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HomeMy WebLinkAboutTimes-Advocate, 1980-12-10, Page 6• Almatex Paints and Varnishes Wide Selection Wallpapers Complete Line of Refinishing Products Gifts - Pictures - Plaques Exeter Decor Centre 15 Gidley St., E. 235-1010 9.49 lb. 42.95 lb. 1.00 lb, Heinz Tomato SOUP 10 oz, tin 4/1 Lipton Chicken Noodle SOUP pkg. of 2.73‘ OLIVES Club House Manzanillo 1 2 oz iar 1.15 CRISCO I 3 lb. tin SODAS Weston Plain or'Salted 400 g 89‘ •Gains Select 8 kg. '6.95 DOG FOOD Sani Flush CLEANER kg BOWL 98t JUICE 48 oz. tin 8 ( MUSHROOMS leavers Stems & Pir.cos 10 oz, tin 73( 309 Cannon Club Ginger Ale, Orange, Cola $3 99 POP 750 ml bottle PEPSI 1.09 1.99 '3.49 9.89 39t Christies Crumbs or 400 g. GRAHAM . WAFERS 1.09 Kraft Miniature 10 oz. flt MARSHMALLOWS GRAPEFRUIT oickl "hal USAE Hostess COTTAGE SLICES iiiitiokE filched Carnation Hash Brown POTATOES High Liner FILLETS IN SAUCE COOL WHIP York Deluxe ICE CREAM 0 ut 4 ac 4 2 0 cr. a. ut 4 tg ac 4 a 0 0 Og 0 0. vu 4 I- et 4 0 O au I FRYING ei3 CHICKENS cot LEGS OR BREASTS 1.08, Fresh Chicken SUPERI • • MEAT SPECIALS Fresh Grade A Fresh Whole Cut UP Fryers Schneiders Mini Sizzler Sausage Schrieiders Beef Steakettes Schneiders Blue Ribbon Bologna Schneiders Wieners Store sliced cooked Ham Schneiders Side Bacon OXYDOL lb. Order . Your Christmas Fowl NOW! 500 g. 17 1/2 oz. pkg. 1 lb. vac pack lb. sliced or piece lb. ff r 500 g pkg. 500 g. pkg. (backs attached) '2.28 9.98 1.68 $1.49 5 1.98 '1.98 lb. '3.49 984 OPEN THURSDAY & FRIDAY NIGHTS UNTIL 9 P.M. Red path White WE DELIVER PHONE 235-0212 in Shell 1 lb. 1.59 MIXED NUTS 2 lb. 10 oz. tins case 24 plus deposit 2 kg. bag SUGAR $2 .48 CHERRIES Bicks Mai aschino 12 oz. lot 1.49' clover Leaf Broken 3/994 .1 Aylmer Harvard Beets, a •C•eam Corn VEGETABLE S c hoice I Del Monte Bleached RAISINS CAKES Duncan Hines Butter Pecan, Choc. Chip, Spicy Apple Snackin' QUIK ,k 9. ;2.79 MANDARIN ORANGES 2/$1 Mono' (11 C alo.• & Postry FLOUR TEA BAGS Hills Brothers COFFEE TilliiiXED NUTS Nestles chocolate 2 5 kg. bag 13.5 oz. 72's 1 lb. tin tins 10 oz. tin - 375 g. 9.69 1.99 1 lb. LETTUCE White or Red BUTTER $1.69 1 ,7 ri r. k re i el Produce of USA Canada no. 1 fresh produce 2 lb. bag. 694 your choice 14 oz. pkg.`$2•09 1 litre tub $ 1• 29 head 4 9 size 48's 6/s 1 $ 20 ot: •25 1 lb. bag 65( 06 C 1W UI N O O -4 I. C /11 IN C In O a sv 2 litre 2.29 bakery buys 24 oz loot 3/$1.79 New Dietrich 100% Whole Wheat or White LITTLE LOAVES 59 frozen foods AR.H.SUPIIRIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR 000 MARKETASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPER 0 ag LH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET Ml 0. us, SI 4 LFISLIPER110R11,01:0-MARKET A&H SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET A&H SUPIRYOP FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET A&H SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR FOOD MARKET ASH SUPERIOR Fe To to C “."°N dims"CIV • ,O. ember. 1 a,.19$o 'Odd 'n ends Songs of Christmas MR. AND MRS. HAROLD SMITH Harriet Prince Ella Warrander and Harold Christian Smith were married at Grand Bend United Church on September 27. Rev, Harley J. Moore officiated. The bride is formerly of Cleveland, Ohio and the groom is formerly of Lakewood, Ohio, Matron of honour was the bride's sister Mary Johnson, and the best man was Robert Johnson, the bride's brother-in- law. After a reception at the Grand Cove Estates club house, , the couple travelled to Quebec City for a honeymoon. They • are now residing at Grand Cove Estates, Grand Bend. Photo by Jack Doerr Area teachers at Federation session: FISHER'S 1k1aATT011i a n d MIE4TS. Zurich 236.7703 ENGAGED - Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Perry, Exeter and Mr. and Mrs. William Sharrow, GrandBend are happy to announcethe forthcoming marriage of their children, Nancy and Paul. The wedding ceremony will take place Christmas Eve at the home of the bride. By ELAINE TOWNSH END Cllristn3as music is already in the air, and as the day approaches we will hear it wherever we go. The carols we sing at church, the songs we sing at parties and the tunes we hear on radios, in stores and on street corners are second nature to us, They have been around so long we know them by heart and seldom think about their origins. Two books, Christmas Songs and Their stories by Herbert H. Wer- necke and Merry Christmas; A History Of The'lloliday by Patricia • Bunning Stevens, tell us the stories behind the songs, , Carols were suppressed in England in the seventeenth century by the Puritans who abolished Christmas. However, some carols survived in western England and' Wales. In 1822, Davies Gilbert revived some of the Chrislmas songs, and William Sandys brought dnmuninnumnimummumuninn. Over 80 .club Mrs. Luella Simpson, 134 'Sanders street, Exeter will celebrate her 87th birthday on December 11: attention to more in 1033. The two men. saved. such favourites as The First Npel, I Saw Three