HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1980-08-07, Page 14r• 73, rrAr-
11/4
• When Mend get together
•for good times; fond Is al-
ways part of the fund. •
'
Is entertaining ever more
frustration than fun for you -
or 'Mere preparation. , than
bartic.ipation? If so, you may
• need some of the new party
food ideas in "Food For
Friends:"
•
The 441 Homemaking
• Club Project(will be offered
I in Huron County .this fall:
SOine, of., the recipes Fe
Tacos, Cidahage Rolls, Maze,
and Chinese Style Pork '
Entertaining With energy
consertration in ,:Mind is
stressed throughout the pro-
ject, Members learn how to
detetanine the cost of energy
used by various small
..... ap-
pliancesii making the mouth
wateringsrecipes. They also
become familint with the
important features of each
-^ka appliance.•
So, for good -eating, learn-
• ing, and fun besides, tome
out to "Foed For Friends."
We are presently looking
for volunteer leaders for this
program. The requirements
for forming a club are that
there Fe ttrn adult readers
and a lInhilinuni Of four young
people. Membership age is
12 to 26 as of Septeinber 1st;
1980, If you would like to get
involved, contact Grace Bird
or Loralee Marshall at 482-
3428 Or Zenith 7-2800. Lead-
ers workshops begin on Aug-
ust, 21st in the following
locations: -
Walton - August 21-22;
Clinton August *28 - 29;
August 2a 'September 6;
September 13 - ,September
20; Exeter - Augu4 26 a 27;
Vcringham - September 9 - 10;
Pottle - September 11 - 12.
Grace Bird &
" Loraled Marshall
• Home-Ec. for Huron
BEAN DAY 1980
• Centralia College will
again host a Bean Day on
_WednesdayAugust...201h—
Yon will hear talks on weed
control, problem:weeds and
new bean varieties. • There
will also be a- discussion. on
seed quality. Don Littlejohn I.
from W.G. Thompson's will
talk about coloured beans.
As in other years, Charlie
ftli.;,ireport. The tanrs -Sind
10:00 and will be repeated
in the afternoon. A snack
booth will be available on the'
CONFERENCES
More than 60 4-H agricul-
tural 'club members from
Brae, •Prey and Huron'
Countlea will'be participating
at the 'Regional 44 Confer-
ence held at Centralia Col-
lege of -A0111,401 Tech-
nolegy on AugusiVth,
and 141h. ••,‘ '
This three-day thnference,
Nspons,oted by the Ontario
Ministry orAgrieulture and
Food, brings 15 -year old club
members together, to build
leadership skills, self an-
fidence and enthusiasm for
the. 4-H program.
The conference pro-
grammelocuses_on_one_part
Of the theme - Me, You and
Us - each day. The first day is
devoted -to developing 'self
confidence. Communication
with others is the theme of
the second day. On the final
day, groups particpate in
non-competitive games to
There are ' Id,,SollrentY , of
,
•recteattOnal -itali;dtiee and
oppartunites for Serious
Cussiona on current issues
such is urban sprawl, the;'''
corporate versus'the famdy
farm, and the role of the
•rural youthfin'the agriculture
•community.
Another aim ()Labe con-
ference is to stimulate inter -
et econdary educ-
ation, The conferenceis held
at - Centralia College to give
4-1.1 members a chance to
experience campus life and
to tour a post secondary
'institution.
The conference also gives
15 year olds a chance to
discussitheir, plans with 4-H
members of the same age• '
•
THE HURON EXPOSIT911; At)Gt4P17.
Wingham* Sandra Daters,
#1, Dashwootit.Caroline /Vint' -
vey, #1, Clifford; Roh Staf
ford, #1, Wroxeter; Cheryl
. Vieter; Jacquie
ohertsort, #2, Blueaale; Ain
Saldivar, #5t, Seatorth; Tom
•Menheerea ,#4, Seaforth;
, Melanie Scott, #1;''BelgtOei
Meribeth Scott, #1, Belgreve
Greg Hoggarth, /12, KipPen;
Ken Siertsema, #3, Blyth;
Kevin Clark, #5, Goderich;
Bruce Boneschansker; #1,
Ethel; Kitten Heist, #2; Cen-
tralia; Paul .Gingerich', #2,
Zurich; Wayne Marshall, #6,
Goderich.
