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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-03-14, Page 289r N;EFFECT FROM WED.' BAR. 1 UNTILLOIN SATURDAY, MARCH i7/84 OUR REQ. 39.9 f.� �. Jnr w tas:.. .. � a a i. ...u,,. �.S MAXWEL.L1HO E ALL IN� SAVE! 1.30 F FBRE SAVE! 1.30 400.45.0 g PKGS. POSTS CEREAL. 3 VARIETIES1.89 tO oz. JAR OUR .REG 7.19 SAVE TANG 39i ORANGE FLAVOUR CRYSTALS 369 g PKG. 4's 13 oz. OUR REG. 1.98 SA E!s. NO' NAME STRAWBERRY OR RASPBERRY f.49 REGULAR, WINTERFRESN OR GEL COLLATE TOOTHPASTE SUNPAC FROZEN CONCENTRATED GRAPE JUICE .11 355 mL TIN SAVE HERE CHRISTIES PREMIUM PLUS CRACKERS 95Aa` SALTED OR PLAIN 450 g PKG. SUPERSPECIAL AL WESTONS MEALTYME HAMBURGER OR WIENER ROLLS 500 g TUB AYLMER CATELLI MEAOQWGLEN _PASTAS CHICKEN MUSIIROOMS CREAM OF CHICKEN, CHICKEN RICE, CREAM OF CELERY SPAGHETTI, SPAGHETTINI, READY CUT MACARONI WHITE, REG. OR THIN, 60% W. WHEAT COLOUR PRINT WHITE, YELLOW, ALMOND 67; 9 LOAF REGULAR OR DIET 7 -UP 750 mL BOTTLES 490PLUS 30C DEP. STOKELY 2 VARIETIES KIDNEY BEANS 19 0z_ TINS 790 We reserve the right to limit purchases to reasonable weekly family requirements. EVAPORATED 2% CARNATION MILK 385 mL 650 TIN BEANS, PEAS, CORN AYLMER VEGETABLES CHOICE 19 oz. TINS 69f CARNATION COFFEE MATE 500 g JAR 2.39 DELMONTE FANCY QUALITY FRUIT COCKTAIL 14 oz. I 99,4 RAGU 3 VARIETIES SPAGHETTI SAUCE 796 mL 1.59 LARGE SIZE 121.4.8 Kg FAB DETERGENT FOR YOUR LAUNDRY 7.9, • ROSEBUDS, MACAROONS, WAFERS, CARAMEL ROLLS NEILSONS CANDY 12 oz. PKG. 2.29 FOR CHICKEN STOVE TOP STUFFING MIX 170 g PKG. 1.19 LARGE SIZE PALMOLIVE DETERGENT LIQUID 1.5 L BOTTLE 3.99 SUNPAC FROZEN CONCENTRATED ORANGE JUICE 355 mL 99,4 GLAD GARBAGE BAGS 40 UNIT £69 6 VARIETIES PEEK FREAN COOKIES 400 g PKG: f.79 CARNATION INSTANT HOT CHOCOLATE. 3 VARIETIES VARIOUS SIZES f.69 FANCY QUALITY 3 VARIETIES PEACHES, PEARS JHIRMACK DELMONTE SHAMPOO F14 RUITS OR CONDITIONER oz. TINS 220 mL 99° ?.79 FIVE VARIETIES DELMONTE JUICES 3's 750 mL 1.29 3 VARIETIES MENNEN SPEED STICK. 75 g SIZE 1.99 PRODUCT OF CALIFORNIA SAVE 350 BUNCH FRESH a BROCCOLI DOLE OR CHIQUITA /kg lbs. FRESH FROM THE TROPICS / 90 FRESH DELICIOUS CHUCKWAGON BREAD 450 g 69' LOAF AKESHOP SPECIAL FRESH, DELICIOUS, FRESH COUNTRY OVEN ' TENDER DINNER APPLE PIES ROLLS goR 565 g 9 8d EACH • Doz. EACH 6 VARIETIES VENETIAN ICE' CREAM ONE LITRE SIZE 1.69 12" WIDE ALCAN FOIL WRAP 25 FT. ROLL 990 KRAFT BRICK STYLE PHILADELPHIA CR.50 CHEPKESEG. 2 g 1.59 WITH PORK OR -VEGETARIAN STYLE VAN CAMP BEANS 19 oz. TINS 79 HIGH LINER SEAFRESH BATTERCRISP FISH 350 g f.49 INSTANT CARNATION POWDERED MILK 500 g PKG. 169 HIGH LINER FROZEN SOLE FILLETS 16 01. 3.89 89 HOTHOUSE GROWN ENGLISH CUCUMBERS 9S° PRODUCT OF ONTARIO4. EA. PROD. OF CALIF. PROD. OF U.S.A. CAN. NO. 1 , SWEET EATING SPANISH NAVEL ORANGES PROD. OF ONTARIO CANADA FANCY MACINTOSH APPLES 5 LB. BAG 2.,9 SIZE9 113 DOZ. • 9 TYPE ONIONS Vf 6," Ib. Crossroads --March 14, 1984—Page 5 POINOMIallt PROD. OF CALIF. CANADA NO. 1 CELERY STALKS EACH 99' PROD. OF CHILE THOMPSON SEEDLESS GRAPES 3.st /kg. .59 Ib. apogimommantamm more fresh produce JUICY RED RIPE MEXICAN WATERMELON /kg 39# LasomIb. PRODUCT OF FLORIDA FRESH ENDIVE PRODUCT OF FLORIDA ° FRESH ESCAROLE NO NAME 20 LB BAG WILD BIRD SEED EA NO NAME 10 LB BAG /9' SUNFLOWER SEED a. 99 ONTARIO GROWN CANADA MO, 1 EA. 79# FRESH PARSNIPS 2 it 1.49 ONTARIO GROWN FRESH 3� 99 BEAN SPROUTS ° 0 59# �a�,tw��rn++r WE WILL BES EASED TO SERVE YOU IN: 87210th Sweat Open 6 nights a week 611 9:30 HANOVER ELIVIIRAS 232 Arthur St. S. Open Wed.. Thurs. and Fri. evenings LISTOWEL 975 Wallace Ave, N. Open Wod., Thurs. end Fri, evenings FERGUS ' 735 Tower St. S. Open Wed.. Thurs. and Fri. evenings WINGHAM Corner of No. 4 end 86 Hwys. Open Thurs.. Fri. evenings �.