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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-01-19, Page 19SCHNEIDERS BEEF WIENERS OR SCHNEIDERS RED HOTS 454 g PKG. FROZEN BEEF SC NEI E STEAKETTES a00g PKG. • KLEENEX FACIAL TISSUES ASST'D COLOURS m 200 SHEETS PRONTO PAPER TOWELS ROLLS FRESH BAKED PACKAGE OF 12 CREST TOOTHPASTE REGULAR, MINT OR GEL LAURA SECORD MINI -PUDDINGS ASST'D FLAVOURS FLAKED PARAMOUNT LIGHT TUNA aso.dIT ` �, \4. � : •h +til .•: �} �;; � , �{i.h+.. .. .-':�M!!•i�1t!tfl:Il:'�14!<:i{ti:':::`•:ii`i :•: VELOUR BATHROOM TISSUE ASST'D COLOURS MILK MATE INSTANT SYRUP CHOCOLATE OR STRAW BERRY .350_mL. DEEP 'N' DELICIOUS PEPPERONI OR DELUXE McCAINS PIZZA 14 oz. OR 15 oz. -------------------------- CTN OF 4 ZEHRS CHEESE COLBY, BRICK, MARBLE, MOZZARELLA, HAVARTI RANDOM CUT /kg GREEN GIANT FANCY QUALITY SWEETLET PEAS FRENCH STYLE OR SEASONED GREEN BEANS 14 oz. TIN !?�ilAiiil�3�►k�1�!• '�:;i;:?;;�r� � �:;ii; ::f%;<i;i;s; ATELLi SPAGHETTINI, READY CUT MACARONI OR SPAGHETTI 1.kg. G11FW TOIMfB.. SPAGHETTI SAUCE DEEP 'N' DELICIOUS SUPREME' McCAINS PIZZA 17 oz. CTN. OF 4 PERT SHAMPOO 300 mL 3L DOWNY FABRIC SOFTENER 9. 100'/• WHOLE WHEAT DIETRICHS BREAD LOAF 675 g 24 oz. 21 PEA SOUP, NAPO & PEA OR Y ETABLE. HABITANT SOUPS �z. TIN STRAWBERRY OR RASPBERRY LAURA SECORD JAMS ALL FLAVOURS NEILSONS FAMOUS ICE CREAM SCENTED OR UNSCENTED SECRET ROLL-ON 75 mL FRESH BAKED DELICIOUS CHOC. CHIP COOKIES COUNTRY OVEN'S OWN BOSTON CREAM PIE COUNTRY OVEN'S OWN WHITE BREAD $50 g• 1,69 4�Og 1.75 24 oz. 65# HIGHLINER FROZEN SOLE FILLETS 16 ®z. 3,29 BLUEWATER BOSTON BLUE 24 oz. FISH STICKS 0 FRIES3.39 32P'K®�. 2.99 G. MORNING MEADOW SEA' WIND FRESH BAR SOAP 2 95 g BARS FOR BLUEWATER BOSTON BLUE FISH it CHIPS TWO VARIETIES SECRET ANTIPERSPIRANT REG. 200 mL OR 80 g SOLID • LIQUID STYLE PALMOLIVE DETERGENT 500 mL f.39 10 kg PLUS 1 kg BONUS GREEN GIANT POLY BAGS FROZEN PEAS OR CORN 0 350 g PKG. NEILSONS FRUIT PLUS OR NATURAL YOGURT 175 g CUPS FOR c MAPLE LEAF FLAKES -J OF TURKEY 184 g GREEN GIANT FROZEN REGULAR OR CRINKLE McCAINS 'SUPERFRIES 1.5 kg 189 PKG. NEILSONS 3 FLAVOR CHOICES GOOD'N'PUDDIN WESTONS BRAN MUFFINS OR 6'S .2 9 BUTTERHORNS FOR YOUR LAUNDRY FAB DETERGENT 6'S 12 I 719 POWDERED AJAX CLEANSER 4th g 69' 159 FANCY QUALITY CREAM STYLE CORN OR SUMMER SWEET PEAS 14 oz. 6 C TIN FAMILY NIGHT FEBRUARY 15 AT THE ICE CAPADES $2.00 DISCOUNT COUPONS AVAILABLE AT ALL STORES DETAILS AT ALL STORES TOO. COPPER SCOURING PUFF CHORE BOY 3'S ALCAN FOIL WRAP ireI-I. ItS9 1140E WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU IN: W 1®tIi Stress Open!! nights , week *1 OHO HANOVER ELMIRA 232 Arthur St. S. Open Wed.. Thurs. and Fri evenings LISTOWEL Wellsce Ave N Open Wed . Thugs and Fri. evenings FERGUS 736 Tower St. S. Open Wed.. Thurs. and Fri, evenings WINGHAM C41,911,46` of Pio 4 end SS itvvys Open Thum . Fri evenings Crossroads—Jan. 19, 1983—Page 7 At wit's end by Enna tombsock =.q,, LI lora P'MP0 P:oEeryrroeo Im Every parent has been through the frustration of trying to get their toddler to talk. The kid slobbers and they shout in excitement, "Didyou hear that? He said, 1 I love you, Mommy."' A simple burp turns into, "I love my new curtains with the teddy bears." I was the same