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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1979-06-21, Page 27you & LsAvE ib I-7\ clo better Regal Brand, Smoked, Cooked 16 to 20 -Ib avg. Ib WHOLE HAMS Our Regular Price Ib 1.48 Regal Brand, Smoked, Cooked GREAT ON THE B.B.Q. Centre Cuts --13AVE 2.20 Regular or Diet 1 -UP case of 24, 10 -fl -oz tins t Our Regular Price 6.49 Butt 38 Shank Portion Ib. • Portion OR HAM STEAKS NO CENTRE SLICES .REMOVED Ib 1:88 Butt Half A & P SLICED SIDE ( Our Regular Price 1.59 ) BACON 1 -Ib vac pac 1.18 61.48 SAVE 30¢ GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR, THURSDAY, JUNE 21, 1979—PAGE 9A WE REDEEM LL FOODSTORE C'. PONS Action Price.! Ann Page PIECES& STEMS MUSHROOMS J l YOU'LL DO better AT .. . 4AE FA /mat Winn% California — The Natural Snack seedless Ib Fresh, Shoulder Previously frozen "Great on the B.B.Q." 5 BONELESS CORK PORKBUTTIbI.1.I. 4SIDERIBS lb . Previously frozen, sliced Shopsy — Cole Slaw or 24 -oz container Pork Liver b49 Potato Salad 1.39 Frozen Meats & Seafood! RAINIOW VALLEY Frozen Trout 8 oz pkg 1.29 Hamburg Patties 3.29 FROZEN Pollock Fillets TOWN CWS, FROZEN "GREAT ON THE 1.1.0." 2-L11 PKG SEA BUOY, FROZEN, BATTERED COOKED Cod Portions FROZEN, HONEY DIPPED .Ib 1.13 Chicken Breasts or Legs Ib1.98 HJQHUNER,_FaOZENo 14-02 ryE Ib 1.78 CheddSticks 1.48 A&P, Orange Flavour SUNMIX CRYSTALS .�P2k w 695,1 (Our Regular Price 89c) A&P, Assorted Flavours JELLY POWDERS 3pkg-o>e5or99jj RAPES No. 1Grade, Florida, Tender, Golden, Sweet CORN -ON - THE -(OB each 1 No. 1 Grade, Imported, Juicy, Yellow Flesh, Pick of the Crop SWEET PEACHES Ib Picked Fre h Daily (OLE;, 8 -oz SLAW pkg Texas, Sweet, Vine Ripened, Large Size HONEYDEW MELONS each No. 1 Grade, California, Long, White POTATOES '° 1 Ontario, Fresh, Large Size ROMAINE f LETTUCE each SAVE 20r A&P. Fancy TOMATO JUICE (Our Regular Price 79) NPASTEURIZED ACTION PRICEI 3 -LB CONTAINER FRITO LAY, HOMESTYLE, REGULAR OR RIPPLE ACTION PRICEI CHAMPION, ASSORTED VARIETIES, DOG FOOD ACTION PRICE! 3eemaid Honey 3.49 Potato Chis 200 g Pk9 79¢ Dr.Ila 25.5 oz tin ¢ Y p Ba rds 49 SOLID, LIGHT ACTION PRICEI 7-01 TIN SWEET MIXED OR PICALLILLI ACTION PRICEI DETERGENT ACTION PRICEI 750 ml PLASTIC BTL Bye The Sea Tuna 99¢ Heinz Relishes 12 -fl -oz jar 59¢ Mir Liquid 261.39 (PWS 60e BTL. DEPOSIT) KLIK ACTION PRICEI 12.01 TIN LIBBY'S, ASSORTED VARIETIES ACTION PRICE! 7 -UP «nof6_,o.flozrelurnableblls1.49 Luncheon Meat 1.49 Pure Juices cluafib•t :461.49 GOOD HUMOR ACTION PRICEI 60 ml PKG OF• 8 BARS , KRAFT, ASSORTED VARIETIES ACTION PRICEI BUDGET 2000 Starship 1.39 B.B.Q. Sauces 16-fl-ozjar89�r Bathroar Tissue:arc L89¢ 48 -11 -oz tin GRADE "A" LARGE EGGS PER DOZEN .A lake controls Tougher controls on phosphorus and toxic substances and controls on growth and development are needed to maintain the excellent water quality of Lakes Superior and Huron, the International Joint Commission reported today. The Commission, .consisting of three Canadians and three Americans, recommends action to the two governments on boun- dary water issues con- cerning both countries. The report, entitled, "Water Quality of the Upper Great Lakes", follows five years of exhaustive study after the Governments, in 1972, asked the IJC to deter- mine the extent and causes of pollution in Lakes Superior and' Huron, to identify practicable remedial measures, and to rec.ar-nmendd-measures to prevent fucfher degradation. Major findings of the study include: 1) Growth and development should be permitted but the two` Governments should require developers of lake -shore sites to demonstrate, before the projects are approved, that no pollutants will be discharged into the lakes. 2) Persistent chemicals should be banned until a potential user demon- strates no potential damage to health or property because of either acute toxic effects or . concentration potential in fish, water and sediments. - '3) The IJC says that transboundary pollution 'occurs in the St. Mary's River as a result of the discharge of phenolic substances from the Algoma Steel Cor- poration at Sault. Ste. Marie, Ontario. 4) Water use problems occur in several areas, particularly' Saginaw Bay on Lake Huron and Duluth -Superior Harbor on Lake Superior, as a result of inputs of nutrients and organic substances. The nutrient inputs to Saginaw Bay are also degrading the open waters of southern Lake Huron. 5) Excessive algae growth due to'phosphorus is not a major problem in most of the Upper Lakes, but could become one if phosphorus pollution is not minimized. 6) A drinking water standard for- asbestos should be established as soon as possible because of pollution of the Western arm of Lake Superior by taconite tailings waste (asbestos) by Reserve Mining Company. The Commission recommends that the governments limit new phosphorus input ..w the lesser of 1) • se achievable by .est practicable treatment, 2) target loads, and 3) the margin of safety above _water quality_objectives.____ The Commission said, "While accommodating growth and development, ., more stringent point source controls should be applied as part of an offset policy, to ensure that loadings from point sources 'do not increase with growth. Sediments, water and fish in many Turn to page 11A • Shortage... • from page 8A surveyed continue to stress the importance of energy conservation to help make Canada less dependent upon foreign sources of crude oil. Public policies and realistic' ground rules are needed to attract the investment capital required to discover and develop the resources which Canada will need in the future, but the opinion today is that RV owners and prospective owners still do not have a serious basis for concern that gasoline will not be available to them.