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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-03-30, Page 25WESTONS "BROWN 1' SERVE" OR "SOFT 'N' CRUSTY" ASSORTED VARIETIES RUFFLES OR LAY'S POTATO CHIPS 9 • WELCHS GRAPE JUICE 12 oz. FROZEN EC C C COL DIET COKE TAR, SPRITE OR SUGAR FREE SPRITE CASE OF 2410 OZ. TINS (LIMIT 3 CASES PER FAMILY) DUVET ASSTED COLOURS BATHROOM TISSUE 169 I:. GREEN GIANT FROZEN SWEET PEAS KERNEL CORN ONE KILO BAG 1.19 f.99 NEILSONS SOUR CREAM 250 mL 69f DIETRICHS 100% WHOLE WHEAT BREAD 675 g LOAF 790 CLUBHOUSE MANZANILLA THREE VARIETIES LOOSE PACK BICKS OLIVES DILL PICKLES 375 mL - ONE LITRE JAR f.99 TOFFUFAY CHOCOLATES 4...,, A�:.::::: THREE SIZES NEW .FREEDOM MAXI PADS 1 0 s or 12 s PER 1,49CARTON f.69 FIVE ROSES FLOUR 4.69 BABY POWDER 400e?.S9 iiG;�i►:v:1:Y CIA: 4 OLL KG. GREEN GIANT FROZEN MIXED VEGETABLES 199 NEILSONS PREMIUM ICE CREAM NOVELT!ES .CTN. OF 12�/ .29 SWEET MIXED, YUM YUM BICKS PICKLES ONE LITRE 99 • MAZOLA CORN OIL 129 ;NRF RED ONLY CLOSE-UP TOOTHPASTE 100 mL 99? BIRDSEYE COOL WHIP 50o mL RICHS COFFEE RICH 1 Kg DEJEAN REGULAR COCKTAIL SHRIMP 4 oa. PLASTIC FILM GLAD WRAP ao m ALCAN 12 INCH FOIL WRAP 25 FT. POWDERED AJAX CLEANSER 600 g 89' 79° 169 79° 99' 89' SATURDAY AFTER GOOD FRIDAY ALL STORES OPEN SATURDAY AT 8:00 A.M. MARKET SQUARE, KITCHENER 7:00 A.M. WESTONS BREAD' STUFFING FOR YOUR EASTER POULTRY 310 g PKG. GREEN GIANT FROZEN GREEN BEANS OR FR. GREEN BEANS ONE K!LO BAG i................ ;>: BRIGNTS GAIDEN BLEND JUICE ONS LITRE Q :� MONARCH SOFT STYLE E ,;IAL MARGARINE FANCY HONEY POD PEAS, CREAM,.CORN, CUT GREEN OR WAX BEANS, 14 o o OR 12 oz. KERNEL CORN / STOKELYS VEGETABLES sir TINS FOR NEILSON LARGE OR SMALL CURD LIGHT 'N' LIVELY COTTAGE SEALTEST CHEESE . YOGURT 500 g TUB ASSTED FLAVOURS - 500g f.39 1.19 SKIPPY 2 VARIETIES PEANUT BUTTER 500 g JAR 1.99 STOKELYS 2 VARIETIES KIDNEY BEANS 14 oz. TIN 590 JELLIED OR WHOLE ALLANS OCEAN SPRAY WISHING WELL CRANBERRIES CHOC HEN 14 oz. TIN 156 g :f•f9 1.59 NESTLES FRENCHS CH000LATE MUSTARD 750 9 500 mL 2.49 89' ALL GRINDS NABOB "TRADITION" COFFEE WESTONS STONED WHEAT THINS 300 g 990 HIGH LINER COOKED FROZEN FISH IN BATTER 700 g WESTONS LEMON FILLED BUNS 6's CLUBHOUSE RED MARASCHINO CHERRIES 250 mL STOKELYS BEAN SALAD 14 oz. OCEAN SPRAY CRANBERRY COCKTAIL OR CRANAPPLE DRINK 40 oz. LAUNDRY DETERGENT ARCTIC POWER 6 LITRE CROSSE & BLACKWELL MINCEMEAT 16 oa REALEMON LEMON JUICE 675 mL DOLE BRAND PINEAPPLE JUICE 48 o8. 139 1.15 199 69' 149 439 X019 159 139 NEILSONS PREMIUM ICE CREAM SWEET MARIES 8's 129 DOMINION EASTER EXPRESS RABBIT 10 5 oz 2.99 DREAM WHIP f.69 APPLE, ORANGE, GRAPEFRUIT BRIGHTS JUICES ONE LITRE GLASS 4 Crossroads—March 30, 1983—Page 5 ORR GOSLILIN !OGLOBAL NEWS THE ST OF PE7\ TRUEMAN a I got a letter not long ago from a man in Sudbury who will become a grandfather sometime this summer and who is anxious about it. Man- like, he is already assuming that the child will be a grandson. He says it better than I could, so I'll quote his. letter from here on: "The' doctors must be very careful riot to injure him as he enters his new world. He must then be protected against,a host of bacteria that would invade his young body. Surviving these hazards, we find our- selves responsible for a small person who will eat