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The Goderich Signal-Star, 1956-04-12, Page 5Q altURSDA.Y, APRIL 12,th, 1956 'THE GODERIVR SIGNAL .hR r CANMIi GOODS SALE Choice, Ungraded As To Size A & P PEAS Choico Rod Pitted A & P CHERRIES Iona GREEN BEANS Choico C?oam Style a► & P CORN • Dozen $1.85 2 20 -oz tins 31c Dozen $1.85 2 15 -oz tins 31c Dozen $1.69 2 20 -oz tins 27c Dozen $1.59 2 20 -oz tins 2 7c PEW LOW PRICES .Liquid Bleach JAVEX Breakfast Cereal RICE KRISPIES Cleansing Tissues KLEENEX Navy TOILET TISSUE 9 x 10 - 9 x 6 32 -oz btl 2 3 9 -oz pkg 27c 2 boxes 3 5 e 3 rolls 29c All Pure Coffee A&P INSTANT COFFEE Large Jar 99{ Christie's, RITZ Campbell's TOMATO SOUP • Kraft Deluxe CHEESE SLICES Monarch FLOUR Margarine Regular ROSE BRAND Monarch Color Otdck MARGARINE Luncheon Meat KLIK POPULAR BRAND CIGARETTES 8 -oz pkg 18.c 4 tins 47c 8 --oz pkg 29c 25 -Ib bag 1,6 5 2 pkgs 49c 1-1629c 2 12 -oz tins? 5 c SAVE 31c Ctn of 10 pkgs of 20's' 299 • GERBER'S or HEINZ Infant or Junior BABY FOOD 4 5 -oz tins 3 c Case of 24 2.09 • FROIJEN FOOD FEATURES VEGETABLES RASPBERRIES • 2ii_ozpkgs39, 15 -oz pkg 35c COLLATE PALMOLIVE PRODUCTS LOW PRICED AT AQP Special 10c Off Offer 1 VEL Special 10c Off Offe, l SLIPERSU S IIalf Price Salo I FAQ 2 Special 50 Off Offer 1 PALMOIJ Toilet Soap CASH Aler •.r s.. large box 29C la(ge. ben„ C 29 Targe luxes banded 5 9t E SOAP CAKES 2 2,3 FOR The Foaming Cleanser AJAX !•4 2c. 1FfN9� .� �; 2 You e n Put Your Trust In "SUPERAIGHT " QUALITY MEAT BEEF ROASTS BLAiDE BLADE BONE REMOVED REMOVED SHORT RIB MEATY ib SHOULDER FULL CUT c MINCED BEEF 'EXTRA LEAN 21 9c Lean Meaty PORK SPARE RIBS l637. All Good, Smoked SIDE BACON Brookfield Pure (Loose) RINDLESS 1 -Ib pkg 49, PORK SAUSAGE Wheatley Brand FISH-- STICKS HADDOCK JANE PARKER PINEAPPLE PIE each 49c SAVE 10c JANE PARKER PIE ' each 49e SAVE 10c JANE PARKER BAR PANIsh CAKE each 35c C SAVE 4c GOOD LUCK MARGARINE Ib 35c Jane Parker Daily Dated WHITE BREAD 24 oz °15< lb 35c 10-ozpkg 31c OPFPI FRY AMP SAWVPY NKHi, TILL 9 P.M. A SHOWER OF.SAViNGS ON Spring - Fresh Fruits and Vegetables Fresh Fancy California, Long Green Spears — A Real Spring Tonic ASPARA-GUS California Fancy —Now at their Best NAVEL ORANGES Fresh Curly Leaf No. 1 Cr:de, Washed, Trimmed SPI NACH Fresh Fancy Florida Yellow SWEET CORN Florida Fancy, Fresh Jumbo Size READY TO COOK GREEN PEPPERS Hand Selected Quality TOMATOES Florida No. 1 Grade, Fresh Green Long CUCUMBERS 2 f° -19c DUTCH BETS ARE AVAILABLE NOW FOR EARLY PLANTING LIQUID BLEACH JAVEX 32 -oz btl 23, 64 -oz btl 43c Mild and Mellow - Custom Ground 8 O'(LOCK COFFEE Ib $,c 3 -lb bag 2.55 IT'S LEMON Pif- WEEK!. BAKE A FRESH LEMON PIE with Sh th Il's PIE CRUST MIX aaa sae. pkg31c LEMON PIE IPLVNG28-oz PI(C3s 3ic Serve Lemon Pie Often ! Pvices Effective Until Saturday, April 14th, 1958 lbs 5-16 cello bag 5 9c 0 2 cello bags 2 5C Cello pkg. 6for35C 2f0r1 5c 25c Fancy Grade, Ontario Grown, McIntosh Red APPLES 3 -Ib cello bag 2 5 c FRESH STRAWBERRIES ARE NOW AT THEIR BEST LIQUID DETERGENT GAY 12 -oz btl 35, 20 -oz btl 57, LIQUID STARCH GLIDE 32 -oz btl 25, HOUSECLEANING DEEDS Handy AMMONIA Cleanser BIG 5 Johnson's Furniture PRIDE Polish Johnson's Red Band GLO—COAT Sturdy C-4 5 -Strand BROOMS 2 13 -oz pkgs 21c 2 for19c 0 -oz btl 77c, pint tin 59c • c -h 99c GREEN GIANT FOODS Green Giant Fancy Cut GREEN BEANS 21oo2tins33c Green Giant NIBLE1S Green Giant MEXICORN.. 