HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1982-05-05, Page 25May is Hearing Awareness Month -Communication -Think about it!
GbDERICH SIGNAL -STAR, WEDNESDAY, MAY k 1982,PAGE7A
A&P DOESN'T CELEBRATE MOTHER'S DAY,
WE CELEBRATE MOTHER'S WEEK
with great buys in every department Savings that will make your
f • • budget go further than ever.
YOUR MOTHER'S DAY GIFT FROM A&P!
PLUS BOTTLE DEPOSIT -
Tab Cola, Sprite
or Coca Cola
6 PACK OF 750 mL BTLS
OUR REGULAR PRICE 4.14
SAVE
1.32/kg
.601b
MAPLE LEAF
Tenderflake
Lard
1 L13 PKG
OUR REGULAR PRICE 1.09
2 TO 3 LB AVERAGE
•.fresh,Gracle
Chickens Limit 4 per
family purchase
OUR REGULAR PRICE 3.213/kg-1.49 Ib
INSTANT COFFEE
Maxwell
House
10 OZ JAR
OUR REGULAR PRI9E 6.39
•
SAVE 1.32/kg
.601b
QUARTERS WITH BACKS ATTACHED
Fresh Chicken Legs
Ikg
OUR REGULAR PRICE 3.50/kg-1.59 Ib
POWDERED
ABC
Detergent
6 LITRE BOX
rp
WEI/ IV 831138 00 11M0i,
OUR REGULAR PRICE 4.19
SAVE 1.10/kg .501b
QUARTERS WITH BACKS & WINGS ATTACHED
Fresh Chicken Breasts
09
/kg Ib
OUR REGULAR PRICE 3.50/kg-1.59 LB
CUT FROM CANADA'S FINEST GRADE 'A' BEEF
Fresh Lean yagi /19' Boneless Lt 6 5 ,!/. 2 9 9
Ground Beef lot Ikg lb Round Steak ,
CUT UP. TRAY PACK
Stewing Chickens
TENDE ED
Cu 7" • Steak
NEW ZEALAND, SPRING. WHOLE OR BUTT END 5.05Ikg-2.29 Ib
•Lamb Legs Fti:lik
TOWN CLUB, SWEET PICKLED
.Cottage,Rolls
MAPLE LEAF, READY -TO -SERVE. SMOKED. PICNIC
Pork Shoulders
\'1)() 110'1011
,..)J 1,
STYLE
20M
1741kg/ib •79
17Ikg/Ib 329
549/i49
/kg/lb /16
417/kg/b 189
373,1,g/th 169
WITH THIS COUPON
FROZEN, CONC, WHITE OR MNK GRAPEFRUIT OR ORANGE
(-- Minute Maid
. _ - s 12.5 11
Juice
oz tin II
Limit one per family . Valid until May 8 th, 1982.
(..._. Feature price 1,.09,without coupon.. .V C.
,----7
c---. - ( )r) - ' k, .-) -s, " r) qqnnpnrynnnn,-!-( (-)
c( U' )()I '')( )( (00)Y, J( ()(4 1,,
Headcheese":
MARY MILES. HOT OR SWEET. "ITALIAN STYLE"
Sausage
SWIFT BROOKFIELD, PURE PORK
Sausages
TOWN CLUB OR A&P. REGULAR OR THICK SLICED
Side Bacon
MAPLE LEAF. REGULAR OR ALL BEEF
Wieners
MAPLE LEAF. GOLDEN FRY OR SKINLESS
Sausages
439/kg/lb 1-99
351/kg/b 159
328/kgib 149
500g 919
vac pac
lib159
vac pac
500 g 199
pkg
A&P, ASST FLAVOURS
Jelly Powders
SAVE 2.65/kg 1.20 Ib
CUT FROM CANADA'S FINESTGRADE "A" BEEF
Boneless Roasts
71 59
Ikg Ib
Outside Cut,
Eye Removed
Round Roast
OUR REG. PRICE 8.36/kg-3.79 Ib
RUMP, INSIDE CUT ROUND SIRLOIN TIP
Boneless 6 5
Roasts ,k A 279
SAVE 2.43/kg-1.10 LB—OUR REG. PRICE 8.58/kg-3.89 Ib
MAPLE LEAF, SLICED, 6 VARIETIES (OUR REGULAR PRICE UP TO 2.49) g 159
Cooked Meats SAVE UP TO .90 vac pac I
MAPLE LEAF
Sliced Cooked Hamva17c5p2c 1"
MAPLE LEAF
English Style Bacon
1759 1 99
vacliacl
IN STORES WITH DELI!
