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The Huron Expositor, 1972-08-31, Page 5HAVEN PEACHES by the 4qt,, 6qt., 11qt., t LOW PRICE Good Canning Varieties anniversary at the Anglican Church in Brits- eels on Saturday. Mr. Ted Achilles and Kenny Turner of Hearst, spent the week end with Mr. and- Mrs. Rollie Achilles. Mr. and Mrs. Bill Taylor and family of Kintail also visited at the same home. Sunday School will resume after the summer holidays on Sunday, September ICth when the promotio'n service will be • held with the awards and shields given. Recent visitors with Mrs. Russell Marks were Mr. and Mrs. Dorian Campbell of Eugenia Falls and Mr. and Mrs. George Rowland of Mount Bridges. - Mr. Jim Shortreed was taken to Seaforth Hospital by ambulance last week ans is to be transferred to a London Hospital for further treatment. ivir. and Mrs. Charles King of Detroit visited Mr, and Mrs. Gus R-edmonci Saturday night. Mr. David McAllister was taken from Wingham liiispital on Friday to Pine Crest Nursing Horne, Luc know, 'A number from St. Augustine attended the funeral, of Gus Leddy in Wingham on Wednesday. Mr. Pete Jefferson underwent heart surgery at St. Joseph Hos- pital last Wednesday We hope for his speedy recovery. Mr. and Mrs . Joe Carol of Kitchener visited Mr, and Mrs. Gus. Devereaux over the week- end. Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Boyle and family were at wasaga Beach over the week end and visited Mrs. Boyle's brother and family at their cottage. Mr. and Mrs. Ethyarctfirophy of Doll, Mills are spending the L last week of his holiday at their farm home at St, Augnstine, Miss Anae Boyle is staying with her grandmother who has been ill in Blyth. The funeral of Miss Teresa Glasglow of Goderich Was held in St. Augustine Church on Fri- day with burial in St. Augustine Cemetery. She was a former parishoner. Sister Mary Foran left on Wednesday for Labrador where she will teach this yeari There are about 6'7 species of gymnosperms ( plants with essentially naked seeds ) and more than 250,000 species of angiosperms (flowering plants or trees with seeds and .fruits.) BASM*RT•14A14.41(.Mq .$4 I • -ch,frteroci Accoiitoo 476 Mahe St S; EXETER *IMO . W. 881D, C.4. ARNOLD' STINNISSEN • -Life Health and Accident -- Registered Retirement Pensions --, Income Tax Deductable Registered 'Retirement Al4npoitles Representing Sun Life Assurance Company of Canada TELEPHONE 527.0410 117 GODERICH ST. EAST — SEAFORTH •••••••••••••••••••••• NEIAM OF AUBURN • THE,HYg1;41 EXPowrokt 9,NT4 Ai li.;Tx 1,714-4 • JUBILEE PEACHES $1.79 Friday and Saturday only WE. RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT QUANTITIES Back - To - School Specials Are Featured in ur Easy-Care Yard G for Fall Sewing Gym Bags arone s BOOKS and STATIONERY ;TORE ,The Friendly Store in Seaforth - "the friendly town • .O... ...MI Now.. mokoro. smoolo6* Maim'roio omOdoed* -/p 1 K1MBERLEY-CLARK PAPER SALE I pELSEY Assotied Colours KOTEX Reg. or Super 1' I I 4 reit pkg! 69c pkg. of 12 BATHROOM TISSUE FEMININE NAPKINS KLEENEX ASSORTED - COLOURS *olio** =wow I onibmse /MIMI 1.1•1.4 10,•11110•• WNW *Mr XlfENEX FIa Fold 2 ply ASSORTED COLOURS FACIAL TISSUE pkg. of 180 3/88c I mom orogir.,4;41.410 Warm JLEENEX 2 PCY ASSORTED COLOURS FACIAL TISSUE box of 200 3/1 .00 5c 25 lb. ,bag BONUS DISCOUNTS 9C ARCTIC GARDEN FANCY FROZEN GREEN PEAS 21b. #19c bag 100 CARLTON CLUB ASSORTED FLAVOURS SOFT DRINKS 26 az, non return btl. pkgs. 40" 99` BLEACH plastic lug 640:. 