2 14 -oz tins 3 34 2 14 -oz tins 3 7c ittit4 GOA? ATII,ANTIC t PACIfte Talk COMPANY Lt :i A.S Worneu's: CoIumn litY MARY GUEST It loth as th9ugl Sprang is .really here to stay --With ix now and I, for Ona, am overjoyed to see the last of Old Mn Winter. At .the first hint oo warm sunshine, my spirits begin to soar' and 1 am of) ou daydreams of world travel, pater on, of . course, 1 Will return - rom far Cathay and Ciiiiriborazo Cotopa ii refreshed, and ready to redecorate"My kitchen. But for now. . One day bast week, it Vas warm and sunny and the sky was a brilliant blue, so instead of having lunch to e* at home, sitting at the table like civilized human beings, we packed sandwiches and headed for the dock and a ,"pieniv. We were in luck, for a boat was scheduled to leave that after- noon and as we sat- ona bench eating our bread "and anew (God bless Lord Sandwich - and his gambling mania) we were treated to a display of nautical mmanoeuvers. My two young sons, aged two,,arid three respectively, were enthralled and the younger one had to be tied to the bench to keep him from falling into the water in his excitement,, There is a strange magic about a boat leaving harbor— even a rusty old lake freighter stirs the age-old longings for faraway places—and we think of the Phoenician galleys plying the Mediterranean, Spanish galleons laden with treasure and the armed fighting saps of the buccaneers. Ah, the romance, the strange exotic delight, the dirt and the scurvy -ridden sailors! What am I saying? Oh well, boats nowadays are not the floating hells they once were, the poets notwithstanding, and Spring is the time for daydreaming. We watched the boat leave the dock, its crew lining the rails, and then we climbed"back up that long hill from the water. If anything could , be calculated to drive Spring vagaries from your mind, pushing a baby buggy up that hideous hill could. Oh for some rich millionaire to install a "cliffside elevator" for the poor pedestrians—the sort of thing they have at seaside resorts in England. I'll bet there are a lot of people in Goderich who would go down to the dock if they did not have that hill to face on the way back - And just think how popular the dock would become if somebody were to open a really first-class harbor restaurant down there. John Fisher was talking about "floating restaurants" the other day and they sounded quite fascinating, but I envisioned a spanking new glass and concrete building looking out over the water. A place where boating tourists could eat in comfort without treking up into town afoot and hungry—a place where the townspeople could take their landlubber tourist friends for something really new and different in eating delight. Come to think of it, you could make a real -"tourists' delight" down by the water—but now I'm off on another Spring daydream. .. . Before -I leave the subject --of Spring altogether though, not all spring days are warm and sunny and the day when the Girls''Trumpet Band paraded through town last week was far more like winter than Spring. • I was not able to see