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Clinton News-Record, 1979-12-20, Page 31• • • • • III' • • II, • • C4/NTON Nws4mQAP,iliVRSPAy,pgcgmg.g4. X), 19:79,p4sag74. SAVE 2.30 CASE OF 24 COCA -C • LA 1041 -oz tins 1. teh er with Supermarket Prices '444) No Confusion at A&P . ONE LOW PRICE ON ALL. WEIGHTS! Grade "A", Eviscerated, Frozen, Vac Pac, A&P Self -Basting, Maple Leaf Miracle Baste or Swift Deep -Basted (Our Regular Price 7.29) (PLUS 10c PER BTL DEPOSIT) (Our Regular Price Ib 1.48) 6 -pack of 10 -fl -oz btls 149 Did you know that A&P is not just a butcher shop with its hundreds of cuts of fresh beef, pork, Iamb, veal and poultry . . . any Shops in c nef • A&P is.11/1 SPECIAL! Swift Sugar Plum or Maple. Leaf, Ready -to -Serve S OKED •HA s silP SIDE I BACON 1. Quarters lb 2.59 Ib' Halves 1 -Ib vac pac All Beef • A&P is a Fresh Beef Shop! ti SAVE 20fi Ib Burns BREAKFAST SAUSAGE I. SHOPSYS WIENERS 1 -Ib vac pac CUT FROM. CANADA GRADE "k" BEEF SWIFT, READY -TO -SERVE BONELESS WHOLE CLUB STYLE, 12 TO 14 -LB AVERAGE Cross Rib Roast 162.29 Sugar Plum Hams6239 MAPLE LEAF, READY -TO -SERVE, DINNER STYLE, MINI, VAC PAC Boneless Hams 162.69 MAPLE LEAF, READY -TO -SERVE, SMOKED Pork Shoulders 161.39 SWIFT SUGAR PLUM, READY TO SERVE Dinner Hams 1b2.69 SCHNEIDERS, SLICED, ASSORTED VARIETIES CookedMeats 6 °z vac Pac 89si OLDE FASHIONED, READY -TO -SERVE, VAC PAC SCHNEIDERS, ASSORTED VARIETIES Schneiders Hams 63.6. 9 Wieners ,1-16 vac pac 1.59 SWIFT PREMIUM OR SUGAR PLUM, SLICED SCHNEIDERS, SLICED, REGULAR OR MAPLE Side Bacon 1-16 vac pac 1.49 Cooked Ham 6-°z "c Pac 1.59 • or BLUE RIBBON, GROUND Black Pepper 8." tin 3i29 DISHWASHER DETERGENT ACTI41 Calgoritte . 65 -oz box 3.55 ACTION PRICE! Ile. -Cider 48 -1I -oz 69,1 ASS RTED VARIETIES ACTION mat 14.02 TIN TIE BAG Peek i Frew.' Cookies 119, f SAVE 2,01 A&P Frozen Concentrated , RANGE JUICI 12.541 -oz tin (Our Regular Price, 89c) FRITO LAY, REGULAR LAYS OR RUFFLES Potato Chips 300 g pkg Lig- BORDEN OR SEALTEST Egg Nog 1 litre cartdn 119 AO BRAND, JAPANESE 10•FL•02 TIN Mandarin. Oranges 69 , PiUS 25't BT,!.. OtOSIT) 'ACTION PRICE( ' epsiw.,... Ctila retu#711' bit 31099? , - Blade,. Chuck Short Rib or Shoulder , e Cut from Canada Grade 'A' Beef STS pound Swift Lazy Maple SAUSAGE MEAT 11-01 GRADE "A", EVISCERATED, FROZEN Geese 8 to,12-113 average GRADE "A", EVISCERATED, FROZEN Ducks 4 to 6 -lb average SWIFT PREMIUM, BROWN & SERVE SausagesSHOPSYS - COLE SLAW OR Potato Salad "(Our Regular Price Ib 2.19) J Ib 1.29 In stores with Deli Shop! 1151.29 SHOPSYS Pastrami 162.89 SHOPSYS - COLE SLAW OR 8 pkg 1.29 Potato Salad lb 89,z1 SCHNEIDERS - MIX OR MATCH, ASSORTED VARIETIES, 24 -oz ctrl 1.09 Sliced Meat Loaf 161.89 SCHNEIDERS LOOPS SCHNEIDERS, SMOKED Polish Sausage lb 1.79 Cocktail Sausage 11,2.79 YOU'LL DO better WITH A&P'S bakery features (Over 2/3 Fruits & Nuts) Jane Parker FRUIT CAKES 3 -Ib ring 111/2 -lb piece 3.99 - 41/2 -lb ring 9.99 JANE PARKER, SLICED, 60% OR ACTION PRICE! 