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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-06-13, Page 19• 1 WESTCANE FINE GRANULATED WHITE SUGAR OUR REG. 1.99 2 kg BAG FOR SALAD OR SANDWICH $" KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP STRAIGHT OR CRINKLE SUPERMAN FRENCH FRIES f7 , SA. "CONCENTRATED WELCHS GRAPE JUICE OUR REG. 1.79 FROZEN 1 kg BAG CONCENTRATES MOTTS APPLE JUICE OUR REG. 1.39 355 mL TIN WHOLE WHEAT CEREAL NABISCO SHREDDIES REGULAR INSTANT NESCAFE COFFEE 10oa DEEP BROWNED IN TOMATO SAUCE OR WITH PORK LIBBYS BEANS g9` OUR REG. 1.45 19 oz. TIN t LAURA SECORD YOGURT OR MINI PUDDINGS OUR REG159 2.39 500 OUR REG. 2.59 CHAMPAGNE VIVA WHITE OR YELLOW PAPER TOWELS OUR REG. 1.73 2 ROLL PKG. 9 9` SEALTEST SOUR CREAM In500 mL CHEEZ 9 KRAFT WHIZ 500 i199 ZEHRS IND. WRAPPED CHEESE SLICES X00 904 2i 99 16 , REGULAR OR EXTRA BODY SILKIENCESHAMPOO OR CONDITIONER 200 mL f59 PARKAY SOFT MARGARINE BOWL 9 VACHON 12 CARAMEL 6 Gli IiOC. HALF MS OONS -.,Ii 79,, PKG. REGULAR OR MINT AQ UAFRESH �, TOOTHPASTE 150 mL 1• S9 COKE DIES' COKE OR DIET SPRITE 750 PLUS mL 590 JUMBO SIZE ROLL SARAN WRAP METRE 1 99 ORANGE FLAVOURED TANG CRYSTALS OF 4 1e 49500 WELCHS PURE GRAPE J AMoR JELLY mL 1.69 COKE DIET COKE OR DIET SPRITE 24 280NSL�.99 PALANDA CANNEDBEEFARONI, HAM 2.59 4548 NABISCO 100O RAN �� B 575g 179 NCH EF BOY -AR -DEE MINI BITES, BEEF RAVIOLI, OR MINI RAVIOLI 4259 890 .e FOR YOUR LAUNDRY FAB DETERGENT 2.4Kg399 .;T MIXED OR YUM YUM :=�BICKS PICKLES LITRE 2.99 I BLUEWATER BOSTON BLUEFISH FRIES OR.KRI5PS 227g 1e39 SANKA INSTANT COFFEE , 8JA°Rz. 6.49 NEILSON CALIFORNIA ICED TEA 500 g ii 99 ,, VACUUM PACKED SANKA COFFEE 369 g 3e 99 LIQUID FOR DISHES PALMOLIVE DETERGENT ONE. " ONE �e 77 DESSERT TOPPING BIRDSEYE COOL WHIP ONE �e�9 LITRE GRANNY BUTTER TARTS PKG. OF 10 L29 Special prices in effect until closing une1 th June 16th CLUB HOUSE GROUND BLACK PEPPER 113 g e39 RUG 8 ROOM DEODORIZER CARPET FRESH 400g �•I ASSTD VARIETIES COLONIAL COOKIES 00 4g 1.79 ASSTD VARIETIES MISS MEW CAT FOOD 1709 3/1 KEN -L -RATION TENDER CHUNKS 4Kg S 99 J PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIFORNIA CAN. NO. 1 LONG WHITE 79 NEW POTATOES BULK 4�,4 ikg 10 19�Ib. BAGLB. (HOTHOUSE TOMATOES PROD. OF ONTARIO CAN. NO. 1 063. f.39.06 /kg Ib. ASSORTED LARGE SIZE - 10" POT TROPICAL PLANTS PERSIAN VIOLETS TABLE FERNS REIGER BEGONIAS GREEN PLANT PRODUCT OF U.S.A. FRESH SPINACH 10 Oz. PKG. 795 PROD. OF S. AFRICA GRANNY SMITH APPLES CAN. FANCY f.7f " r Ib. PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIF. CAN. N0. 1 STRAWBERRIES QUART 12.95 PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIF. CAH. N0. 1 CANTALOPES SIZE 18 6' POT 4- POT 4 POT IN 1.99 1.29 PRODUCT OF HONDURAS 4.99 DOLE PINEAPPLES EA 1.99 PROD. OF ONT. CAN. FANCY 139 IDA RED APPLES 3 LB BAG 1.79 rilla .S.A. CALIF. CAN. N0. 1 61 1 1.69 E PLUMS 2 kg • 191b PROD. OF U.S.A. TEXAS CAN. N0. 1 ©� 49° A MUG EA. 199 SPANISH TYPE ONIONS L /k9 Ib . OF ONTARIO LEAF 2/89° PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIF. CANADA NO, 1 GREEN PEARLETTE SEEDLESS GRAPES 4.39 '99 PRODUCT OF ONTARIO GREEN ONIONS BUNCHES PRODUCT OF ONTARIO BUNCH RADISHES PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIF. CAN. N0. 1 CAULIFLOWER ' EA' U PROD. OF U.S.A. CALIF. CAN. N0. 1 BUNCH CARROTS PROD. OF U.S.A. FLORIDA CAN. N0. 1 CUCUMBERS FRUIT PUNCH LEMONADE OR GRAPE COCKTAIL ��� J.B. DRINKS 1 5 LITRE . . 3/99i 2/89' 1.79 79' 2/99¢ WE RESERVE THE RIGHT TO LIMIT PURCHASES TO REASONABLE WEEKLY FAMILY REQUIREMENTS. WE WILL BE PLEASED TO SERVE YOU IN 032 10th Street Open 6 nightie 6 week till 9:30 HANOVER ELMIRA 232 Arthur St. S. Open Wed . Thurs and Fri evenings LISTOWEL 975 Wallace Ave N Open Weld_ Thurs and Fri evenings FERUUS OUR REG. 3.99 LUVS DIAPERS 24 SMALL, 16 MEDIUM OR 12 LARGE RAGU PLAIN OR MEAT 398 POWDERED SPAGHETTI mLAJAX 40 0 g� SAUCE 99' CLEANSER 69 CLUBHOUSE BACON CHIPS SALAD TOPPINS 90 g 1.79 BADEN COLBY CHEESE 1.89 227 g SURTEC GARBAGE BAGS 1049 PKG. OF 10 BADEN CHUNK STYLE 340 g SLIM CHEESE 2.99 CLUB HOUSE GARDEN VEGETABLE SALAD 84 g TOPPINS 1.79 LIGHT N LIVELY ASSTD FLAVOURS 1 Kg SEALTESTS9 