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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-02-22, Page 21WESTONS FRESH FINE QUALITY AND FANCY QUALITY HAMBURGER OR ASSORTED FLAVOURS ASSORTED VARIETIES WIENER DUNCAN HINES STOKELYS ROLLS CAKE MIXES 'VEGETABLES 520 g PACKAGE 14 oz. TINS. KERNEL CORN 12 oz. PACKAGE OF 12 POPULAR, NUTRITIOUS CAMPBELLS VEGETABLE SOUP 10 oz. TIN 7 VARIETIES FINE QUALITY AGREE CONDITIONER 350 mL FACETTES WHITE FACIAL TISSUE LIBBYS TOMATO JUICE BOLD 3 LAUNDRY DETERGENT BOUNCE FABRIC SOFTENER VELVET CAKE & PASTRY FLOUR 20 oz. SIZE 8 VAR. 200 g 1.4 kg MINUTE RICE 25.92.59 4.49 FILOW-YELLOW ROYALE PAPER TOWELS 2 ROLL PKG. LIPTON ORANGE PEKOE TEA BAGS LAWRY TACO SHELLS, SAUCE, . RELISH, REFRIED BEAMS VARIOUS SIZES 'FROZEN CONCENTRATED AWAKE ORANGE DRINK 341 mL TIN LAWRY. SEASONING, VARIOUS DUNCAN HINES CREAMY FROSTING MIXES 4 VARIETIES 9 440 g. .. DUNCAN HINES MUFFIN MIXES 440 g 2 VARIETIES 1,39k9. DUNCAN' IIIN;ES COOKIE MIXES 4 VARIETIES VARIOUS SIzES AGREE- SHAMPOO 350 mL 2s 9 DUNCAN HINES ANGEL FOOD CAKE MIX 4109 9.9 McCORMUCKS CANDIES 18 Varieties Various Sizes a al Ley Pkg. 750 mL BOTTLES MOUNTAIN DEW or All VARIETIES PEPSI -COLA BLUEWATER FROZEN HADDOCK IN LIGHT BATTER QUICK QUAKER OATS ALORO MICRO WAVE PIZZA BLUEWATER FROZEN SOLE IN LIGHT BATTER 350 g ZEI'IRS -11---ARBAGET BAGS PKG. OF 10 SUPER SPE'C'IAL Crossroads—Feb. 22, 1984—Page 7 WESTONS ENGLISH MUFFINS BLUE BONNET SOFT MARGARINE 1.19 OR ALL FLAVOURS OF SEALTEST . SOUR CREAM 7 VARIETIES CMOCOI AT CMOCOtAT PEPSI COLA WESTON 1882 STONE MILLED BREAD WESTONS CHOCOLATE SWISS ROLLS 99' Pkg. of 4 GAY LEA YOGURT WITH FRUIT 99' STAFFORDS SUNDAE TOPPINGS OLD BAVARIA KNOTTY PINE CHERRY OR LEMON CHICKEN,TURKEY TWISTS OR BEEF PIES 283 g 1.49 ZEHRS SNACK CRACKERS VARIOUS WEIGHTS 3 Var. 250 mL CONFIDENTS MAXI PADS 30's FOR DISHWASHERS 4.39 ELECTROSOL 1.8 k9 RICH'S 49' COFFEE RICH 500 a IMAM DIAMOND MOZZARELLA OR COLBY CHEESE 225 g 1.09 SCOTT BABY FRESH WIPES 40cs 1.99 HERSHEYS 750 S INST.. CHOCOLATE Z• 49 GAINSIOROUGH 69 PIE SHELLS 425 s • NEILSONS 500 mL f9 WHIPPING CREAM • REGULAR 4's IVORY SOAP 400 g 1.19 uwRYs TACO TRIO 2592` OAR GAINSBOROUGH TART SHELLS 255 g 1.29 DUNCAN HINES WILD BLUEBERRY A MUFFIN MIX 360 g LU COUNTRY OVEN SPECIALS I Save $1.00 t — - Save $1 .00 This Coupon Pnt'I'eS you 'C S' Y r" Neilsen*, Fh rfArs Ice cr_arr (any slit' or flavour) with a mirnmum 04.' ease oi 'wt' PI S'a'brrl Surda. T, pp,rq p0CM 8QPS rant Ila vOurl •NotE tOu mu51 preset"O the Cht'(MOu' ! (mote, h I purchase nl ice Cream i Stafford Sundae Toppings +^�.�' 0 and rh15 CoupOr . �T To The dealer S,a"O,l F',ods Yrrll rF deem thr5 'OVpOr for 'ale valor PIU*, 56 'Or 'handlmq provldmg you ^ rece'vt rt 'torr yra,Or 'us,Omer according to Iht 104P5'i S ' the ,oupor offer any Other a0PlICettOf C.OnShIC1105 i ',aut.,Farlwt'r 04.),404.Q or rtue5t evldehCe SATISIattO'✓ 'o Std"ord ma' you rave rnmplted +vnh'surI, terms *Al void coupor Au ,,upon*, subm,ted for redempeor OPCOmt ft, property ',' Srat/nM Fonds ltd tot, n On. n w P.. .n„t N .1 , `nt.'wt .0,.. t 4Aa 'p v. I Save S1.O0 Save $1.00 IDEAL FOR LUNCHES BLACKDIAMOND "SINGLE THINS" CHEESES SLICES WE WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU IN 032 10th Street Open 6 nights e week till 9:30 HANOVER ELM I RA 232 Arthur St. S. Open Wed.. Thur.. end Fri. evenings