CANADA PACKERS MAC & CHEESE DUTCH OR CHICKEN LOAF
Cold Cuts .44,100g/17b90/4'
33pg1.00
A&P, ORANGE FLAVOR
Sunmix Crystals 6013x,V1.19
FARMERS, BRICK, COLBY, MOZZARELLA
Schneiders Cheese
CHEFMASTER. CORN OIL
• Margarine
pkg 11 69
250
tub • 89
1 lb
CHAMPION CHOCOLATE CHIP, PANDA, RIO
Dare •
29
Cookies 400 g
box
STRAINED MEATLESS VAR. OF FOODS .& JUICES
dill IV 831138 00 11,110A
d 18 31138 00 11,110A
Mark 40th
miniver. ry
Benson and. Fliitence
Shackleton of R.R. 1
Dungannon celebrated *Jr
40th wedding anniversary on
Sunday, April 10 with a
farailY geTAtOgether'
Mr. and Mrs. Shackleton
were married oh March 25,
1942 in Bluevale at the home
of the Wide's parents,
They have three children,
Mrs. Alvin (Card) Ser of
Hay Township, Gerald of
Ashfield Township and
Valerie of Hanover. Another
son, Lindeen died several
years ago.
The Shackletons also have
two grandchildren,Heather
and Larry Becker.
All were trend for the
4 Oth anniversary
celebrations.
Forest
official
speaks
• There is an urgent heed for
water -bombing aircraft and'
• other sophisticated fire sup-
pression methods to protect
Ontario's forests against the
ravages of fire, a senior
forest industry official told,
the Goderich Rotary Club
' here on Tuesday, May 4.
A. S. Fleming of Montreal
who -rice -president of
forest litoducts., Domtar
Inc., c s 1980 was a bad
year fur) forest fires in nor-
thern Ontario.
"Orie fire alone destroyed
trees which would keep a
newsprint mill at full pro-
duction for 10 years," he told
his luncheon audience.
• Fleming also pointed to
the increasing losses of
valuable timberland by
spruce budworm? and said 60
per cent of the balsam fir in
northeastern Ontario has
been destroyed by the cur-
rent infestation.
"More wood is lost through
insect damage than any
other factor and is
equivalent to five years'
harvest east of the Rockies
sthce 1967,' he stated, ad-
ding that a program of con-
tinuous spraying under strict
control is essential.
• Flemingnoted that coin-
mercial forests can be grown
in the most unlikely places,
and saidpointar has an ex-
tensive hybrid poplar pro-
gram underway on abandon-
ed farmland in the Cornwall
area. •
•
"These trees will reach 10
inches in diameter in 10
years compared to a spruce
tree in the north which takes
80 years to reach maturity."
He said that Ontario Paper
Company in the Niagara
Peninsula is using land in
that area to grow' poplar
trees for its Thorold milt
He also called on the
public to, help "moderate the
pressure from environmen-
tal grow and over -zealous
government technicians to
eliminate timber harvesting
from much of Ontario's
forest".
Fleming noted that
already, of the 198 -million
acres of forested land in On-
tario,
49 -million acres, or 25
per cent, have been
withdrawn from production
to satisfy environmental and
recreational needs.
"If you add to that area the
• 93 -million acres considered
non-productive, then the
forest industry can only
harvest in one-quarter of the
• total area, while three-
quarters is exclusively
available for recreation."
Fleming said that' in spite
of this, demands for addi-
• tional wilderness areas and
enlarged reserves continue
to be made,
"Each square mile of pro-
ductive forest has the poten-
tial to generate 64 -million of
newsprint sales."
He added that "we in the
forest industry maintain that
the multiple use concept of
forest management is ' most
beneficial for the province.
It provides for recreation
and wilderness experience
as well as the harvesting of a
mature crop of trees".
Fleming pointed to Algon-
quin Park as an excellent,ex-
ample of how an area can be
used both as an outdoor
recreational amenity and a
source of trees to sustain a
forest industry which has ex-
isted in the park for more
than 150 years.
The speaker also referred
to the • growing public
awareness of the recycling
of paper products. As virgin
fibre becomes more costly to
harvest and distances from
forest to mill increase, the
use, of recycled material
becomes economically
viable.
"In the future, every
Canadian will have ever-
increasing opportunities to
engage in the harvesting of
'the urban forest'. This isn't
cutting down trees in an in-
ner city park. It is participa-
tion in recycling- of paper
products."