>;wn;,�2[d. `�:�.aau,...�1•�af�n. .utxr�ariii;:oi H. GORDON GREEN Some three centuries ago the English poet John Dry- den observed that "war sel- dom enters except where wealth allures". Seems tome however that we can't be • quite as pagan today as we were in Dry - den's time because as I see it the chief motivation of war is no longer greed but religion. In Iran, in Ireland and in the Middle East the gutters run blood everlastingly be- cause men are everlastingly convinced that the faith one has inherited from one's forefathers is the one true faith and all else is error and the work of Satan. The bitter irony of all this holy catas- trophe is that it just couldn't happen if only there were some way to make these young men with the smoking guns and the Molotov cock- tails think, rather than to merely believe. But these young men are no longer young enough for that. They are already in- capble of any kind of reason- ing other than that of their fathers. Their faith is reason enough; and to defend4m dis- seminate that faith of -their fathers they are willing to kill or be killed. Along the border between Iran and Iraq there are at this very moment young men whom the Ayotollah Kho- meni has promised that, be- cause they have volunterred to die for the faith, they will immediately enter that won- drous heaven described in the Koran, there to be re- ceivedy "houris, ever vir- gins". And to guarantee such a reward each of these young martyrs goes into battle wearing a blood -red hea d band bearing the words "Warriors of God"; and to each the Ayotollah has given a small metal key to to ke into the fray — a key which e1y rish'uck-the-p mals ----- of that heaven. Some of these warriors of Gei'd are only 12 years old. Few are older than 17, bt t all ar'e' old enough to' believe blindly. And hundreds of them have already died crawling over Iraqi Imine - fields and letting themselves he blown to bits in order to map a safe passage for r Iran- ian tanks. And it was probably one of these youths whose !Suicide took the lives of . 241 U.S. Marines "in Lebanon a few months ago. In Ireland the senseless fighting leaves fewer -dead of course, but here agzlin it is religion which lies at the root of the trouble, avid here again there seems to be no hope of making peace. As a British editor asked recently "How can we hope for any solution to this ins. ane vio- lence as long as ` children everywhere there lire grow- ing up with no mer nory of a time when they were not taught to hate?" There are thinkers amongst us who a re convin- ced that the only hope for achieving peach here on earth is in some form of World Governmer it — a Par- liament of Man ars Tennyson once dreamed it. But if that momentous day !Should ever materialize I wonder if one of the first thin f;s that Par- liament of Man would have to do would be to prohibit the teaching of relligion to any youth before he, or she was old enough to he capable of independent jut Igmint. Abol- ish all of f. he religious schools everyvvhere, abolish Sunday Schools, make it a criminal offense to even teach religion in the home. . Such a law would not out- law religious teaching how- ever, but would make it per- missable onl!,r when a youth has reached the age of ma- ture judgement as prescrib- ed by law, and then he would be made aware of many reli- gions and n of just the one which happens to be in his , pedigree. What would that prescrib- ed age be? I'd suggest 18. That's the age we gjenerally suppose our youngsters are mature enough to face many of the other haznrds of life — ha- zards like driving, drinking sex and marriage. Why ndt add religion to the list? Wright b irthdate Amerltcan aviation pio- neer Orville Wright was born Mc Dayton, Ohio, on Aug. 19;, 1871.