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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-01-26, Page 17
HOT CHOCOLATE NEILSONS REG. OR WITH MARSHMALLOW 500 g MAZOLA PURE CORN OIL 750 mL 2.49 f.89 MAYONNAISE2 BY KRAFT ,�m. .39 CASCADE FOR DI1.8 kg 4.59 SHWASHERS D SHWASHERS 1.19 POTATO CHIPS HOSTESS ASST'D VARIETIES 200gPKG. ... .. HIGHLINER FROZEN IN SAUCE FISH FILLETS 1a::IET1ES 239 VAN CAM BEANS 6 WITH PORK, WITH BROWN SUGAR OR VEGETARIAN 14 ©z. TINS KIDNEY FANS 6� STOKELYS DARK RED OR NEW ORLEANS 14 Oz. TINS . . IN-STORE BAKE SHOP THRU TUES. FEB. 1 CHUNKY CHEESE BREAD16QY.f.5 VIENNA OR FRENCH BREAD 16 0z. 2P1 COUNTRY OVEN CARROT CAKE 180.2,29 0 R► 84. 'RAND QUALITY ALL FANCY QUALITY 14 oz. TINS . < .. . DEEP 'N' DELICIOUS McCAIN CAKES C HOC MARBLE, BANANA 19 oz. FROZEN PEPPERONI STYLE TOTINO PIZZA 5 WESTON CHOCOLATE SWISS ROLLS..,... PKG. 350-360 9 FRUIT COCKTAIL, BART. PEARS, PEACHES 89� f.79 :39 8t OF 4 WESTONS APPLE SNACK BUNS PKG. OF 8 REESESPIECES L E.T.'s99 FAVORITE CANDY 1 Ib. PKG. .1I PRIVATE LABEL SAVINGS BULK MILD CHEDDAR CHEESE MEDIUM CHEDDAR CHEESE OLD COLOURED CHEDDAR OLD NIPPY PROCESSED CHEESE 7.59g g , lb BOLD 3 LAUNDRY DETERGENT 8.99 12 L 4.8 kg OVEN MELTS KRAFT PIZZA OR BACON 250 g SPECIAL PRICES IN EFFECT UNTIL CLOSING TUES. FEB. 1ST. 9 AGREE SHAMPOO REG. PROTEIN & HENNA OILY, GENTLE 350 mL Q -TIPS COTTON SWABS BOX OF 180 SPAGHETTI SAUCE RAGU PLAIN ONE LITRE NEILSONS ONION CHIP DIP 2 50 g 99,, 9 79? 200 REGOFF icEs ICE CAPADES ON FAMILY NIGHT TUESDAY FEB. 15TH 8 P.M. PICK UP YOUR COUPON WORTH $2.00 AT ANY ZEHRS OR CORDONS MARKETS REDEEMABLE AT THE KITCHENER MEMORIAL AUDITORIUM FOR ANY RESERVED SEAT OR SEATS FOR FEB. 15 PERFORMANCE. REDEMPTION MUST BE MADE BY MONDAY FEB. 14. CHOC's LATE BARS NEILSONS BUNDLE ASST'D VARIETIES11 BUNDLE OF' 4 PLUM TOMATOES 79# PRIMO CNADIAN 28 oz. TIN CHIC PEAS PRIMO BRAND 19 u. TIN 59' ZIP DOG. 7FOOD 3 w st KLIK BRAND 340 g LUNCHEON MEAT 1.79 TOTAL DIET DOG FOOD 2 kg 2.99 SAUERKRAUT 32 Oz . 1.19 WESTONS FRESH PKG OF 9 CRUSTY ROLLS NEILSONS SOUR CREAM 50D BICKS WINE mL 1.19 1.19 WESTONS - 6 VARIETIES COOKIES PLAYTEX TAMPONS NON -DEODORANT REGULAR - SUPER BOX OF30 3.49 PLAYTEX TAMPONS 3.99 DEODORANT REGULAR - SUPER BOX OF30 zehrs fine markets... of fine foods WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASES TO REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS Crossroads—Jan. 26, 1983—Page 7 Baia;..;cing the books Ask Betty Friedan about the Equal Rights Amend- ment Bill which is back on the congressional books, and she will tell you adamantly and without hesitation: "We are now at a point of turning the government around. We will get the Bill passed before the end of the decade." The gruff -voiced, out- spoken American feminist and author will appear on TVOntario's Speaking Out program, "Women's Lib — Where Now??" on Thursday, January 27 at 9:30 p.m. opposite Toronto Star columnist Michele Lands - berg, an equally outspoken activist. Among the issues up for discussion are: restruc- turing the family; raising children; jobs and job -shar- ing; marriage versus co- habitation; Sexist language and sexist ads; stereotyping, and rape crisis centres. When The Feminine Mystique appeared almost two decades ago, Friedan helped set in motion what has become the most power- ful force for social change in our time. She articulated the yearnings, frustrations, and buried rage so many millions of women felt, but could not express. Although Friedan is still a heroine within the women's movement, some of her more recent comments have been attacked by a new breed of feminists. Friedan has travelled and lectured on women's issues all over the world. Founder and, first president of the National Organization for Women, she is the original convener of the National Women's Political Caucus. In recent years, she has been a leader in the fight for the ERA, and for new ap- proaches to divorce, abor- tion reform, housing, em- ployment, and education. Friedan was named Human- ist of the Year in 1975 by the American Humanist Asso- ciation, and she has received • an honorary Doctorate of Humane Letters from Smith College. Friedan's most recent book, The Second Stage, was published in 1981. The mother of two sons and a daughter, she has residences in New York City and in a small town on the eastern end of Long Island. BILBRAM_ ONTARIO Did you know that the • largest grower of cactus on North America is a 70 -year- old dynamo who lives in Dundas. Dundas, by the way, is a small town near Hamilton. The grower is Ben Veldhuis who has acres, of green- houses on the edge that are packed with cactus. Ben and his family sell over three million cacti a year In 12 hundred varieties. They ship them across con- tinents from Vancouver to Hong Kong, from Barbados to Europe. They have cactus plants with names that would throw even a Latin teacher into a tizzy. Some, are 25 feet high. Others are those squat, dome -like types that you see in landscape gardens. Then there are thousands and thousands of little plants peeking out at you from their greenhouse beds. Ben spends about five months of the year travelling the world buying and selling seeds. He's been doing it for years. He's big, bluff with a booming voice and usually has a black cigar stuck in his mouth. He's a busy man and a knowledgeable one. So is his wife, and his son, and his brother, and his sister, They're all into the act, and none of them seem to slow down. Trucks are coming and go- ing. People are on the phone taking orders. Groups of seniors and school children are being shown around. I stood in the middle of it all while Ben and his sister Martha told me about the care of the water -thrifty prickly plants. But the cactus plants are in no rush. It make take some of them three months just to germinate and a century to become sizeable plants.