YOGURT ?. PKG OF 2 BATH BARS IRISH 280 g SPRING 1.49 LEMON OR RASPBERRY WESTONS PKG. BUTTER - HORNS 1.39 735 Tower St S Open Wed Thurs and Fri evenings teereireereireiremeriseerreerreerleememerrierekik WINGHAM Corner of No. 4 and 66 Hwys. Open Thurs.. Fri. evenings Crossroads -June T3,184 -=Pale 5 firoissieseemommaiimaineatessamile H. GORDON GREEN • P• resident Reagan's pil- grimage to China was off spe- cial interest to me because just 20 years ago I was there ahead of him. True, my visit in 1964 was somewhat less auspicious - my Chinese visa listed me as a 'Canadian peasant' - but in one respect I think my trip was even P" more remarkable than Rea- gan's because mine was to a country that didn't exist! The Americans had said so, and to the free world that made it official. The real China, so Washington had declared, was on the island of Taiwan and its leader was a broken down warlord nam- ed Chiang Kai Shek. And here in Canada we reverently accepted the American dictum, though in a manner as curious as it was convenient. We shipped the Chinese a lot of our sur- plus wheat in '63, bit their coin and found it real, but agreed with the U.S. that the country which minted it wasn't! For 30 years one American government after another refused to accept the fantas- tic revolution which for the first time in history had not only unified the billion Chin- ese, but freed them from centuries of hunger. They kept Mao's China out of the United Nations and the Olympics, and refused to let any of their own people go there. They fumed inces- santly about how Mao's damnable Reds threatened world peace; and to contain that threat, they threatened. One Sunday, morning when we were being shown around the lovely Children's Palace in Shanghai, I discovered 'that one of our interpreters was listening on his pocket radio to a broadcast beamed at Red China by the Voice of America, and when he began shaking his head in dismay I asked him the reason. "They are telling us," he said, "that from their base in Okinawa, they are now' able to wipe out five of our cities .in a single day." Finally came Viet Nam and the hideous war to hold the Communist hordes to the north at bay. Not a Chinese soldier • did the Americans find but they lost 55,000 of their own men in that jungle hell trying to contain what they perceived as a deadly peril. And then an incredible thing happened. Even as his troops were locked in battle there, President Nixon went to Red China and shook hands with Mao. Though he now confesses that at certain times in his career he has been rather stupid, in this in- stance Nixon had finally be- come astute enough to real- ize that the United States might find it more profitable to be on speaking terms with the new China than to re- , main its implacable enemy. So began the thaw which has now made it possible for even a president like Reagan to go there glad -banding and back-slapping. But why is it so difficult for a country so fiercely proud of the revolution that made it a nation, to tolerate revolution elsewhere? Why must it be a state religion in the U.S. to rely on threat and force to snuff out the revolutions of lesser peoples no matter what evils may have prompted them? And why must such a policy persist when it is clear to all who will see that it never suc- ceeds? The CIA didn't topple Cas- tro, but only made a hero of him. The embargo hasn't starved Cuba into submis- sion but only made it more dependent on the Soviets. Ditto for Angola. And Henry Kissinger and Company must know by now that the assassination of Allende only postponed the inevitable in Chile. When Senator Frank Church was dying of cancer a few weeks ago his last pas- sionate plea to his country was that it should cease "trying to repress the irre- pressible". The policy' of al- ways opposing change by force, he warned, had done terrible damage to the Unit- ed States. I wonder if Ronald Reagan took any note of that warn- ing, and if anything in his visit to the China his nation so long feared and despised gave him occasion to ponder it. Or if he will go on ponder- ing new ways to mine the harbors of Nicaragua.