the parade, but I did watch the band disperse at the Arena, and it struck me that their costumes were most inadequate for the bitter cold - weather. Bare legs and thin cotton blouses had reduced most of the girls to blue -faced misery. If we are unable to supply them with a more suitable costume, one incorporating long stockings and warm sweaters, theta perhaps we could arrange for them to parade in a heated or partially enclosed float—that is, if we MUST have them parade outdoors in cold weather. These girls are too valuable to be subjected to pneumonia from exposure. See you next week! Mrs. N. Clairmont Is W.I. President IThe annual meeting of the Wo - J inei '. ,.11• 'J,'4IP- wa c els1 .in_. Amo.. i ay -Haid with the president; Mrs. D. Riehl, in the ch -air. Roll call was answered by "Why members do not wish to take office." Re- ports of committees were read and adopted. During the year there have been some inte9-esting 'and instructive 1. meetings. Donations have been given to several organizations. Twenty-five dollars is to be don- ated to The Huron County Music Festival. Election of the following officers was presided over by Mrs. A. Wilkin: Past president, Mrs. D. Riehl; president, Mrs. Norman Clairmont; 1st vice-president, Mrs. ,A: Straughan; 2nd vice-president, Mrs. W. Kingswell; secretary -treas- urer. Mrs. H. Tichborne; press secretary, Mrs. C. McCabe; audi- tors, Mrs. C. L. Bissett, Mrs. W Price; district director, Mrs. D Riehl; pianists, Mrs. J. Snider, Mrs N. McInnis; flower fund treasurer, Mrs. G. Inglis; branch directors, Mrs. R. H. Wilson, Mrs. J. Cook• Mrs. A. Alexander, Mrs. H. Brad ley, Mrs. Wm. Doak, Mrs. N. 'Miller. Standing committees appointed were: Agriculture and Canadian Industries, Mrs. L. Bannister; Citizenship and Education, Mrs Geo. Mathieson; Community Activ- ities and Public Relations, Mrs_ E.. Mills; Historical Research and Cop- rent Events, Mrs. R. Good; ,,Home Economics and Health, Mrs. W. Price; Resolution convener, Mt -s. A.. Wilkin, Tweedsmuir book, Mrs_ A. -Good Tis.eringnan, :'Mrs'. X- F. • Lunch was served by Mrs. 1 t. Chambers and her committee. SUNSET DRIVE -If TO OPEN SATURDAY ETV A sign of warmer, weather around the corner is the an- nouncement in this wee'k's Signal -Star of the opening for the season this Saturday even- ing vening of Sunset Drive -In Theatre_ Program is contained in the advertisement on page three. Box office opens at 7 p.m. with the first show at dusk, There will be two shows night- ly. o -o- BRIDGE WONNERS The Goderich Duplicate Bridge played their regular Monday night games at Mrs. A. A. Nicol's aparll- ment with the following winners.- Mrs... inners.Mrs.., F. Saunders and Mrs. A. A_ Nicol, 45 points, tied with Mr. and Mrs. G. G. Gardiner; 'Mrs. G. Pater- son and Mrs. C. A Reid, 44 points; Mrs. J. R. Wheeler and Mrs. J. V. Thomas. 43 points. o p 0 Of the 3,685,000 families in ada at June 1, 1955, 1,155,000 were childless. 10••••••••••••••.••••••••••••••••••••••••••.0004100 • • • • • Goderich Community Concerts Associcition • ANNOUNCE ITS trEXT COMM r' `I' ON • • Monday• • • AT Goderich District Collegiate Auditarill • AT 8.30 P.M. A !� • 0 • • CA� Ethel tDarryrnore Colt OUTSTANDING OMANI) -_-- e • ►••4•:,•••ieeeee.11 0 0 0 11,