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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
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cr.
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FRYING ei3
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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.
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500 g pkg.
500 g. pkg.
(backs attached)
'2.28
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$1.49
5 1.98
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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
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12 oz. lot 1.49'
clover Leaf Broken
3/994 .1 Aylmer Harvard Beets, a •C•eam Corn
VEGETABLE S c hoice
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Del Monte Bleached
RAISINS
CAKES
Duncan Hines Butter Pecan, Choc. Chip, Spicy Apple
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QUIK ,k 9. ;2.79
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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
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Produce of USA Canada no. 1
fresh produce
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14 oz. pkg.`$2•09
1 litre tub $ 1• 29
head 4 9
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bakery buys
24 oz loot 3/$1.79
New Dietrich 100% Whole Wheat or White
LITTLE
LOAVES 59
frozen foods
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'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