The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-05-16, Page 20A
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SCHNEIDERS "CRISPYFLAKE"
I SHORTENING .Ib
IOUNTAIN DEW
REG., DIET OR SUGAR FREE
PEPSI COLA
CASE OF 24 - 28.0ML TINS
SGNNEIDERS "mos YCRUS'T"
PURE LARD
SCHNEIDERS 500 g PKG. ro12's
SOH .. EIDERS IND. WRAP SINGLE MIN
CHEESE SLICES 5100
GREEN OR WAX BEANS
HONEY POD PEAS OR
CREAM STYLE CORN
6.5 oz.
ORANGE. GREEN GOLD ASSORTED VARIETIES KRAFT WHITE OR FRUIT
WHITE SWAN DUNCAN HINES JET PUFFED
M
ARSHMALL���NS
CAKE MIX.ES.PRINT TOWELS®. ..r..
FINE QUALITY
2 ROLL
PKG.
250 g
PKG.
ASSORTED°VARIETIES
ASSORTED VARIETIES
HUMPTY DUMPTY
NIAGARA BRAND.
FROZEN
LEMONADE
455 mL
MACARONI & CHEESE
KRAFT DINNERS
41111
NEILSONS NOVELTY
ICE CREAM
12 PACKS
CRISPY CRUNCH, MALTED MILK,
BURNT ALMOND, JERSEY MILK, CANADIAN,
NESCAFE INSTANT COFFEE INSTANT STYLE
iO oz. ENCORE
DECAF. INSTANT
8 oz. JAR COFFEE 8 oZ.
REGULAR INSTANT
TASTERS CHOICE
FREEZE DRIED
WESTONS MEALTYME
HAMBURG OR
WIENER ROLLS
OR8
PACK OF
SWEET
MARIE
CARD OF 2 0, C, AA, SIZE
OR SINGLE 9 VOLT -•
DURACELL
BATTERIES
2.49 CARD
RICE OR TAPIOCA 4'S
NEILSONS
MINI
PUDDINGS
SEALTEST ASSORTED FLAVOURS
LIGHT 'N' LIVELY
YOGURT
2175 g99?
ALIENS
RED OR BLACK
LICORICE
TWIRLS
OR RED LACES
690 PKG.
DECAFFEINATED
TASTERS CHOICE
FREEZE DRIED
WESTONS
1882 STONE MILLED
WHOLE WHEAT
BREAD
675 g 99?
WESTONS
PLAIN STYLE
ENGLISH
MUFFINS
99?
8's
FOR GARDEN AND PATIO
WEATHER RESISTANT COVER- 10 RIBS
MANUAL TILT MECHANISM 6'7 DIAMETER
CLUBHOUSE
BLACK BLACK
PEPPER
113g139
CALIFORNIA
OR REGULAR
NEILSONS
ICED TEA
SIX
ASSORTED FLAVOURS
QUENCH
CONCENTRATE
199
750g2,99
6 VARIETIES
NEILSON
CRYSTALS
109
NO NAME 9 INCH
FOAM
PLATES
MOUNTAIN DEW
OR ALL VARIETIES
PEPSI COLA
750 mL BOTTLES
50 s 2,59
PLUS
30c
DEP
NABISCO
APPLE OR ORANGE
McCAIN
REVIVE
FRUIT COCKTAIL STOKELYS
PEACHES, PEARS DARK RED OR ORLEANS
KIDNEY
BEANS
79'
WITH PORK
OR VEGETARIAN STYLE
VAN CAMP
BEANS
19 oz. 419
4 VARIETIES
DUNCAN HINES
CREAMY
FROSTING
470 1,59
FROZEN ORANGE OR
ORANGE MORE PULP
MINUTE
MAID
mL5 1.39
3 VARIETIES
BICKS
DILLS
199
MINUTE MAID
GRAPEFRUIT
JUICE
139
WESTONS FRESH
APPLE
PIES
624 g 1,69
CLUBHOUSE SALAD TOPPINS
BACON
CHIPS
90 8 179
PURINA REG. OR BEEF
PUPPY
CHOW
8 kg 10.99
CLUBHOUSE GARDEN
VEGETABLES
SALAD
TOPPINS
84g 1179
SPECIAL PRICES IN
EFFECT FROM 9 A.M.
WED. MAY 16 UNTIL
CLOSING SAT. MAY 19
We reserve the right
to limit purchases to
reasonable weekly
family requirements.
UMBRELLA
29. 99ACH
FOR GARDEN OR PATIO
DELUXE WHITE MOLDED SEAT AND BACK
WHITE EPDXY PAINTED
TUBULAR STEEL FRAMES
STACKING CHAIRS
24.9-9EAc.
SUNBRELLA
SUNGLASSES
'/2 PRICE
LARGE SELECTION OF
LATEST STYLES
PKG.