Len -MacGregor.,
Extension Assistant
HAVE YOU DISPOSED OF
YOUR EMPTY PESTICIDE
and learn how the 4-11 pro- • CONTAINERS?
Along otir roadside we
gramme can help thern ac-
-hieve their-goals,--Delegates_occaaiontly_see_a. stream_
for the conference are select- !link or ditch cluttered with
ed on their interest in agri--
pesticide containers. These
culture, the 4-H programme containers ate the respon-
and their leadership qual- •aibility of the pergon who has
left them exposed to the
ities. Attending from Huron
are: Helen Jacobs #1, Zurich; environment. Any problems
such as contamination bY
Karen McMiihael, Box 70,
leeching into the stream or
Wroxeter; Ron Godkin, #1,
Broadwell will give an up -to- build a aeamwork affitude. — Walton; Lisa Thompson. #5,
direct contamination frill
back on" the •owner'',The
person leaving these con- •
tainers on the roadside is
also liable to prosecution for
improper disposal of con-
tainers, Pesticide containers
must be either punctured or
broken and burled in at least
50 ctnof soil away from- the
water table or water course.
Anothercomment ,we
should consider in referring
to the local watering hole is
while filling the sprayer, the,
suction line from the stream
must have a hack flow de-
vice. If there 15 back flow or
over flow from the tank, the
spray operator is respon-
sible. If the water thurse is
contaminated, the Director of
Pesticides Control, Ministry
• of the Environment, niust he
notified. Containment and
_elean -up -are_the.-reapon-
Sihility of the Person who has
contaminated the water
course.
Ann Steeper will be, work-
ing in my area during the
month of August, out of the
Clinton Agricultural Office.
Bruce Lobb
Pesticides Control Officer
LGATE PALMOLIVE SALE!
FAB
LAUNDRY
DETERGENT
6 LITRE 2.4-4
PALMOLIVE
GREEN OR ASSORTED
BATH BARS
PKG OF 2
TOOTHPASTE
2 VARIETIES 1..89
COLGATE
200 ml. TUBE
TAMPAX TAMPONS
*2.99
SLENDOR. REOMLAR,
SUPER OR SUPER PLUS
!,10X OF 40
HALO SHAMPOO
*1.39
FOR NORMAL OR
OILY HAIR
350 ml.
AJAX CLEANSER
FOR YOUR •
HOUSEHOLD
22 oz. SIZE 65'
BAGGIES
BOX OF 40
FOR STORING FOOD
SANDWICH BAGS
IRISH SPRING
BATH BAR SOAP
PKG. OF 2
2130 g..
PRICES IN iFFECT UNTIL CLOSING TUESDAY AUGUST 12
• MD FOR CLOSE SHAVES e WILKINSONS
.
30M. FILM WRAP 4A CONTACT RAZOR 41. PKGS. OF 5
it9FTRETCHNSEAL S '' 1.0INSON _
Y VILK-
EACH 1 95f CONTACT BLADES_ 149
N.. -V
IDEAL FOR SALADS & SANDWICHES . 4 VARIETY CHOICES
MAPLE LEAF ' ZEHRS .
FLAKES OF HAM POTATO CHIPS
990
PALMOLIVE
LIQUID
DETERGENT
32 oz SIZE
3.6,LITRE JUG
JAVEX •
LIQUID
BLEACH
FANCY QUALITY
HEINZ
TOMATO JUICE -
TIN
OZ 79
6 5 oz TINS
99'
'225 g. PACKAGES •
• KRAFT
MAC & CHEESE
• QINNERS
46225 g
PKGS
79' -
FROZEN POTATOES
• CARNATION
HASH
BROWNS:
S4
ARATIII
FROZEN
DINNERS
ASSORTED 11AVOURS
WEIGHT WATCHERS
SOFT DRINK
39'
RETURNABLE
750 mI BOTTLE
PLUS DEPOSIT
PIECES & STEMS
, RIO
BRAND )
MUSHROOMS
'A GREAT SUMMER 'DRINK
. • APPLE OR ORANGE
C -PLUS DRINKS
48 fl OZ
TINS
59#
SHELL
MOTOR OIL, 4E 89'
5 FLAVOURS cs
QUENCH
CRYSTALS L3...iv
ail FILLETS OR
IN BATTER
FROZEN $i 98
14 oz
14 oz
TINS
• STOKELY
KIDNEY BEANS
Z890TINS •
ROBIN HOOD 6 VARIETIES
PUDDING
CAKE MIX 247 g
.SPAGHETTL'MACAROfil OR -SP7A6HETTIN1
CATELLI -
PASTAS
QUENCH
CRYSTALS 274 if•UY
ifiEd""" a
COFFEE "9. .3-9
1 FRUIT. ORANGE
LAURA SE
COR sj o
MARMALADE 2_4 I • n
17
o.