LISTOWEL, 976 Weise. Ave. N. Open Wed., Thur.. and Fri. evenings' FERGUS 736 Tower St. S. Open Wed.. Thur.. and Fri. evenings Corner of No. 4 VYINGHAM and 661"8' end 80 Mwrys. Open Thurs., Fri. evenings The Globe and Mail has been carrying a series on the growing water shortage in the United States and pro- bability that Washington will turn to Canada for relief. This situation has leen in the making for a long time now, and it should not come as a surprise' to anyone. The heart of the problem is a vast underground pool of water in the central United States known as the Ogallala Aquifer, on" which a vast American agricultural area depends for irrigation. Its reserves were once con- sidered boundless, but they are being used up at an alarming rate. When the aquifer is finally dry, a major chunk off the Ameri- can heartland will face dust bowl conditions and a social upheaval which cannot be contemplated. And so, for a long time now, knowledge- able Americans have been eyeing Canada and thinking of water diversion on a scale that is gigantic. The general Canadian view is that such diversions would be a tragedy; that it would be tantamount to ex- porting our environment. 'But I don't think we can ex- amine this question purely in nationalistic terms. This is not time to jump up and down in the schoolyard shrieking "It's mine, it's mine." Like it or not, our fate and that of the Ameri- cans are hopelessly en- twined. It isn't just our economies. It is the fact that no two cultures are closer, and that weare unavoidably neighbors and traditionally allies. I am not suggesting that we assume our usual wimp posture with the United States and sell off major chunks of our birthright for a few strings of wampum. I'm saying that we should begin by agreeing, in principle, to giving what water .we can spare to a friend and neigh- bor. You can't avoid the fact that if they get into trouble, But I think that our••.negotia= tions with them should 'be tough and hard-nosed in a way that they have been only rarely, .if at all. We have them by the short hairs on this one, and we should not let go until we nogotiate some things that will benefit all of us in North America. We are polluting water on both sides of the border' al- most as fast as we are using it for drinkingand agricuk, ture. We should make the sale of water to the United States conditional on a mas- sive joint. effort to clean up acid' rain and put an end to the Love Canals. We should make it conditional on a pro- gram with teeth 'in it to 're- store the treat Lakes to something like purity, and to make a start on doing the 'same thing for the oceans along our coastlines. We have other things the Americans want: oil, natural gas and wide-open spat which they are going to need increasingly for industry, transportation and recrea-. tion. Without = generosity of spirit and breadth. of vision, we'll all fall victim to water shortages, the greenhouse effect, and that most feared of seasons, the nuclear winter. Mere national fron- tiers will protect us from none of these. "� ; : , � What pitcher gave up Babe Ruth's lost major league. home run:...extro points if you know ere and when? I olseg eq4 q4I.' A001n2 144 ewpue sura gins s0 'tong /ono second iow060 .4soi pu0 git lL e! l SOm pot; olg '48m940d u! Sun, 8W09 E iiq gins 'SCAT 'SZ AOW u0 0