45c TOP VALU EVAPORATED MILK 5 TOP VALU HAMBURGER OR HOT DOG BUNS IAVEK LIQUID 17c tint 00 16 ca. SHIRRIFF ASSORTED VARIETIES JELLY 3,02. Pkg. POWDER TREESLNEET RECONSTITUTED GRAPEFRUIT, BLENDED OR ORANGE JUICE 48 otiz 49 JOHNSON'S ASSORTED COLOURS ALL PURPOSE J-CLOTH TOWELS Pc,l'f% 49 DRIVE POWDERED NESTLE CHOCOLATE.QUIK tz:89 ZIP DOG FOOD "Z; 0` CARNATION FROZEN CRINKLE CUT FRENCH FRIES 2 :4'; 89c GOLD SEAL. FANCY SOCKEYE SALMON TOP VALU 5 VARIETIES ASST'D SOUP 6 'Olin; NESCAFE NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE YORK FANCY S VARIETIES Vegetables KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP MONARCH COLOURED MARGARINE 51 • 14 fins :Jr t. 9C C1 WE SELL ONLY CANADA'S FINEST RED & BLUE BRAND BEEF! CUT FROM TEIr BEEF CHUCK BONELESS CROSS RIB ROAST OR,STEAKS 16.1.09 PRIMROSE FROZEN BEEF STEAKETTES TOP VALU VACUUM PACKED SKINLESS WIENERS MARY MILES PARTLY SKINNED shank SMOKED HAM . portion CHECKERBOARD FARMS FROZEN Fully Cooked TURKEY Maple Leaf M,iode Basted Conoda Grade "A" Butter Basted 6.916, sire NUTRITIOUSLY RICH IN VtTAMINS SKINLESS sLICE4 BEEF LIVER CUT FROM THE LOIN FROZEN PORK TENDERLOIN NOVA SCOTIAN FROZEN BONELESS PERCH FILLETS TOP VALU VACUUM PACKED SLICED .SIDE BACON 4 oz. a9C serving ‘1148 lb. 09. 1.09 lb. 59 c 6-9 lb. 89C size TURKEY BROILERS 0.69c lb. 1 N39 lb. 69c ,k e,9c pkg. CANADA GRADE "A" FRESH FRYING CHICKENS 2 to 3 lb size lb. • PRIGS /FRC • WE UNTIL CLOSING SAT. SEPT, 2,19!2 • Seaforth IGA is open air day Wednesday and Friday night 'till 9pm t, Like's Europe but prefers Canada or But there's no way. This kid's "Sure, Europe was great. Mary. getting a ride every day," said Canadian". ' She said, however, that hit- This was the reactiononvlarY ch-hiking was by far the best Stephenson, H.R. 1, Varna, on way to see the continent, es- pecially for the first time. her recent return from a three "Everyone who picked us ap give and a half month tour of Eur- us suggestions about whatto see, ope with a girlfriend , Corrie and some even drove us around Bouwkamp, Collingwqod. 4 "There are so Many things to see them." Mary couldp't pick one laigh.-you take for granted here," she light out of the whole trip be- continued: " I guess we have cause there were Just so many. been really spoiled by Canada. One. of hex favorite places, how- Over there, if you don't make ever was the Greek island of • it, you just have to get out." Confu, where she and Corrie Mary and Corrie travelled " spent a week. They rented motor ..thousands of miles on their tour, bikes for $2 a day (including gas) * visited' a total of 18 countries, and toured around the whole is- and experienced everything from land. .in. a day. ' mountain • climbing in Swit- "Life is so different there," zerland to a bull-fight in Spain. she said. "'Life is really slow, The latter was "really gory" and time means absolutely noth-according .to Mary, but an ex- ing to them." perience she wouldn't want to From Greece, they took a have missed. We saw six bulls • killed, and one of them was two-day boat ride up the Adriatic sea 'to Arcona, Italy. This was killed with only one sword, which partially due to the fact that the matador plunged In, right they wanted to avoid hitch-hik- up to the hilt. ' This is a very ing throuhg Southern Italy. "The unusual occurrence. men bothered its too much there," It was just like a scene from said Mary. a movie, said Mary. The mat- Mary and Corrie stayed away ador paraded around the arena from the cities as much as poss- ▪ twice following the kill, and ible, although they 'did spend everyone was throwing him roses four days in Rome and just loved and wine-shins. I don't think Berlin. . I'd want to see it again, They visited East Berlin too, though", she said. and there,- ran into their only The girls flew to London, problem with customs. "'The in connection with a group call- security was fantastic," said ed the International Youth Hostel Mary. “They just about didn't 0 Association. They arranged for let us through because they said both the flight over and back, Corrie's passport was invalid." and Membership in the organ- ization makes it possible for.. the She had been using it for four girls to stay in hostels in just years, but technically it was invalid, because she hadn't signed about any country. it. "On the average, it cost us That was the only place they ,about $1 a night," explained had any trouble. At some bor- Mary. There were usually be- ders, they didn't even ask to see tween 12 and 15 girls in a hos- the passports. tel, which is equipped with bunk Although. Paris was one of ,beds,, and some even have gas Mary's favbrite cities, France stoves, pots and pans and