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Clinton News-Record, 1971-03-18, Page 9SIDE BACON Tot egl h l oc red LAMB CHOPS SAUSAGE BOLOGNA WIENERS 1-lb vacuum pkg 58? 1b 59? 148? 1636Ft 2•16 vacuum pkg 98fi All prices in this ad guaranteed effective through Saturday, March 20, 1971, Mary Miles Frozen, Imported, New Zealand Spring Lamb Burns, Store Pock, Beef & Pork Burns, By the Piece, Any Weight Cut, Visking 811.3 PORTION 7 Ions Cut, C.unt Them lb 8, TENDERLOIN Portion 3 to 3'2-lbs OR RIB HALF LOIN .68,1 PEAMEALED, SWEET PICKLED BACK BACON END CUTS CENTRE CUTS There's nothing like it! Take a light, flaky Jane Parker pie crust — fill it with apples, pineapple, peaches, cherries and orange puree, and what do you have? You have one of the finest tast- ing pies you'll ever ea : u-• "New'!" Jane Parker Daily Dated FIESTA PIE Full 8" 24.ox size .46 491 Regularly 59c Pork Loin Roasts lb 81 Look At These Prices! ECONOMY Red Rose Tea Bags pkg of 90 69c JEW( DESSERT Shirriff Powders 3.0z. pkg 1 Oc INSTANT MASHED Carnation Potatoes 12.0z pkg 49c FRESH FRUIT AND VEGETABLES FLORIDA, SWEET AND JUICY, VALENCIA RANGES DOZEN 4 8 51. Florida Grown, Cattodn tsiti. 1 Grada, Fresh, Crisp, Larae Bundles CELERY HEARTS each 3 St Ontario Grown, Nb. 1 Grade, Yellow Cooking ONIONS 5-lb cello bag 2 9c I PREMIUM, PLAIN OR SALTED Christie Crackers COPFEE Chase & Sanborn I-LB TIN TII BAG 3 9 I•lb pkg 3 coc l ib bag 89c Action Priced I DAD'S COOKIES cHoto.c CHfp Choice Qualify P PEACHES .00 19 fi tt t Frozo Brand, Frozen FRENCH FRIES 1b pkgs .3 . 1 $1000 Martin's, Choice Quality, Pure APPLE JUICE 3 4841 Vint it00 CANADA DRY (Quarts GINGER ALE — WINK ROOT BEER — ORANGE 3869( plus deposit PORK LOIN QUARTERS CUT INTO PORK CHOPS 9 TO 11 CHOPS IN A PKG No finer meats sold anywhere ... at any price! with Discount Prices & Guaranteed Quality httiOnVICedl COLD WATER POWDER ARCTIC POWER DETERGENT GIANT 7.-LBS 10-01 SOX (15c OFF DEAL) N tiltvi ATO SAUCE 5 1411 oz tins $1 Heinz, Beans .00 POUR MAIDS BRAND, HALVES Apricots $1.00 mE.A-r FLAVOUR 4 14-fl.oz tins Own Dog Food 4 15'07 tins 494 WAX OR GREEN A&P Beans 6 144. fins $1 .00 A&P KETCHUP 25.6z 3 9c 7 VARIETIES, CAT FOOD Puss "N Boots 15-o7 fin 1 8( FRIED Rice-A-Roni 8-oz Pkgs $1.00 SWEET MIXED Rose Pickles 15-fl-oz jar 3 9t Action priceoi M STYLE CLARIICA CORN 4,1119 STORE Buy Drug Needs at. Your Drug Store 8 oz. VASELINE PETROLEUM JELLY Reg. 89c ONLY 59 4 YOUR 994 Reg. $1.98 ONLY Clinton News-Record, Thursday, March 18, 1971 9 THIS WEEK'S EXTRA SPECIALS SCOPE MOUTH WASH 12 oz. Reg. $1.49 ONLY 974 CIGARETTES EVERYDAY PRICES REGULAR SIZE 4,49 KING SIZE A ca 7b, — CARTONS — CARTONS NEKOMBE Phanna0 PRESCRIPTIONS P one •2-'5 Clinton, Ontario Before the thaw RIGHT GUAM! DEODORANT SPRAY 5 oz. Reg. $1.39 ONLY 774 VO5 HAIR SPRAY 8% oz. ambling with Lucy BY Lucy .F1, WOODS Old Windsor, England (C.P,) — Clara is used to working to music but as a retired battery hen she can be a problem for her owner eter Hume, Whenever music comes on the television, Clara flutters re sits on top of the set'— and lays an egg, But Mrs. Hume, speaking om her Berkshire home, said she didn't mind. 1117e've got used to lara's unusual ways." When Lucy read the above item, recently, it set her to thinking bout hens. They have various personalities just as do people. When ne refers to a woman's party as "a hen-party" one immediately sualizes a good deal of merry chatter, Once when Lucy was quite young the finest hen in her mother's ock took sick. She moped and could hardly move, Father xamined this lovely big white rock biddy and decided she was crop ound. She was going to die anyway so he brought her in to the itchen table gave her a whiff of chloroform and opened her up. ssisted by his wife, he cleaned out the sour solid crop and removed e obstruction, syringed her crop with antiseptic and sewed her up ain. Perhaps that hen is the only hen which was attended ofessionally by a physician and a graduate nurse! They made a nest for her in a box in the washroom. And after a y began fluid feedings with an eye dropper. It was milk