The Goderich Signal-Star, 1983-01-05, Page 22PACE 2A- -GQI ERIMISSIGNAIATAR, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 5,1
Coiboni e Township Recea on Committee
cide
s teu 1e mareparties
•
Tow `eighty*tws one to
lts,close;
AltiO
tweet, weddour best.
enough .none could doniOre.
Bait eighty three awaits:!
• What then? •
Will higb hopes,•, courage and
apurpose strong.
• to better do, endure?
And ivillthat be enough?
• Nat not enough; our purpose
v e.mmst prove.
Colborne Townshi
Recreation Committee hag
decided to commence the
euchre card parties held in
the Colborne Township Hall,
Carlow. The first one will be
Thursday, January. 13' at 8,
p.m. and from then on willbe
held the second and fourth
Thursday of every month
until spring. Admission is $1
and as has been the custom,
everyone brings- lunch. Mr.
COLBORNE
CORNER.
ySiartrude Kaltlna,1824®2O9EE
and Mrs. Reg. Riehl will be
in charge.
Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
MacCrostie attended the
wedding on December 23 of
Kerry Toll and Greer Black,
both of Edmonton, Alberta at
the home of the bride's
parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Aubrey Toll, R.R. 3, Blyth.
The MacCrosties spent
Christmas at Kincardine
with their son Dale and
family. They also attended a
family gathering at
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Mrs. Theresa Fulford
spent Christmas with her
daughter, Mrs. David
Gornall and Mr. Gornall of
Clinton and during the
holiday season visited her
daughter, Mrs. Jack Marr,
Mr. Marr and son Bobby in
London.
Guests with Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Kaminska and daughter
Lucknow, December 26.
Mr. and Mrs. Terence
Hunter enjoyed Christmas at
their daughter's, Mrs, John
Thomson of Seaforth and
for New Years were at their
grandson's, Jim Thompson
of Seaforth.
®during :the . holiday season
were their . daughter Mrs.
Randy Kisch and Mr, Kisch
of Sault Ste. Marie, and
daughter Mrs. Ed. Kelly,
Mr. Kelly and children Roy
andJoey of Kitchener.
Sincere'' sympathy to the
family and relatives of the
late Mrs. Colleen (Millian)
McGee of R.R. 2,
Thamesford. Colleen was a
Colborne girl and known by
many.
Sincere sympathy to the
family and relatives of the
late Howard Fowler who has
been in Huronview. Howard
was from Colborne and well-
known.
MONUMENTS
MARKERS -CEMETERY LETTERING
MONUMENT CLEANING & REPAIR
PRYDE MEMORIALS
GODERICH - CLINTON - EXETER
Phone 524-6621
DON DENOMME - AREA REPRESENTATIVE
WE DO OUR VERY BEST TO OFFER YOU CONTINUED
LOWEST
GAS PRICES
LAST WEEK'S WINNER OF
$35.00 FOOD VOUCHER FROMZEHRS
Harry Talbot - R.R. No. 2 Clinton
NOW OPEN 7 DAYS WEEKLY FROM 7 AM THRU 11 PM
Acolu, �. n, • more than two months ago has brought sharp
cpm,entrom a number of people. '
The column suggested that farmers get=it in the ear when
theenvironmental control act is applied . but many big
businesses get nothing but a slap on the wrist.
Wow! It was like being strapped immobile behind a
manure spreader. One letter bas already been mentioned. I
got another from the Stratford area, from Madoc, Dresden,
Lucknow, Walkerton, Mitchell, Exeter, Brighton, Drayton
and Grand Valley- Another from Prince Edward Island and
one from Alberta.
Although one or two were definitely in favor of my stance,
most of them poured out the vitriol. However, only one or two
were from farmers; the rest were from town or city dwellers.
The tone of those against the assumption that big business
got much easier treatrilent than farmers was that industries
are needed; they mean jobs and taxes to smaller towns and
even townships.
A couple of writers chided me for the lack of factual infor-
mation in the original column.
Like the famous comedian of the Dirty Thirties, Will
Rogers, I only know what I read in the newspapers.
