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HomeMy WebLinkAboutClinton News Record, 1981-04-02, Page 17zehrs fine markets... of fine foods FISH & CHIPS -HIGH LINER FAMILY SIZE 02 oz. FROZEN 0 89 LIBBYS ALPNA6ETTf, ZOODLES OR °SPAGHETTI IN TOMATO SAUCE 14 F'L. oz. TINS 2/9 9Ci INDIVIDUALLY WRAPPED KRAFT SINGLES CHEESE SLICESJA5°K°Gg $2. e _J AUBURN Eleanor Bradnock, editor dvocate4101•11111.11110� Village readies for syrup, and craft festival Saturday, April 4 will be a big day for Auburn when the • local Lions Club will present their first Maple Syrup and Craft Festival. It will start with apancake and sausage breakfast at 8 a.m. in the Community Memorial Hall. As soon as breakfast is over, bus rides will be given to Robinson's sugar bush. At 1 p.m. a log sawing contest will be held, weather permitting. About 14 different craft tables will be set up by local craft people and some from the -neighbouring towns and villages. Wooden bowls, candle stick holders, hand - knitted sweaters, apples, apple cider and apple butter, wicker baskets, hooked rugs, dolls, ceramic ashtrays, Easter bunnies, eggs and maple syrup products will be some collie things offered for sale. A demonstration of chair and stool caning will also be given. Horne made baking and candy will tempt young and old alike when the United Church Couples' Club and the Anglican Church Girls' Club set up their tables in the hall. Steven's Country Gold will supply music for dancing in the hall from 9 p.m. to1a.m. to complete the festival. It is hoped that everyone will turn out and support the local Lions Club to raise money for their many community projects. Eldon Stoltz cies in London Word has been received by friends here of the death of Eldon H. Stoltz at St. Joseph's Continuing Care Unit after a lengthy illness at the age of 76 on Thursday, March 26. &Inf. hi East Wawanosh Township near Auburn, he was the only son of the late Jacob Charles and Mary Ellen (Garland) Stoltz. He attended U.S.S. No. 5 Hullett, Goderich high school and was a graduate of the Guelph Agricultural College. He is survived by his wife, the former Lillian Phillips of 9 Lonsdale Drive in Guelph; two sons, Donald and Douglas; one daughter, K_atherine;. two grand- chiidreii, , Jarale __ and -Toby Stoltz; and one sister, Mrs. Marguerite Chopin of Guelph. 1ph. The funeral was held at the Gilbert Maclntyre and Son Funeral Home on March 28 and cremation followed. The sympathy of the community is extended to Mr. and Mrs. William L. Craig on the death of her mother, Mrs. Dawson Mackey in St. Joseph's Hospital, Condor►, following a lengthy illness. She was in her 87th year. She is survived by her husband, Dawson Mackey of West Williams Township; her daughter, Mrs. William L. (Hazel) Craig of Auburn; one brother, Mn rra v St home; five grandchildren; four great-grandchildren; and one sister, Mrs. Ella McMillan of North Lambton. The funeral was held at the M. Box and Son Funeral Home in ?Arkhi: last Wednesday with . the Reverend John Brown in charge. Burial took place at theSylvan Cemetery. Relatives and friends from this community attended the funeral. CLINTON NEWS -RECORD, THURSDAY, APRIL 2 ,1801 -PAGE 17 Going....going....gone! Within a few seconds the back half a chain by a back-noe. The building is being wrecked by of the Jervis Aluminum building on Albert Street had- Joe Cronin of Blyth for owner Mason Bailey. (James collapsed into a heap of rubble with just a couple of tugs on Fitzgerald photo) KRAFT PHILADELPHIA cHEEsE 250 g. PKG. 9 r 7.