to which ay have been added a few drops of liquor. At any rate, Biddy was on able to drink out of a saucer and then followed a smooth diet til she had completely recovered and was put back into the hen use again. Perhaps her recovery was aided by music and song for Lucy's tie sister Jean sat on the floor and played her toy piano (which d belonged to her mother when a child) and sang songs to Biddy ile Blarney, the fox terrier, raised his voice in obligato. It attered not whether piano chords and song were harmonious. Jean ng with such gusto that her sweet voice out did the rest. And ddy came to love these duets on her behalf and in her "henny nny' way welcomed them with a "choor-choor-choor". Both Lucy d Jean petted her, smoothing down her white feathers and tickling r head. But when Biddy thought she was one of the family and w up to investigate the food on the kitchen table, she was -instated in the hen house. Lucy doesn't recall whether she was a vourite there or "picked on" by the other hens. But when running large in the stable yard, she invariably followed members of the mily. Hens when they are laying usually announce the fact to the orld, unless they are by chance stealing their nests away. Then they e as secretive as a maiden going to meet her lover, unknown to her rents. One never sees a hen going away to a nest she has made rself, nor coming back to feed with the flock. The owner of the •ck probably does not know, when hens are on range, until she mes clucking in, very proudly and giving great protection, to nine ten chicks who resemble her or the rooster. Of course with the aying parlors" Biddy has not much freedom in this age. It's mething like being hemmed in by our government regulations. Carl remembers his mother going to the hen house one day. All as quiet. "What's the matter today?" she asked. "Aren't the rookies talking?" And one by one they joined in quite a chorus of lendly greeting even if they weren't laying eggs or busy scratching r grain. Carl once had a fine big rooster which he thought he'd enter at e Bayfield Fall Fair. One day he took a dish of corn and went over ar the rooster when the flock was feeding, and dropped some rnels in front of him, thinking the corn would put an extra sheen his feathers. "Tchur-r-r-ruk! Teyk-tcyk chajsk! Tchur-r-r-ruk!" d one by one he called his favourite hens around him and fed ery last kernel of corn to them. A most gallant bird! It was discouraging to try and get a "clucking" hen to set on any ther nest4 than the laying box she had chosen in the hen house. And fen more discouraging when the rats under the barn took the eggs •om under the brooding hen. Lucy recalls going out one morning to e box stall in the stable to find blood on the hen's head and only ye of a special setting of 12 eggs left. Biddy had evidently put up a gitt1,"' Lucy had paid an exhorbitant price for a setting of special white yandotte eggs to bring new blood into her prize flock. She was in a uandadi but eventually persuaded one old matron to sit in a nest in disused rabbit hutch in the middle of the vegetable garden with a overed run, It worked out very well. Then she bought an 160-egg incubator heated by a coal oil lamp nd also a little brooder. The incubator was in a dark room upstairs nd the brooder in the kitchen. The fluffy little chicks were so interesting. They cheeped away hen feeding, scratching the litter over the wire, and some more recocious than others, flew over to investigate the kitchen, latching season was the bane of grandmother's life. If she weren't weeping up litter, she was gathering up the chickens which flew aver. When they were quite strong foster mothers were induced to ok after them outside. Then came the time when ▪ 'Lucy disposed of her flock. But other was lonesome for a hen about the place so she bought two arred rock pullets from Abe Wendell. One was large and very alkative, the other smaller and more beautiful, They were great pets et if one went out the back door in the dark in the middle of the ight the talkative bird would start "chorr chorr