way. I'd stand in front of my son and say, "Ma Ma, Ma Ma. Da Da • ... watch my lips, darling. Maaamaaa . . . Daaaa- daaaa." Finally, one day the child looked me straight in the eyes and uttered his first words — "I'm telling." It was a curious thing to say for a child alone in a room, but from that day for- ward that's all I ever heard him utter. There would be a crash in the bedroom and his voice would emerge Loud and clear, "I'm telling." ' The dog would yelp and run 50 miles an hour out of the house and a voice would say, "I'm telling." Sometimes, therewould be no sound at all — only a tan- talizing threat, ''I'm telling!" There is at least one in- former born to every family. A family couldn't take more than one. His talent for see- ing what no one else sees is positively uncanny. Our stoolie was the only one to see his brother hum- ming after I told him to stop . . . by watching his neck quiver. He could tell by smelling his brother's breath that he ate the banana I was saving for the fruit salad. He could look through a closed door and know that others were hiding from him and making faces by seeing their shadows under the door. He knew by a sixth sense when they were going to raise their hands to hit him - by the draft. He knew when his brother took off his coat on the playground, even though they went to different schools, because his arms were sunburnt. In my heart, I knew' 'he'd grow- up'10' be'Ali agent for the CIA if his brother per- mitted him to grow up. Come to think of it, that's probably what Eve thought the first time she heard her son Abel call from Cain's bedroom, "I'm telling." TVO Academy on computers Bits and Bytes, a television orientation course in micro- computers, is part of the TVO Academy on Computers in Education, TVOntario's step-by-step, 12 -week course combining print and elec- tronic media, starting Wednesday, Feb. 16 at 9 p.m. Each program in the serie deals with practice and theory. The practice ele- ments are interrupted at strategic moments to reveal some of the theory behind bits and bytes, chips, disc drives, floppy discs, and ways of teaching with micro- computers. The theory ele- ment makes use of computer and cell animation, film foot- age, interviews, and visits throughout North America to leaders in educational computing. Bits and Bytes is produced by TVOntario's husband - and -wife team David Stans- field and Denise Boiteau, producers (if Brush Up Your French (the forerunner of The Academy with Jack Livesley), The French Show, and two award-winning series. Parlez-moi and Eureka! Comedians Billy Van and Luba Goy are cast as the computer "innocent" and the genial, nonthreatening g "Van represents the aver- age likable person interested in computers, but, like many people. he's a little wary of them He's also in the series' target group and acts very naturally playing himself," says Stansfield. "The same principles apply to Goy," he continues, "whom Denise worked with on a number of projects in the past." Well-known PET specialist Jim Butterfield is chief consultant for technical con- tent. Butterfield is the asso- ciate editor of Compute! magazine and author of The First Book of KIM, a guide to an early microcomputer system, A A -