
top there will often be a small
amount of dried food at that spot.
THROW IT OUT!