their -was ter least favorite country. own grocery store. . The French hate Americans put They cooked. all' their own and out, sald'Mary, and they think meals, except in those places all Canadians should be able to e where the meals were provid- speak French. And they weren't ed. The Mediterranean count- very tolerant when they discover- "' ries were ' just fantastic for ed that the girls could not speak meals, sal d Mary. They would French. think nothing of giving you a They found no anti- Can- meal that took two and a half acliansinv and not too much anti-hours to eat.... '"And there was Americanism, outside of France. no extra cost for second help- The difficulty came, though, when * , ings either," she said. people mistook them for Amer- The girls hitch-hiked all over icans and Mary and Corrie had the continent, and didn't have to explain the difference between any problems at all. In fact,. they got a lot of rides from the 'two. other Canadian on holidfys, and The Dutch, especially, have Americans stationed over there. a very high regard for Canadians, They met one fellow from said Mary, and they Itrst treated • Edmonton who had rented acar us royally. in France, and travelled . with .She said the people in South- him for .two and a half -weeks, ern', /reland Were 'also very re through France, Spain and on to :„:i'lf,g,pil( kb yoty iurprised Rome. "It was great, because '• that he grille' Were travelling we didn't have • to worry about through their' country. They told us, said Mary', that the normally thriving tourist trade dwindled down to prac- * Performance - tically nothing, because of the civil war in Northern Ireland. I guess people are much the tested 'bulls same all over, said Mary, as she reflected on her experiences in Europe. Some immediately produce . class you as a tourist, and could care less about what happens to you. Others welcome you higher profits as individuals and do everything they can to help you have a good holiday, Exeter Times Advocate Plows of Walton Mark 25th Correspondent Mrs.Allan McCall Neighbors and friends of Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Lee gathered at their home last wednesdaieven- ing to honor them on the occasion of their twenty-fifth wedding an- niversary. The evening was spent in playing euchre. Prior to lunch an address was read by Ross Bennett and gifts of a clothes hamper, a 25th anniversary plate and a salt and pepper set were presented to the bride and groom of 25 years by Martin Baan. Mr. Leernade a suitable reply. Mr. and Mrs. Lee were mar- ried 25 years ago in England and have a family of two child- ren, Chris who farms next to them on the 17th of Grey and Christine who goes to a school in Goderich, and was- present for the evening. Unit Meets The 17th and Boundary Unit of the U.C,W. met Wednesday evening at the home of Mrs. Ross Bennett. Mrs. Rey Williamson was in- charge of the devotions. Mrs. Graeme Craig took the topic. A social half hour followed with a lunch served by Mrs. Roy Williamson, Mrs. Graeme Craig and the hostess: Visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Nelson Reid were Mr. and Mrs. William Scott of Nor- anda, 'Que. and Mr. and Mrs. Jim Scott Sr. of Blyth. Mr. W, H. Bell is a patient, in Westminster Hospital,LOndon following surgery. " Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Clark and son Jim spent the week end with his father, Keith and Ann,' and also attenaed the Brady - Leeming wedding on Saturday at Duff's United Church. A number of Walton ladies attended the annual Horticultural Flower Show and Turkey Supper How's Your Hearing? Chicago, Ill.-A free offer of . special interest to those who hear but flo not Understand words has been announced by Beltone.Anon-operating model .of the smallest Beltone aid evCr• Made will be given , absolutely. free to anyone answering this advertisement. _Try it to see how it is worn in the privacy of your own home without cost or obligation of any kind. Tes.yours to keep, free. It weighs less than. a third of an Ounce, and •it's all at ear level, in one unit. No wires lead. from body to head. • These models are free, so we suggest you write for yours now. Again, we repeat, there is no cost, and certainly no obligation. Write to Dept. 62,51, Beltone Electronics, :16:37 Metropolitan Blyed., E., Montreal 38, P. Q. ro••••••••••,,I,O Acco Press Binders , 79c to 1.49 1/2"-5 /8"-3 /4"-1" 1 1 /4 "-1 1/2" In any cow-calf operation, the herd sire is of major importance, says N.M. 