GINNAMON
BUTTERHORNS 79
SOO g
YRTWPORK OR IN' MOLASSES
STOKELY
VAN CAMP BEANS
r) 79'
14 oz
BLACK DIAMOND GRATED
PARMESAN "
CHEESE 25° g 1.19
GAY LEA DAIRIES QUALITY
SOUR
65' CREAM
PARKAY TUR STYLE
soo me_ TUB
SOFT
MARGARINE
MONARCH BRAND
DESSERT
TOPPING
STUART BRAND TASTY
FIESTA
SNACKS "G °F 889'
WESTONS 1882 WHOLE WHEAT
ONE MILLED
BREAD 24 " 1°4F Y
225
a-,
89'
69'
M -M -M -GOOD!
FRESH BAKING FROM OUtt
counitir
IN-STORE BAKESHOP
!
FRESH BAKED .
COUNTRY OVEN .
WHITE BREAD 24,nz R°46.•
F
GAY LEA ALL FLAVOURS
SWISS
STYLE
YOGURT
0
zehrs
fine inarkets... of fine foods
BLACK DIAMOND CHUNK STYLE.
FRESH COUNTRY OVEN
MOZZARELLA
6iiiiiiiirs„f1•39, CHEESE _12.2z___189
T.h.boghts.. ott
While leafing through notes on possible
column topics, I found short philosophies
of life that hadimpressed me enough to jot
them down ,and Save them. Some were
penned by well-known poets; some were
quoted from famous people; others were
offered by everyday people like yeo and
me. They gave a varied outlook on life'. •
If it'satirue that "the best things in life
are free," the better things of life must be
diminishing because the price tags are
certainly increasing.
But someone pointed out:
"Money can buy a lot of -things - finery
but not beauty; : books but not, brains;
knowledge but not wisritorin fun but not
happiness; n house but not a home;
luxuries but not culture; food but not
appetite; medicine but not health..."
Everyiyconfionts us with temptation.
Someone put it this way: "Opportunity ,
knocks only once, but temptation leans on
the doorbell."
Some people spend a lifetime searching
for certain' things. One person explained
humility is hard to find because "the -
rriinute you think you've got it, you've lost
it."
On the subject of looking for something
lost, enry Miller wrote: "The reason you
can' d what is lost is because you're
looking where it isn't."
The preceding sounds like a candidate
for entry into Murphy's Law: "anything
that cart go wrong will go 'wrong." Here's
another: "At the precise moment, you take
off your shoe in a shoe store, your big toe
will pop put to see -what's going on."
Life can be frustratiog at times, esnecial-
ly for a fellos,v that joins the Navy to --e the
world and spends ' three years in a
submarine. ' a
A traveller noted with tongue-in-cheek
that Air Canada carried a Bible on each
plane; it was kept in the first-clas,s section.
C.P. Air didn't provide a Bibrefor reading
on ordinary flights but thoughtfully tucked
a New Testament in a pocket of a life raft.
Someone suggested that, if you can't see
the bright side, you should polish the dull
side - a ploy to combat pessimism.
5:A
The man who gets ahead in life is the one
Ivho does more than is necessary and keeps
on doing it. Someone else contended, "id
you do more than people -expect. of you,
soon they'll expect mote."
Everyone needs a friend; it has been said
a friend is „semeone wilt) knows all about
you and likes you anyway.
Phyllii Cult Mabry wrote:,
"Be a friend through good and lean
times, „ a. -
Be a friend through in-between times,
Be a friend and be a good one every day
'Cause the world could use more caring
And the world could use more sharing
And the world coulduse more friehds
along the way..."
Another poet, whose name I couldn't
find among tn_y_noteae_apre"sied__a."
sentiment:
brothers"There is a destiny that makes us
None goes his way alone
All that we send into the lives of others
Cranes back into our own."
