The Brussels Post, 1976-07-21, Page 16Hi Kids!
I'M GIVING
AWAY
FREE
BIKES
and other
prizes!
"Watch for my Safety Conlot
in this newspaper"
OPNOTCH
TOPNOTCH FEEDS LIMITED
A
Sued
Mr.
Harr.
his
W
uft
ell!
mi
heat.
Yeats,
Ai
also
Mrs.
lug tl
8874011 Brussels
ing at 2:00 p.m, the delegates and
their hosts will participate in
swimming, games, a Pot Luck
Supper, dancing and a camp fires
sing song.
On August 2 the Nova Scotia
delegates will be returning home
and the Huron 4-H exchange
delegates will be going with
them. Those 4-H club members
Somebody
Wants What
You Don't Need!
SELL
Through
BruSsels
Post
Classified
Want Ads
who are going to Nova Scol il
include Barb Miller, #3, Exetgr,
Elaine Stewart, #1, Kirkton; Alai
Powe, #2, Centralia; and Kell
Boer, #1, ' Lucknow. Thii
exchange is a new venture fork
Huron.County, 4-H Program and!!
is hoped that inter-provincial
exchanges of this nature wiu
continue in 1977.
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Toi
25
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tha
urb
pla
Gel
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pla
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Bel
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dev
Backrubber Solutions
***
Complete Fly Contro
Products
***
Konk Spray Bombs
and Dispensers
a
***
Plastic and Sisal Twine
still available
B
a
STEPHENSON'S
Bakery
Rich's
-COFFEE .RICH
Green Giant
CORN NIBLETS
Red Rose Perc,
COFFEE
White Swan Twin Pac.
TOILET TISSUE
Phone 887-9226
Grocery
32 oz. 59
12 oz. 2/79
2/99'
Free Delivery
IWO
McCutcheon Grocery
Phone 887-9445 We Deliver
•
Kraft.
MIRACLE WHIP , 32 oz. 1 . 1 9
Weston's HOT DOG and HAMBURG 3/$1 •00
BUNS pkg. of 8
Schneider's
WIENERS
BANANAS
Reg. or All Beef 79
1 lb. pkg.
lb' 21
russets Post
MUSSELS
ONTA1410
tESTAILONED 1\ne
Huron. hosts N.S... 4H members
2, The Nova Scotia, delegates flew
into Toronio on July 19. During
their first week in Huron the Nova
Scotia delegates will be hosted by
the following people:
Cindy Northup, Windor, N,$.
with Diana Brand, #3, Clinton;
Willie Vander Linden, Heather-
ton, N.S. with Ken de Boer, #1,'
Lucknow; Margarete Zillig,
Scotch Village, N.S. with Dianne
Oldfield, #4, Seaforth; and David
Bent, Lawrenceton, N.S. with
Don Carter, #3, Blyth.
From July 26 to August 2, they
will be hosted by Elaine Stewart,
1, ,Kirkton; Murton Brock, #1,
3ranton; Barb Miller, #3, Exeter;
and Alan Powe, #2, Centralia. •
During their stay in Huron the
4-H Youth Council has set up
several activities for the Nova
Scotia delegates. On the evening
of July 20 a "Welcome to Huron
County" party will be held at the
Central Huron Secondary .School
in Clinton. The evening program
will consist of swimming at the
Clinton Swimming Pool at 8:00
p.m. and conclude with games,
dancing and refreshments at the
Clinton High School. On Sunday,
July 25 the 4-H Youth Council will
take the delegates and their hosts
on a Progressive Dinner Party.
This dinner party will start in the
north part of Huron and conclude
in the south part later in the
evening and will give the dele-
gates an opportunity to see some
of the countryside in the county.
On Saturday, July 31 the 4-H
Council has planned a 4-H
Campout for the delegates at
Ball's Grove near AubUrn. Start-
I
I
I
I
I
I
kin= County 4-H club mem-
bers will be hosting four 4-H club
members from the province of
Nova Scotia on a 4-H Exchange
program from July 19 to. August
Lots of lids available
If consumers don't stop hoard-
ing mason-jar replacement lids as
they come on the market there
could be a shortage for this year's
canning season, report food
specialists at the Ontario Food
Council.
Last summer's shortage of lids
left many consumers at a loss as
to how to preserve the abundant
supply of Ontario fruits and
vegetables.
This year, well over twice as
many lids are being manufac-
tured in Ontario and large
quantities are also being
imported. Yet the lids are
disappearing quickly from store
shelves.
Not
many
people
will see
a
mistake
you
make.
Almost
everyone
in town
sees
ours!
NEWSPAPERS DELIVER THE LOCAL Site!,
16. THE BRUSSELS POST; JULY 11 19T6
Your local newspaper's prime function is
to present the news . .. honestly and fully.
That's all. HOwever, sometimes the report-
ing goes astray, when the news is printed.
Some of our friends think this is amusing.
Some don't. We at your local newspaper
don't laugh easily when a mistake is made
in your local paper.
But in spite of our best efforts, 'it does
happen occasionally. Even the editor had to
smile when this caption appeared In his
newspaper under the picture of a fallen tree:
I
The tree downed at this home
damaged spouting and shingles . . .
it was snapped by a violent guest.
In another newspaper, the coronation of a
high school beauty queen took an unusual
turn when the proofreaders overlooked
this one: '
Queen Margie White was escorted to
her throne by co-captains Jim Rlaik
and Frank Gruff. There she was
presented with roses and. drowned.
Sometimes the classified ads are full of
surprises, too. The young lady who ran this
advertisement is still wishing that her
friends would let her forget it:
I
Wanted: Large well-furnished room
by young woman about fifteen
feet square.
Then there was the time one of our 'nice
Iowa ladies, trying to do her part .to add
to the Christmas spirit of her home city,
found her efforts recorded., thus:
Mrs. X set up a still life composi-
tion of avid figurines and greenery
entitled, ."Hark the Herald Angels
Sin."
So,'when you see one like this:
I the Rotary male quartet will sing, 1
I- "I need three °veil, hour . . ." I
Or this:
, I I am now in position to hatch I
I your eggs at five cents per egg . . .
Please remember that local newspapers are
regarded by readers as a friend they can't
do without, and even a good friend is bdund
to make a mistake once in a while. .
When you stop to consider that over a million inches
of news are reported each week in hundreds of
weekly newspapers throughout Canada, a mistake
here and there doesn't sound too bad to clothe
people, But a misspelled name of a local Citizen in a
news story is no laughing matter . . if it's.about
you.
-12