• 1trAmra, PLAIN STYLE L SANDWICH BREAD THIN SLICED OR REGULAR STYLE 24 oz LOAVES 2/R.EG 88c LOAF BATHROOM TISSUE CAS HMERE WHITE OR YELLOW 4 ROLL PKG. 99 FLEECY 5 LITRE Amik FABRIC SOFTENER.69 LIQUID CLEANER MR. CLEAN#2.99 1 5 LITRE WEIGHT WATCHERS KETCHUP 1 of BO rTLE 694t POWDERED CLEANSER COMET 600 y '9 KRAFT -WITH MEAT 24 or SPAGHETTI SAUCE 1.Z9 COLONIAL -4 COOKIES OOKIES 149 450 y SNRIMPHIGH LINER cDOKEO 'Z� 99 8n� WESTONS CHOCOLATE ROLLS OF 4 99# SWISS SAUERKRAUT 1�: Z%89 # KRAFT MIX CHEESE PIZZA 850 q $1.89 KENT FROZEN ORANGE .JUICE 18 P, 99 2 VARIEITIES-FROZEN TOTING PIZZA 350 q $2 19 ICE CREAT N 6 IFiAVO URh1 49 NEILSONS RBBSIIKSICIFS OR FROSTSICLES CARTON OF 12. r- KRAFT MACARONI & CHEESE DINNER S 225 g.PKGS. 3/9 0 L TOMATOJUICE 99s 48 FL oz. TIN 1 KRAFT PARKAY SOFT MARGARINE 1 LB. 990 BOWL VIKING BOWL BRUSH AND HOLDER FOR THE BATHROOM 99 SET RUBBERMAID GARBAGE CAN 17' GALLON 99 SIZE 0 EACH INDOORWRING PUSH BROOMS EA WOtol 99 V; ING SCRUB SPONGE 2/99# IMPERIAL SPONGE MOP F A C " '199 ASSORTED VARIETIESBRUS VIKING HES EA. 69' RUBBERMAID PLASTIC BUCKET EA �Z. 99 SHELFAILINER PKG $259 1 GRANNYS DELICIOUS BUTTER TARTS PACKAGE OF 10 9 9 0 LIQUID STYLE BLEACH 3,6 LITRE JUG 91(A4, .. Al'o. E.D. SMITH PIE FILLINGS APPLE OR RAISIN 19 FL. oz. TIN 9 LIBBYS BEANS IN TOMATO SAUCE OR DEEP BROWN BEANS WITH PORK 19 F L. Oz. 6 90 LT IN RUBBERMAID LAUNDRY .. BASKET CHOCOLATE $3 GOLD OR ALMOND 0 99EACH IMPERIAL ANGLE BROOM *2.79 .co EACH SPECTALSI COUNTRY OVEN \1 BROWN ROLLS PKG Of 11 99 "COUNTRY OVEN" CRUSTY ROLLS 12, 99¢ FRUCHUNKIT LOAF 17 „, 99 EASY OFF .... -._ FF CARPET CLEANERS AVAILABLE IN ALL ZEHRS MARKETS THREE FLAVOUR CHOICES SEALTEST JP DIP ‘90 gr TUB WI CAMPBELLS SOUP CHICKEN I NOODLE 10 FL. oz. TINS 3/990 GLASS CLEANER WINDEX 99 # BOTTLE REFILL 900 ml, 5 COLOURS VIVA TOWELS 2 st 29 PKG. • KRAFT TOMATO 2407 SPAGHETTI SAUCE "1. ®9 SCENTED OR NEUTRAL , .4.DIAL ROLL-ON 75 ANTIPERSPIRANT 200 % %9 DEODORANT DIAL STICKTED 5 '1.19 WEIGHT WATCHERS TOMATO CLAM COCKTAIL ,50 89� KRAFT 64 Ft ORANGE JUICE .JAR 7.89 ROBIN HOOD ALL PURPOSE '139FLOUR ' 2 5 Kg McNAIR SEEDLESS SULTANA RAISINS 150 'Z,Z9 KIDNEY©BEANSCE 2/99p KRAFT GRATED CHEESE PARMESAN .250 169 E D SMITH CHERRY PIE FILLING iq .139 BARS 4 VARIETIES COUNTRY CRISP ,, s1.29 NEILSONS CANDY BARS 99 MULTI PACK PKG Or WE ARE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU Mt GoDERiCHH URO Hwy No. g' EN WEDr 'OUR MANANGER itt RAY HURD FRI�... �NINGS UCW study leadership Leadership Development was the theme of the general United Church Women's meeting held in Knox United - Church Wednesday, March 26. The convener, Mrs. Kenneth McDougall, in- troduced the guest speaker, Mrs. William Craven of Goderich who spoke, on the subject "Leadership". With a wealth of experience in this area, she outlined the qualitites necessary to be a good leader. She urged members to be especially concerned over good leadership for teenage groups. Her closing advice , was, as a leader, be genuine, be open (listen to others) and be committed. Mrs. Donald Haines thanked Mrs. Craven. "God Answers Prayer" was the poem read by Mrs. Gerald McDowell when she opened the worship service. She was assisted by Mrs. Peter Verbeek /with Mrs. Donald Haines es°s pianist for the hymns, "Lord Speak to Me" and "Master Let Me Walk with Thee". A meditation on the theme, "What Have We to Serve With?", was given. The president, Mrs. Peter Verbeek, conducted the business period with various conveners reporting on matters which were dealt with and completed. Members were reminded that Easter boxes will be packed on Thursday, April 16. Donations for these are to be left with Mrs. Beth Iansing. It was announced that a cantata, "The Fourth Cross", would be presented by Gorrie United Church on April 26 at 8 p.m. under the direction of • Mrs. Ron Livermore in Knox United Church, Auburn. A thankyou letter from the Bible Society in London was read.' The Auburn, Branch, now on a mailing appeal, contributed $415 in 1980. Mrs. Margaret Burkhart of Wingham was present and briefly outlined a bus trig to the Mennonite quilt auction in Elmira on Saturday, May 28. Anyone wishing further information regarding this trip, please get details from Mrs. Peter Verbeek. The members of Unit I served lunch with Mrs. Jack Armstrong, Mrs. Maurice