chorr" from her erch. A tip to owners of egg laying parlors; InStall T.V. as well as tight night— it might result in increased egg production! T BY ERIE EARL There was a little activity in the village this past week — The moving van was at George and Irene Mayors. Bill Crawford was carrying some stuff into the Bayfield Meats on the highway. They might open soon. The Red Pump Restaurant opened for business last week, Ed Seddall the fisherman spent many weary hours making new lead weights for his nets. Hugh Gregory and Dr, Bill Tellmann had some friends up on the weekend to join in what will probably be the last snowmobile run of the season. The ice isn't out of the river yet but the flats are covered with big chunks of ice thrown up on the bank, and the rapids and channel are open at the foot of Brandon's Hill. Joe Koene is out at his sugar bush getting prepared for the big sap run. Russ Kerr with a little help here and there is getting the entrance to" the Community Centre fixed up. A friendly crowd gathered at the Bayfield Community Centre for a St. Patricks dance on Saturday night, The crowd wasn't very big but all had fun. The next dance is being planned for Saturday, May 22, and we are all hoping for a big turn out. The Bayfield Lions Club is holding their Ladies Night at the Clinton Legion on Friday, March 19. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Myer of Milverton spent the weekend with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Ervine. Miss Mae Ervine of Goderich spent a few days last week with her brother and sister-in-law Mr. and Mrs. Spencer Ervine. The Bayfield Library Board met on Monday morning. Those present were Mrs. Elva Metcalf, chairman; Mrs. Fred Cleft, Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Ormond, Mrs. J. MacKenzie, Mrs. R. B. Johnston, Mrs. G. N. Rivers, Librarian; Mrs. Eric Earl and Reeve E. W. Oddleifson. Maintenance of the Library building was discussed along with the advisability of purchasing a few more childrens books. It was reported that the increase in book circulation for 1970 over 1969 was 2,679 books. UNIT TWO The March meeting of Unit 2 of the United Church Women was held at the home of Mrs. John Siertsema. President Jean Dunn opened the meeting with a prayer. Phyllis Campbell led devotions with the theme "The Church Is a Mission". Her reading was interspersed with related Bible passages read by Margaret Scotchmer. After the singing of hymn 383, Anna Scotchmer read an explanation of "The Basic Teachings of Jesus". Devotions were closed with silent prayer and the Lords Prayer, Eleven members answered roll call and the secretary's report was read. A decision was made to go ahead with the adoption of an overseas orphan Bayfield Spring beginning to sprung and family as a U.O.W.. project, • Plans were made for the annual chicken .barbecue to be held Thursday, July 1, and the tea and bake sale on April 17, April 14 a joint meeting will be held at the church with Mrs. W. Parker showing pictures on Switzerland, everyone invited. The meeting was closed with the Mizpah Benediction and lunch was served, U.C.W. Unit one of the United Church Women met on Thursday, March 4 in the church with 18 members present. Mrs. Clare Merrier led devotions with a hymn sing. The topic of her meditation was "Life's Like That," she concluded her devotions with, a prayer written by Mrs, Jim Ferguson in 1933. Mrs. Bert Greer led the business discussion. Plans for the Easter Joint UCW Meeting for April 14 were made. Lunch was served at the conclusion of the meeting. A few friends and neighbours gathered at the "Cluster" last week to wish 'Bon Voyage' to George and Irene Mayor who have moved to London. George has taken a job there. The Bayfield Lions will miss George and Irene also. ATTENTION FARMERS! NOW AVAILABLE Limited Acreage of Contract Feed Barley and Oats ENQVIIIg EARLY DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED! Also: • SEED BEANS • SEED GRAIN • FERTILIZER • AQUA and ANHYDROUS • SPRAYS "USE YOUR CO-OP" HENSALL DISTRICT CO-OPERATIVE PHONE 262-2928 liENSALL 4