'MacLeod, live stock specialist, Ontario Ministry of Agriculture and Food. The "right" sire will produce ,fast- gaining calves that will be heavy at weaning and make efficient, profitable feedlot gains. The • heifers will be heavy yearlings and may be bred' to come into production early with more milk and heavier calves. The "'wrong" sire, on the other hand, will produce 'just the opposite, says' Mr. MacLeod. If maximern profits are to be realized, a performance tested bull with fast gain potential and a heavy milking dam, should be used. When selecting a beef ,bull, make sure that he has been per-, formance tested. If possible, buy a group-tested, indexed bull. This type of bull has been acc- urately evaluated in terms of growth, so you know what you • are getting. Make sure his Index is at least 100, which is an average index for bulls of that breed. Of course, the higher the index, the better the bull is in terms of growth. If he has not been group test- ed, then make sure his average daily gain (ADO) on test is high- er than the average .of the herd and the average of that breed. Breed averages for ADO .of the major breeds in Ontario are: Aberdeen, Angus 2.6; Charolais 3.1; Hereford 2.9; Shorthorn 2.6;, However, buying a bull on this • basis involves greater risk than a high Index, group-tented bull., Maximum profits can be real- ized only if the bull you use can sire female calves with the ab-. ility to milk heavily. Try to get some information on the milking herd sire. If she Is able to wean calves that are heavier than the average in that particular herd, .then her son will be ,more likely to produce high-producing heifers. This is easy to de- termine If the herd owner keeps production records.' If he does not, then a look at the calf she raises this year, when com- pared to calves from other cows in the herd, may give you an idea if she is above or below average. Finally, the bull must be structurally sound with good feet and legs if. he is to breed and settle the cows. ti Exercise Books 4 in Packs°, 98t r•V Students and Parents Will Enjoy Our "School Hfeadquarters" It offers an unique adieantage: Books, Binders, Pens, Paper, Book Refills, Math Sets, Clothes and many other items can be had at one stop. BEST VALUE IN REFILLS Largesi selection of refills at as much as 20% less than usual prices today- Check Our School Opening Special Values 17!' MAPLE LEAF CHARCOAL OR SMOTE 1 CHARCOAL BRIQUETS S lb. bog 1 49c CANADA FANCY EARLY McINTOSH APPLES 3 lb. baq 79` PRODUCT tIr SOUTH AFRICA GRAPEFRUIT 5.1,,69` CANADA NO I ONT GROWN CELLO CARROTS 5 lb. bag 49` CANADA NO i ONT GROWN CELLO PARSNIPS 2 lb. bag 415' FOR YOUR WEEKEND HOLIDAY BAR-B-Q STUART HOUSE I 12 inch FOIL WRAP I 50 ft. roll 6W I DIET-RITE COLA, DINGERALE Of ROYAL CROWN ASSORTED FLAVOUR SOFT DRINKS teio In. tins \ 2.39 39` woo. WIMP. I.". .III.oloolom 011•151•• om000• ONO. CANADA NO. 1 ONTARIO GROWN PRODUCT OF SOUTH AFRICA DOZEN ORANGES 49c ESSO BAR-B-41 ,LIGHTER FLUID 32 oz. tin BRIX JUMBO PAK INSTANT STARTING CHARCOA 109- CANADA NO ' ONT GROWN GREEN • CABBAGE each 29c ()WAR* NO I HEAD LETTUCE 2 for 49' US NO. 1 NECTARINES 5 fo169` CANTALOUPES size ea, 421 large U S NO I SAI',DN plain or With Garlic 'or Polish Dills- BICIa PICKLES 32 oz. jar 59` TABLE POTATOES VAPONA NO. PEST STRIP 2:69 TOP VALU I COMPLETELY BEEF BLADE I I BLADE I I 1.1 .FOOTBALL CUT THICK • I I TURKEYS' FRESH I BONELESS I SMOKED I I STEAKS I' STYLE I anodian Proton!, CHEESE 1 SLICES " 6 t6 916. sire I „ YOUNG I ROAST I I WHOEL OR HALF HAM 11 I FOR BBC) I I k. t t 4 J 112 r F767.1 77E7; ,7s --1 r—tlEGRAT cur Thr 7CANADA THE CHUCK / FULLY COOKED I I FROM THE Ma( 1 I GRADE "A" I