Bean and Mrs. Ruhr Koopmans assisting. People report Prize winners at the weekly euchre card party held Tuesday evening at 8 p.m were: high lady -Mrs. Edgar Daer, low lady (playing as a lady) -Mike Van Dongen, high man -Stan Dennis and low man -Walter Mason. There were 11 tables in play. Melissa and Kyla Jardin of Kitchener and - Bonnie Armour of Waterloo visited last week with their gran- dparents, Mr. and Mrs. Tom Jardin and great- grandmother, Mrs. Elva Straughan. Christine, Rhonda and Jennifer Stadelman of Blyth visited last week with their grandmother, Mrs. Eleanor Bradnock. Mrs. Lillian Letherland returned home last Friday from Calgary where she visited with her daughter, Mrs. Paul Lassaline, Mr. Lassaline and family for over two weeks. Susan Dobie was honored last Saturday on the oc- cassion of her sixth birthday. Her little guests were Kelly Bosman, Tyler Craig,Peter Craig, Alison Chamney, Andrew Luna, Amy Hawley and her sister; Shelley Dobie. Games" were played during the afternoon and a dinner of fried chicken, chips and birthday- cake with candles was served. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mutch of Clinton visited last Friday with Mrs. Albert McFarlane. Silver Tops members are reminded of their monthly dinner meeting on April 8 at 12:15 -p.m. sharp. ,Everyone 60 years of age and over is welcome to come and join this group. Urban teenagers try farm life with summer jobs Urban teenagers don't have to rule out their dreams of working on a farm for the summer. The Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food offers a program that will place 180 urban young people on farms this sum- mer. The Junior Agriculturalist program, part of the provin- cial government's Ex- perience '81 program, is designed to give 16 and 17- year-olds with no previous farm experience an oppor- tunity to work on commer- cial farms. Students participating in the program work on a com- McK ILLOP MUTUAL FIRE INSURANCE- COMPANY 91 Main St. Seaforth Ph. 52'-0400 FULL COVERAGE Farm & Urban Properties DIRE ( TORS & hen ( arnochan I asern (,odkin Ross I eonhardt John McE wing Stanley Mcllwain Donald MKkercher John A Taylor 1 N 1rewartha Stuart %Nilson ADJUSTERS 482-1154 145.2214 521-9190 524-'OS1 52' 18i' 482-'52- 482.'591 521-068' AGENTS E F RIII' Durst James keys W m Leiper 527.1455 527.0467 521.4257 ( All AN AGENT OR THE OFFICE mercial farm for nine weeks, beginning June' 22, for a wage of $12 per day. The On- tario Ministry of Agriculture and Food contributes $6 per day. The host farmer pays. the other $6 per day and pro- vides room and board. "The Junior Agriculturalist program of- fers students with an interest in agriculture a chance to ex- perience farm life firsthand," says Norma Brown, program co- ordinator. "The students are allowed to select the type of farm they would prefer, so they have an opportunity to pursue a particular area of interest." The nine-year-old pro- gram attracts a great deal of interest each year. Last year more than 1000 students ap- plied for the openings. To qualify, young people must be 16 or 17 as of May 1 and have no previous agricultural experience. Ap- plicants must also express a genuine interest in pursuing an agriculturally oriented career. Application forms and ad- ditional information are available from school guidance departments in the Experience '81 Guide Book published by the Ontario Youth Secretariat. Deadline for applications is April 25. "Although this program is designed to give young peo- ple an opportunity to work on a farm, it also offers benefits for the host fame ys Miss Brown. "Many farm find it rewarding to in- troduce an urban young per- son to agriculture and rural life, and there's the added bonus of having extra help for the summer." Ontario farmers in- terested in hosting a junior agriculturalist may contact their local agricultural office for more information.