The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-04-04, Page 1913001i,,REVIEW
ri
FOR YOUR BATHROOM CHOCOLATE OR DOUBLE CHOCOLATE
8 ROLL 3 COLOURS WESTONS
ROYALE TISSUE WAGON WHEELS
GENERAL MILLS
CHEERIOS
SUPERMAN
FRENCH FRIES
STRAIGHT
OR
CRINKLE
575
BOX
350 g
PKG.
•
1 kg
ASSORTED VARIETIES
DARES
COOKIES
SPAGHETTI, ZOODLES OR
LIBBYS
ALPHAGETT1
SEVEN VARIETIES
STOKELYS
VEGETABLES
14 oz.
400 g
14(oz.
FROZEN CONCENTRATED
REGULAR - MINT - GEL
McCAINS CREST
ORANGE AMU TOOTHPASTE
TIN
NIBLETS
12 oz.
TIN
4 POPULAR VARIETIES
PURE SPRING
SOFTIVRINKS
NORDICA CREAMED
COTTAGE
CHEESE
500 g
ALL FLAVOURS -SWISS STYLE
GAY LEA
YOGURT
355 mL
150 MC
BOTTLEP
•
POPULAR MOUTHWASH
SCOPE 750 mL
MAPLE
CANNED HAMS' 5 Ib.
3.991\
9 MOTHER PARKERS
McNAIRS SULTANA
'RAISINS 750 g
McNAIRS SEMI -SWEET 350 g McNAIRS SHREDDED OR FLAKED SWEETENED
TUBE
75 s 1.99
1.99
2.9 O.P. TEA BAGS
CHOCOLATE CHIPS t 7'9 COCONUT 200 g 1.N
FIVE ROSES 2.5 kg ASSORTED VARIETIES
ALL PURPOSE KAL KAN 170 g
FLOUR 2.59 CAT FOOD V/
DOLE 3 VARIETIES JUICE FAK
PINEAPPLE 19oz
PLUS
DEPOSIT
CLOVER LEAF 220 qCLOVERLEAF FLAKED ALBACORE if AA,
COHOE SALMON 1.69 WHITE TUNA .44g LOY
McNAIRS 375 g
MEDIUM PRUNES
CREAM SAUCE OR BUTTER SAUCE
A AA FRANCO AMERICAN 3 VARIETIES 4,89,
1./7 GRAVIES 10 TNS2/S9
FARMHOUSE FROZEN
AASSORTE-
VEGETABLES 250 PIES 3409 1.49
9 89 0
GREEN GIANT
MARSHMALL
TOWELS 1.19 BATH 1.19
HI -DRI 2 ROLL MR. CLOWN soo mL KRAFTS
INI WHITE 500g
WHITE OR YELLOW BUBBLE.
SUPER SPECIAL
•
id 11111
WESTONS WHITE
OLD MILL BREAD
\ GRANNYS DELICIOUS
450-g
LOAVES
FOR
. 8,1 rif
•
BIINSE
, ' s
WESTONS FRESH MEALTYME 10
HAMBURG OR WIENER REG.
ROL1
LS
2.09
7K!.
PKG. OF 8
WESTONS FRESH
ENGLISH MUFFINS
BREAD 450 LOAF 129
OLD BAVARIA BRAND
APPLE
WESTONS FRESH
RAISIN
STRUDEL 420
9
SPEC,
WESTONS 1882
WHOLE WHEAT BREAD
675 g
LOAF
PKG. OF 12
WESTONS FRESH
DINNER. ROLLS
4.
SWISS ROLLS
WESTONS DELICIOUS
. RASPBERRY OR STRAWBERRY 9
JAM FILLED
WESTONS
BUNS TRAY OF 6
PKG. OF 8
WESTONS FRESH SPICY
HOT CROSS BUNS
WESTONS TASTY
PLAIN OR SUGARED
WE RESERVE
REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS CAKE DONUTSRESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASES 9
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4
Crossroads—April 4, 1984—Pages
At wit's end
by Erma bombeck
\6131100 1WIP
kletC IlranrIximr. Ise
I'M trying to dean up
things and get 11211 life in
order so be able to devote
the next seven months to the
birth of Princess Di' s and
Prince Chrlessecond
child.
Already I've rnade a nota-
tion of where I was and what
I was doing when I got the
news. I was having breakfast
with my husband (half d
grapefruit and a bowl of
crispies with half a banana
and skim milk) when I heard
it announced on, "Good
Morning, America".
Anticipating all of my
questions, a British spokes-
person said if the new baby
was a girl and was as
"spirited" as her Aunt Anne
was with her brother Prince
Charles, it could give Prince
William a run for his money.
(Not to mention the United
Kingdom and Canada.)
In the ensuing months, I
must be prepared to absorb
Princess Di's maternity
wardrobe, her royal diet,
and if we're lucky perhaps
her milliner will "leak"
sketches of the hat she will
wear during delivery.
The new nursery will come
under scrutiny, as well as
will her layette. Time, Life
and Newsweek will have in-
depth interviews with the
palace obstetrician, details
about the new nanny and
how the people of Great Bri-
tain are being prepared for
the imminent birth. There's
no doubt there will be a poll
conducted to suggest a
name.
The tackier tabloids will be
busy dispensing updated
graphs of what this does to
the line of succession, with
perhaps an outrageous quote
by one of the princesses
complaining that if they
knew they were going to be
this far removed from the
throne they would never
have practised all that wav-
ing all those years.
Psychology Today will run
a cover story on the psycho-
logical effects of the Cain
a made -for -television movie
is undoubtedly being put to-
gether asi write showing the
royal „couple .panning_ a
seco • child; sttiing' Ark -
tori Prmci ; and Clwisio-
pher 'eeve.
Alrea • I have read where
a Britis gynecologist is
warnin of a copycat baby
boom and suggesting that
the royal couple stop at two
children. "Women think it is
a great distinction for their
children to share the same
birth year as a prince or
princess and an influence
like Diana would mean an
extra 2,000 babies this year."
There were a lot of things I
was going to do this year. I
was going to clean out the
hall closet, stitch my per
sonal goals on a tea towel,
plan a family reunion, and
maybe start writing a new
book, but all that has to go on
the back burner. Getting a
royal baby born is just too
time-consuming.
JAMES EDWARD
OGLETHORPE. By Joyce
Blackburn. Dodd, Mead and
Company (Canada) Ltd.,
Toronto. 144 pp.
Reviewed by
MADDIA
Here is a book about the
founder of the colony 'of
Georgia in what is now the
United States. The book was
well written by a woman who
lives on St. Simons Island off
the Georgia coast. It cele-
brates James Edward Ogle-
thorpe (1696-1785) and that is
the book's name "James
Edward Oglethorpe".
It is a brief narrative bio-
graphy easy to read, but it
shows Oglethorpe as a real
hunian being with real vir-
tues and real felings. It
shows how the colony came
to be established and how
Oglethorpe came to be con-
nected with it. It is an excit-
ing volume about Spaniards,
Indians, settlers, and the
home folks in England.
Joyce Blackburn's
"James Edward Ogle-
thorpe" is very informative
about the founding and early
days of Georgia and about
the most important man con -
fleeted with the colony.
A dragonfly myth
In rural England and In
New England, dragonflies
were once known as "darn-
ing needles" or "sewing
needles" because people
thought they could sew up
children's eyes, gars and
mouths.