I can also remember as the farm editor on a daily
newspaper a few years ago seeing 13 beautiful Holsteins ly-
ing dead because they drank from a stream down river from
a chemical plant. .
As far as I know, the industry was never fined. To this day,
farmers in -the area are leery about letting their cattle graze
on the river flats and drink from the river.
Getting back to Will Rogers, a quick look through Canada's
self-styled national newspaper, the Globe and Mail, one day
last week had horror stories about big business polluting land
and water in many parts of the country. The Hooker
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by. Sob Trotter
gm/cooing in. I, ve Canal is a classic example of what I
ann.referring to. •
Again, I ain not ,suggesting that fanners and the
agriculture industry are. blameless Most fanners are well
aware of the fact that pesticides, herbicides and abngrmal
applications of .fertilizer are harinful to the environment.
Many farmers have beer .questioning application in-
structions for years and are doing a great.deal to curtail the
pollution for which they have been, rightly blamed.
My point' is -that individual farmers seem to. get fingered
quicker .and are forced to conform, quicker than many in-
dustries.
The case 1 used to illustrate the story was that of a»cow-calf
farmer who was charged under the environmental protection
act and was going to be forced to install purifiers to eliminate
contamination of wells across the r d from his farm.
A report from a governmep o icial blamed the farmer for
the pollution of his.neighburs' wells. The farmer was charged
on the strength of that report. No hearing. No appearance in
court. No method of rebutting the report.
He got the federation of agriculture on his side to help him
fight the report.
That was the point: the lack of recourse; the judge -and -
jury method used against the farmer.
Big, business gets all kinds of chances to rectify errors.
They can afford lawyers for injunctions. They can afford ad-
journments of court cases. They seem to be able to stall recti-
fying their pollution, sonietiines for many months. The in-
dividual farmer must make his or her changes immediately
and it sometimes costs him -her a lot of money.
-That is all I was trying to say. Sorry I ruffled so many
feathers.
passengers.
••••••••••• •••••••••••••••••••••••:
J.M. CUTT'S NINETI&NINE CENT
Keep.
in the rear
A question for a_11 parent"
ill
"Where should W 1
when travelling° in a motor
vehicle?"
The Canada SafetyCouncil
recommends that very
young infants should be plac-
ed in rear -fading infant
restraints that are anchored
by adult lap belts.
As children grow, they
should progress to po
Canada approved child '
restraints. Whether' using
child.. restraints, booster
seats, or regular lap.-
shoulder belts, children
should always ride in the
rear seat.
Safety restraint systems
are important for two
reasons:. they save lives and
injuries, and are .the most
cost-effective safety feature
available for use in today's
automobiles.
The protection of our
children is of great impor-
tance and it is your respon-
sibility as an adult to ensure
tate • safety of child
4)9
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HEINZ FANCY
TOMATO JUICE
4e FL. OZ.
994
••
•
•
• MARTINS PURE
• ORANGE JUICE 4802. 99
• ORANGE PEKOE 60'6= -
SALE
CAMPBELLS
TOMATO SOUP
10 FL. OZ.
3 FOR
99,4
:RED ROSE TEA BAGS 1.6
MAXWELL HOUSE 10 ox. `
• INSTANT COFFEE 4.99
I 0 COTTONULLE • ROLL PKG.
BATHROOM T-ISSU E 2.6
•
99c
••••••1•• ••
SCHWEPPES
GINGER
° ALE
750 ML.
3FOR
994
PLUS DEP.
SUNSPUN
BUTTER
X1 .99
COCA COLA
• STOKELY 14 FL. OZ. 5 9
• KIDNEY BEANS
•
•
CHIQUITA
• BANANAS 2 LBS. FOR .79
• FLORIDA PINK OR WHITE
.• GRAPEFRUIT 5 FOR .99
• PRODUCE OF USA No. 1 GRADE
HEAD LETTUCE 69c EA.
Complete Stock
£ngs25%
, cocktail tables, end ` s, 3�% Tr
tables, accent chairs, 'r
Mirrors,
- 1
Lartips.••• 3_0--%--04iP-
Bed & .Bat, 50 %oFF
Bath. , T
Sheet Set$ & °�'els••.2Q To 40o�°V
Special heeGroupS of B ComforteroFF
ath Sets•'•30�%o�'F
AccessOrles°•,50�%
All LOWER LEVEL oFF
Lighting Fixtures.