anything not made of stone, who will walk on thin ice, run up to cross dogs, fall out of trees, and just behave as though he wished to self-des- truct. What I don't accept is that the greatest threat to my grandson's future is his fellow man. I am sure that this summer in Russia, many people will become grandparents. They will share my concerns about their new family members. I offer them my love and my good wishes for I know in my heart that they wish me no harm. Why must it be that a handful of leaders can turn millions of people against one another? We, the family of man who have survived a thousand calamities and still evolved to this place of en- lightenment? Yet every day we hear in the news our fear- less ieaclers debating over who has the most killing power and whose delivery system is hest My grandson stands a good chance of be- ing killed by some people who are just like him and who really bear him no mal- ice. Why can't world leaders, who are supposed to repre- sent the hes! in man, see the madness of their ways? I am not so naive as to think that either side will suddenly destroy their weapons. But I am so naive that I think the top men of each side should talk, not lower -ranking peo- ple who have no mandate other than to count rockets. As a citizen'of P1anet'1✓,ar`tWsil_ charge world leaders with treason against their fellow man. Not so much for build- ing more weapons, but, knowing the consequences of global conflict, they did fail to communicate with each other with all the sincerity they could corntnand. Such a place for my grandson to be ` born. The corn grows seven feet high and the laughter of children rings through the land. The whole world could be like this if the same money and effort that goes into killing went to the bene- fit of man. I have no'enemies in foreign lands. My only enemies are the leaders of both sides who fail to work through the night to bring peace on earth." • The typed portion of the letter ends there and my cor- respondent scribbles a P.S. in his own hand "I just wrote this note to relieve my frustrations. A carpenter has little voice in the scheme of things." I would add my own P.S. to his: Simply that car- pentry is an honorable craft, and that at least one car- penter we all know of changed the course of his- tory and human thought; and that sometimes, I wish the whole world was in the hands of grandparents. BOOK REVI BEOWULF. Illustrations by Charles Keeping. Text by Kevin Crossley -Holland. Ox- ford University Press. To- ronto. 8'2 by II'3 in. 48. pp. $14.75. Reviewed by PERI }' MAUUUX Here is the story of Beo- wulf told clearly and mov- ingly by Kevin Crossley -Hol- land in a large format ormat book illustrated by Charles Keep- ing Beowulf of the Geats goes to Denmark to fight a monster that has been invad- ing the great hall of Heorot and killing and eating men. The monster Grendel is van- quished but there is still his monster mother Beowulf -conquers her too and thus frees the Danes from this evil. Ile returns to his own land and becomes king. Eventually he is killed by a dragon. hut at the same time he destroys the dragon. fhis is a gond presentation of the Anglo-Saxon epic, hut the black and white illustra tions are fuzzy and indistinct and .ugge*.t rather than de pint.