FOR GARDEN AND PATIO
WHITE MOLDED PLASTIC TOP WITH
TUBULAR STEEL LEGS 37 DIAMETER
PATIO TABLE
24. 99EACH
• GARDEN AND PATO
UMBRELLA STAND
DURABLE WHITE POLYETHELENE
PROVIDES UMBRELLA ANCHOR
8.99 EACH
MORVAL
BEVERAGE HOLDER
INSULATED
RETAINS HEAT OR COLD
PACK OF 4 0
NOXEMA
TROPIC TAN
LOTION 01L TAN & GUARD • AFTERTAN
110 mL
"SIZE 2.-39
MORVAL
FOAM COOLER
24 QUART CAPACITY
arip
EACH
MULTI -POSITION
VINYL LOUNGE
TUBULAR STEEL HEAT SEALED ATTRACTIVE
13.99
WELMAID
B.B.Q. OVEN MITTS
FULL 13 SIZE IN ATTRACTIVE COLOUR!
WE WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU IN
93210th Street
Open a nights e
week till 9:30
HANOVER
E;LMIRA
222 Arthur St. S.
Open Wed.. Thurs.
and Fri. evenings
LISTOWEL
976 Wallace Ave. N
Open Wed., Thurs.
and Fri. evenings
735 Tower St. S.
Open Wed.. Thurs.
end Fri. evenings
WINGHAM
Corner of No. 4
and 85 Hwye.
Opon Thurs., Fri. evenings
By IR' C Wilton
For tier fit .espeelally
of those .00$0itifilers
wlth:li> d spa+Ner.let'$ t*e
a l at the su&cession
*VA%qt vegetables This
is �another method for
gathering the maximum
possible alma* of pro .duce
from °Or vegetable plots. It
is based on the simple idea
that all the vegetables don't
need all their space for all
the season.
Leaf lettuce is an, excellent
example. I may want a short
row of it as a pretty, edible
edging.for the side of the
vegeble plot closest to the
house. I 'plant it early, and
it's either mostly consumed
or looking the absolute pits
by early to midsummer. °
What, do I do? I Hp out the
poor bedraggled things, give
them a proper disposaFin the
compost, and dig over the
space, incorporating some
peat or finished compost if I
have some. Into that space
I'll now seed a double row of
carrots for fall use. Along the
edge, they'll be well out of
the way of the fall digging,
and they'll ,be easy to pull
without wading, through
muddy dirt.
When early peas and pota-
toes are finished by midsum-
mer, the space they leave
vacant can well be filled with
fall cabbage, kohlrabi, broc-
coli, radish and another sow-
ing of peas — an early, short-
vined one that will mature by
autumn.
The first sowing of bush
snap beans can be made
along a warm edge of the
plot, and once they're past
their prime they can be re-
placed in midsummer by a
sowing of kale for use in the
fall and winter in mild areas.
Again, planted along the
edge by a path they'll be
handy to crop even in wet
weather.
In much the same way,
early carrots can be re-
placed with a seeding of fall
spinach. The early cabbage,
__ kohlrabi, broccoli and cauli-
flower patch can be followed -
with a midsummer sowing of
snap beans for fall. And that
row of head lettuce can be
followed up with a midsum-
mer sowing of beets for fall,
while the early beets can be
replaced by head lettuce for
fall.
While we're on the subject
of using our garden space
well, let's take a look at those
space -gobbling vining vege-
tables which can be a prob-
lem in small gardens.
Here again there are solu-
tions. One is to scour the
catalogs and seed racks for
bush varieties. Seed breed-
ers today are very conscious
of space problems in home
gardens, and have in recent
years produced just about
everything on bush or short-
vined plants — cucumbers,
melons and squash.
Walls, fences, a trellis,
wire or twine mesh, wooden
A -frames can all be used to
grow vining plants up in-
stead of out. Lazy layabouts
like cucumber and melon
vines can be trained up
i twine, or wood frames, or
wire cages. But they must be
either tied or draped over
their supports — they aren't
•clinging vines. And large
fruits like melons and squash
•will need slings to support
the fruits.
1 usually plant my winter
squash vines either along a
path edge where they can
make their way along the
outside of the plot, or against
a block of corn, where they
can wander in amongst the
corn plants.
Both sunflowers and corn
can be used judiciously as
supports for bean vines. One
bean seed only is planted at
the base of each corn stalk
that is on the outer perimeter
of the block of corn. Beans
could be planted beside the
interior corn plants if the
corn is generously spaced.
Some people like to erect
fairly permanent supports in
their vegetable plots, and ro-
tate the vining crops around
on them year by year. A sim-
ple and neat one that can be
constructed where a conven-
tional garden row would be is
a 6- to 7 -foot high frame with
two sturdy vertical posts at
each end and top and bottom
crossbars , of lumber. Strong
twine is laced vertically be-
tween the crossbars.
This works especially well
, for cucumbers which, though
they must be tied, do not tend
to drop their, unsupported
fruits and in fact develop
straighter fruits when the
vines are grown vertically.