All Other Lower
• • " ' ° ° .
Level Stork °
• GIANT SUNKIST
• NAVEL ORANGES 2.99. .
• PRODUCE OF ONTARIO No. 1 GRADE ,
• GREEN CABBAGE 3 FOR .99
• FLORIDA
• TANGERINES .994DOZ.
HOSTESS
•
•
•
•
•
• •
POTATO CHIPS
200 GRAM
994
REG.. AUTO OR DRIP 360 GRAM PKG. 2.49.
NABOB COFFEE
VAN CAMPS 14 FL. OZ.
BEANS WITH PORK 59'
SUNSPUN S00 GRAM •
PEANUT BUTTER 1.49
ROYALE $ROLL PICC. - -
PAPEt TQINELS 1,29i
.
SAPAGHETTI SAUCE 1.4.9
BY TME PIECE •
BOLOGNA
994
Le. •
•
MAPLE LEAF 4 VAR. 173 GRAM .4 •
LUNCH MEATS,. V•
gill
LBS •
PORK LIVER FOR .99 •
SLICED FRESH • � 9 LB. •
BEEF . •
LIVER •
• SUNKIST
NAVEL ORANGES. 99z
• PRODUCE OF USA No. 1 GRADE
• TOMATOES 2 F®R .99
:CUCUMBERS OF_uE
• 2Fo.99
EMPEROR GRAPES 2 LBS. FOR .99
PRODUCE OF USA No. 1 GRADE
•
• PINEAPPLEz. 991 DOG FOOD 2 FOR 99=
• LANCIA 1 KG. 9q s ROSES 2.s KG.
• SPAGHETTI 7 i FLOUR
• DOG FOOD BLE 10 KG.
• PEERLESS 400 RAM SUNLIGHT
• SODA CRACKERS 99` LIQUID 1 L.
• NESTLE
• MINI PUDDINGS a . s oz.
P.E.I.
No. 1 GRADE
TABLE
POTATOES
10 LB. BAG
9 -9.4 ---
STORE SLICED � . 6 918. •
COOKED HA.M •
FRESH
PORK RIBLETS 794LB,
•
•
1.99
4.99
1.99
1.49
FRESH
PORK° -HOCKS
FRESH
PORK HEARTS
FRESH
BEEF HEARTS
CRISPY CRUST 994LB
PURE LARD
LANCIA
MACARONI 1 KG. 994
CHOICE HALVES 14 FL. OZ.
AYLMER PEARS 994
" CANADA GRADE 'A'
FRESH
CHICKENS
2-3 LB. AVG.
99' us
9 94 us
99°
1.6 4:
BRUNSWICK 100 GRAM
SARDINES 2 FOR 99` •
AYLMER 14 FL. OZ. •
FRUIT COCKTAIL 99` •
UTOPIA 28 FL. OZ. CHOICE •
TOMATOES 994 •
GREEN GIANT FANCY
PHILIPS 60-100 WATT 1 99 4 PL. OZ.
2 FOR •
LIGHT BULBS CORN 9.9
JULIA 125 GRAM
GRATED CHEESE
GREEN PEAS GIANT FANCY 14 FL. OZ.
2FOR 99(
•
•
99` •
•
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•
McCORMICKS
MINT PATTIES
125 GRAM
ORANGE JUICE
121/2 FL. 01.
WHITE SWAN
FACIAL
TISSUES
PURINA
PROTEIN PLUS
DOG FOOD
750 GRAM
BLACK MAGIC
OR
DAIRY BOX
CHOCOLATES
200'6
454 GRAM
994 ®®®
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J.M. CUTT LIMITED
•
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RED & WHITE FOODMASTER • .
91 VICTORIA ST. GODEIEICH
WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT OUANTITIES
•••000•00011000411•041000000 10•0•00•000
r
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OPEN MONDAY TO
SATURDAY
8 AM-9.PM
Prices In •Nott 1111 cInsing
finis Saturday. January*.
of 0 p.m. or while quantities
loaf,
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