Ships and God Rest Ye Merry Gentlehlen, Confusion exists about the true authors of many popular , seasonal songs, John Francis Wade, an English- man, was proved to be the author of 0 Come All Ye Faithful, dated 1751. He was a copyist and music teacher at the Catholic seminary in Douay, France, Joy To The World based on Psalm 98 was written by Isaac Watts, A Congregationalist minister in England. The author was in' his teens when he wrote the song in 1719. Watts and Charles Wesley were the most prolific hymn- writers in English history. The latter wrote more than 6,500 hymns; the best knows in Hark! The Herald • Angels Sing penned around '1739. His brother,+ John Wesley, was the founder of Methodism. Several well-known hymns come from the United States, including We Three Kings of Orient Are written by John Henry Hopkins Jr., rector of Christ Church in William- sport, Pennsylvania, in 1857. Phillips Brooks, rector of Trinity Church, Boston, and later Episcopalian Bishop of Massachusetts, visited the Holy Land in Decem- ber,1865, and rode on hor- seback from Jerusalem to Bethlehem on the day before Christmas. He passed through the fields where the shepherds traditionally watched their flocks. Three years later he wrote the words to 0 Little Town of Bethlemen for his Sunday School class in Philadelphia. The world's most loved. Christmas song. Silent Night, was written on impulse on Christmas Eve in 1818 in a little village in Austria. The organ in the village church had broken down, and the young assistant pastor, Joseph Mohr, decided to write a new tune to be played on guitar at the midnight mass. The organist, Franz Gruber, arranged a melody 'for two solo voices, chords and guitar accompaniment, The song has since been translated into more than ninety languages. Christmas has inspired great composers and musicians. Johann Sebastian Bach wrote his Christmas Oratoria in 1733. George Frederick Handel wrote the Messiah in 1741, and Peter Ilich Tchaikovsky's The Nutcracker was presented to the public 1892, Some songs . that are identified with Christmas have little to do with the season. For example, an early French version of The , Twelve Days of Christmas listed the gifts this way: a good stuffing without bones, two breasts of veal, three joints of beef, four pigs' trotters, five legi of mutton, six partridges with cabbage, seven spitted rabbits, eight , plates of salad, nine dishes from the chapterhouse, ten full casks, eleven beautiful maidens and twelve musketeers with their sword. Jingle Bells, written by James Pierpont of the U.S. in 1857, will be hearda hundred times before Christmas 1980 is over. Although it never mentions the day, Jingle Bells is accepted as part of the music of Christmas as min as Away In A Manger and White Christmas. Helping other Women who aspire to leadership is an im- portant responsibility of women who have Already achieved such, positions. This was. emphasized by Kay Sigurjonsson, Deputy ,4,t- ecutive. ,Secretary 9f the Federation of Women Teachers', Associations of Ontario-dpring her address to 250 women leaders from the elementary schools of this province, The occasion was .A non, ference for women teachers. who are in administrative positions which was spon- sored by that federation and held in. Toronto last week- end. Flora MacDonald, M,P., also addressed the group and discussed some of the unique challenges that women may encounter in SuCh positions. Attending from the area were Eleanor Scott of Huron Hope School .and•Verna Kane of student services, The .Women leaderS,, in- cluding principals, vice, principais consultants, coordinators. and resource, teacher$ attended a variety of workshops which focused On many' .fa.cet's of educational leadership. The. participants discovered that less than 2% Of the 31,000 women elementary' teachers in Ontario hold ad- ministratlie positions. The Federation of Women Teachers' Associations of Ontario has an affirmative action programme for the next 5 years in hope$' of redressing the imbalance, If such voluntary programmes' are not successful, par- ticipants were told, legisla- tion similar to the American. law, will be necessary to en-, sure that women have equal' opportunity MR. AND MRS. JAMES C. BARNETSON Yvonne and Jim were united in marriage at Exeter United Church on October 25. Glenda Lincienfield was matron of honour and Basil Crawford was best man. Soloist was Marlene Mothers. Parents are Mr. and Mrs, Glenn Fisher and Mr. and Mrs. Gord. Barnetson. Photo by Brad Baynham NOCEMADE Sausage ' ' Summer Sausage Headcheese CUSTOM SLAUGHTERING WEDNESDAYS Check Our Prices. On Local Feedlot Beef ' Sides, Hinds, Or Fronts and Whole or. Sides of Pork BRAN MUFFINS1 Not like Grandma used to make them... , But like Grandma thought she made, them... This Week THE COUNTRY BAKER Has As His Weekend Feature BRAN MUFFINS for39( (Fri., Sat. Only) For your Convenience The Country Baker is Open Fridays till 9 COUNTRY 367 Main St. BAKERY Exeter 235-2525