For the past' few months, Terry
Fox has been bringing lame into the lives
of manueople, He's the twenty-two year
old from Port Coquitlam, B.C., whose
making an historic run atross Canada on an
artificial leg to raise funds for cancer
research and to show what can b'e done. He
lost his right leg to cancer three years' ago.
At time of this writing, he is in the
Gravenhurat area heading north. In Lon-
don, Ontario, he was asked if he could still
fail and not be able to finish the run.
Terry's reply was, "I believe I will finish
because my attitude is that I'm not a
quit-ter...But something could happen, that
couldn't do anything abbut, and I
wouldn't be able to finish, but I'd still be a ,
winner. .As long as I do the best I can, I'll
be a winner."
Not all amputees can run across Cana
on one leg. Few Canadians can run across
Canada on two legs..But, I think Tery
'telling us that if we do the best we can in
whatever we're involve we can all be
winners.
,
Manor barbecue best yet
BY MABEL TURNBUIL
Friday afternoon the.Staff
planntd a barbecue which
turned out to be the best yet.
We had an unusual program
to entertain us after eating
generous quantities of barn -
burgers and hot dogs.
Ariel Wood. our barbecue
specialist, was busy flipping
an first course followed by
chocolate- milk as a • drink.
and multicoloured ice cream
cones and dainties: Yumnim I
All disappeared quickly, read
for seconds and thirds avail-
able' to those who wished
them. Nobody was shy.
We were -seated in a semi-
drcle on the lawn facing
Centre St. The weather co-
operated so the setting and
all was ideal.
Maude Baird. Brucefield,
cur senior resident at 98
years 'young' joined us. She
looked young and attractive
in a large pink floppy hat
which shaded her from the
noon sun. Sfie seemed to
enjoy it all, including a
special program, when,
Andrea Muir, granddaughter
of Doris Muir, a member of
the staff and Debbie Camp-
bell. daughter of Grace
Campbell . who is a recent
member of out staff as cook,
danced two numbers; a clog
jig on an improvised wooden
9
surface on the sidewalk and a
reel.
Some of our young neigh-
bours brought their pets to
perform for us. their own
idea. The tricks of these pets
proved very popular. Carol
Anne Glanville had her pet
doggie. Toby. Carol Anne's
dog also rode around the
drcle in the wagon, stopping
to be petted by the eager
residentS. Toby jumped
through a large hoop in and
out obeying her cornmands
very closely
Carol Anne and her young
brother Gary had a white
guinea pilL, which made
throat noRtri when fondls •
-cuddled. He was caieed
Oliver and took to the
_ attention he received from
,residents who stroked him -
fondly.
A KITTEN
Debbie Dinsmore brought
a link black kitten and a
forge brown dog. Jigs.
borrowed from the Mpegges.
neighbours. The residents
cuddled the kitten and the
dog showed his intelligence
by doing many tncks at
Debbie's command. cg .
rolling over. playing dead
dog. barking and speaking,
sitting up. He's also reported
to be a dedicated watch -do -g.
Ron Hildebrand. Seaforth,
called to visit his gtand-
mother Bessie Smote. As he •
is an ex -pupil of mine he
came in for a chatIt is good
to see ex -pupils and follow
their careers.
Mr and Mrs. Art Smote,
Staffa and Mr. and Mrs.
Ross Smote visited Mrs.
Bessie Smote this week. ,
Betty Beuttenmiller called
and took her grandmother
out two successive after- '
noons to do a little work at
her home.
Patti Muegge took Mrs.
Anna Hoegy to Mitchell.
Vicki •(Jordon came along
afqa the program with a
treat for me. Thanks Vicki! A
k
sp'ia1 thanks to all who took
part Do the program and alsii
to the staff for making the,
barbecue such an enjoyable
rent It means so much
rittra effort from their- regu•
tar routine to plan and set it
up Thanks.te all the stiff
andan t ho assisted from all
the residents
Our actisist Thelma Bode
drose Dorothy Wolfe. Lucy
flushie. Ruby Anderson.
Mane Seiler and Ada Arm-
strong to Clinton to visit
Fvevlo Malcolm and to Grace
Broadfoot•s. Seaforth for a
loco with these two members
of the .staff or ex -member
Grace kroadfoot.
•
DUBLIN FEED MILL
, is now ready to receive your
WHEAT
• FEED iiidARLEY
345-2330
• Dublin: Ont.
4