100% WHOLE WHEAT OR CRACKED WHEAT 24 OZ LOAF Brown Bread 261.09 JANE PARKER, SLICED, 60% WHOLE WHEAT, SANDWICH Bread 24 -oz Ioaf 2 for 1.2 9 JANE PARKER Twin Rolis JANE PARKER Dinner Rolls ACTION PRICE! pkg 12695/ ACTION PRICE! pkg of 8 5 9f41 JANE PARKER Stuffing Mix mazpkg99c/ JANE PARKER 8-02 CONTAINER Bread Crumbs 69' JANE PARKER SPECIALLY PREPARED LOAF 2402 LOAF Stuffing Bread 69*? Clip the valuable coupon below! SAVE 2.00 4 -Ib pkg WITH THIS COUPON -2.00 OFF The Regular Price of Cut from Canada "A" Beef 8 Beef - Boneless STRIP LOIN STEAKS box of 8 -8 -oz steaks Limit one per family: Valid thru Sat., Dec. 24, 1979. A&P # 634 liensall zli continue to try for annexation Hensall village council has decided to pursue the annexation of 70 acres of Hay Township even though it could not enlist the support of the Huron County board of education to avert an expected Ontario Municipal Board hearing. The village learned this week that the board of education will not amend its policy against busing school children within urban limits. Hensall had hoped to persuade the board to alter its position so it could appease four families who oppose the annexation plan. That opposition, in turn, was based on worry that children would be ' forced to walk along busy Highway 4 when they lose their busing privileges. The residents plan to fight the expansion bid hboeaford.rethe.,. municipal Council met Wed- nesday and decided to press for the annexation "because we've done about everything we can do," Reeve Harold Knight said later. While council still may attempt to negotiate a IJ compromise that appeals to the concerned parents, Knight saidcouncil didn't want to spend more time delaying the annexation, which it hopes will tate 4 T,.. effect Jan. 1,1981. The board suggested that it might consider a financial avrangement so the pupils could board a Nbus, but Knight said the village wasn't interested "in opening that can of worms." He said any fee that might be charged should be "nominal" so fl parents should cover it . themselves. The village will ask the kt four objectors this week if they have changed their opposition to the: „an- nexation. .r If, the ob- jections are not with- drawn, they will be sent along to the municipal board in January, andit then will be up to the ,I, board to decide whether to approve the scheme or to hold a public hearing. One of the.fotr families opposing the annexation is the Freeths. Bill and Theresa Freeth said last . week they weten't sur- prised by the, board's refusal to bus the children. . They and their neigh- bors - Bill and Beverley Simpson, Campbell and Grace Eyre and Harold and Mary Elliott - plan to hire a lawyer to help them fight the village movei While there are several grounds for opposition to the annexation, the "school buses thing is the one that hurts most," Freeth said. The Freeths and their neighbors also fear in- creased taxation, loss of rural mail service, in- creased traffic and a possible forced hookup to municipal water and sewage services. They also flatly reject any suggestion that they pay to transport their boy in Grade 6 or girl in high school.he T four residents want the village to extend a sidewalk and lighting to them to ensure that their_ children can get to school safely and the Freeths want to see Hensall "negotiate a bit." Freeth.said legal costs of a hearing would be a burden on the township and the village as well as the four opponents. e "They'donfes.,asidewalk and , be better off to spend that kind of money lighting than on legal Knight said council has attempted to appease the annexation opponents as much as possible and conceded that one of his major concerns "is the kids on the highway." He said council was willir4 to continue to negotiate --,- "right up to the hearing" with the school board to resolve the contentiouS busing issue but that he' didr 't know what elf* coupolleould do. 1. 14, • •