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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1984-06-13, Page 21kj r Local Talent Presents The Farm Show Wratten By - Theatre Passe MuralIle Directed By Carol Onold Brussels Stockyard Sales Arena 8 p.m. June 26 & 27, 1984 Brussels, Morris and Grey Community Centre 8 p.m. July 1, 1984 53.00 Tickets Avallable'At: Mary's Sewing Centres (Clin- ton.& Listowel), Anna's Dress Shoppe ISeaforth), Harris Stationery (Wingham), Blyth Saga (Blyth). Brussels, Morns and Grey Municipal Offices. Contact Person Marilyn Engel 887-6976 This project has received assistance from the Department of the Secretary of State of Canada to mark the Bicentennial of the Province of Ontario c --SPECIAL PURCHASE Highlines Fish Cakes Ib .89 Fast Fry 2 oz. Portions HighlinerTurbot Ib 1.39 Peeled & Deveined (26 - 30 per Ib ) Highliner Shrimp Ib 8.95 5 PRE=PACKAGED DRY GOODS 2 kg. Windsor Table Salt ', Ib. Clubhouse ' Ground Black Pepper 2 kg Brown -Sugar 2 kg. White Sugar 2 kg Monarch Pastry Flour 2 kg. Icing Sugar ' .591 1.69 1.79 1.59 1°69 1.98 r Mild Cheddar Medium Cheddar Old Cheddar Mozzarella Marbled Colby, Curds Process -Cheese Slices MILLBANK CHEESE 2.89 Ib. 2.95 lb. 3.25 2.59 2.75 2.65 2.85 Ib Ib Ib • Ib Ib 100 gr 100 gr 100gr 100 gr 100 gr 100 gr .58 100 gr °63 Ib 2.69 . 63 . 65 .71 °57 . 60 Prices in Effect Until Closing, Tues: June 19th Congratulations to Olive Kennedy, the Winner of the Gas Barbecue Draw. 995 Wallace Ave. N. Listowel. 291-4777 Mon. -Sat. 9:30 am - 6 pm. Thurs. & Fri. Till 9 pm. ACtl®S3 ®QWN 1. With 6•Across, arctic Animals 6. See 1.Across 11. Luxury fur 12. Artificial 14. Pertaining to the spleen 15. Small restaurant 16. Theater section 17. Frenzied 19. - Yutsng, Chinese author 20. Constellation 21. Very short distance 22. Long (fur) 23. Masticate 24. Pilot's insignia 25. Hurt, in a way 27. Malacca items 28. Vamoose 29. Hit on the head: slang 30. Agony 31. Funny fellow 32. Decay 35. Naval officer: abbr. 36. Intentions 37. Indicating space or flight 38. Hinge (on) 90. Consent (to) 42. Surface 43. Garden bloomers .5 44. Lawn tool 45. Document addition 1. Abbey VIP 2. Greek letter 3. Cover the inner surface of 4 Anecdotal? collection 5. Akin 6. Jazz style: hyph. wd. 7. "CHIPs' " Estrada 32. 8. Dolt 9. Ship's ladder 33. 34. 36. 37. 39. 22. Garden flower 23. Sleuth of fiction 24. Baton 25. Plato's "school?' 26. Corrugated 27. Privateer 28. Sleuth of fiction 29. Eccentric wheel Beyerage Pee Wee or Della Bailiff's cry Digits Angel: French Sour; tart Work unit 41. Dernier -, latest fashion ' 10. Word with apron I1. Girl's name 13. Areas 18. Sea gull 21. Son of Noah �■■�■ 1 2 i 4 5 6 N U 8 9 , �■■..■ a cI 3 0 3 o asap Ma v w 16 ®■. I OO" I 0009 1m d num /ILO ■. N 1['•111 w VMD£ S 1/110 N I Z 20 ■■ 3 o 21 ■■U 22 ZON 3 I M 23 ill 3 3©©w e 11.07 o NI 25 26 �■■.WEI � 28 24 2 11 34 111 35 _lb 37 I isi42 43• 44 N■■. . id At wit's end by Erma Bombeck Last February, a group of my fun -loving, totally honest friends and I got together and decided to go to a health spa. All of us said up front we weren't going to a spa to lose weight. We were talking cerebral. All we wanted was a chance to get in touch with our feelings and visit with one another. If we grossed out people who saw us wear- ing leotards that made us look like a bag of dog nug- gets, then that was their pro- blem. We most certainly were notgoing there to com- pete to see who took the most classes or did the mountain hike. After all, if we wanted pressure, we would stay at home. As for clothes, why invest a lot of money in cute work- out togs that we'd never wear again? What's a few runs in your tights among friends? Right? This was go- ing to be a fun vacation of Retirement Home Al': qC ' C•`,:. 5 . '-• • T . -..V aft: • PRIVATE BEDROOM SEMI -PRIVATE BEDROOM Callander. Nursing Home in Brussels is expanding to in clude a retirement home. We are accepting applica- tions now for late 1984 (lc cupancy. New modern facilities. Enjoy the luxury of private br semi -private rooms complete with private bathrooms. Here are just a few of the advantages -available: • Prepared meals . • Laundry service • Tuck shop • Television and recreational lounge • Comparable rates rid For further information Call 357-3430 and ask for Mac MacGowan, Janet MacGowan or Janis Acheson. Scrabble, relaxation and good conversation. The decision to lose a couple of pounds before we went never entered my mind until we were having lunch a week or so later. I noticed a couple of my friends picked at lettuce and waved the des- sert cart on without salivat- , ing. That's when I decided to set a small goal for myself. I would lose a paltry pound a week so that by the time I got to the spa, I would be 16 pounds lighter. Losing it slow like that wasn't like go- ing on a crash diet, so my in- tegrity was intact. • Around the first of May, you cannot imagine my sur- prise when one of the women whipped by the house in a jogging suit that must have cost $60, a, pair of big -name running shoes and a $6 head- band. . .. There were persistent ru- mors that the others were going for the designer leo- tards, "Flashdance" T- shirts, leg warmers, coor- dinated c.over-ups, new swimsuits and cute shirts , with SWEAT written across them. For a three-week period, I had charge -card burns on 90 per cent of my hands. Several of them joined aerobics classes, two more. got into running programs, and three of them got pedi- cures for the first time . in their lives, for the unveiling of their feet to strangers. Naturally, being a -person of honor who practises truth as a religion, I did not adjust my goal to lose 16 pounds. It's just that at the count- down, I now'had to lose an average of eight pounds a week. This week, the group of fun -loving totally honest friends and I arrived at the health spa. They were so busy changing clothes for the next event, they never had a chance to relax. We forgot to bring the . Scrabble game which is just as well because no one is speaking to anyone anyway. Being totally honest is pressure. It's also a long time to hold in your stomach. There are more. than 300 one -industry communities in Canada depending upon log- ging and wood processing. We all know back-slap- pers, arm -throwers, should- er -grabbers, and two-handed haOshake artists, but by large, the males of North America are not what you might call a touchy-feely so- ciety. Most of the males I know are nervous even about bear -hugs from other men, and except for the Canadian men of recent European or Middle -Eastern extraction, kissing other men is abso- lutely out. For some of us, the thought of kissing or be- ing kissed by Yasser Arafat, for example, is enough to un- settle the stomach. And I hasten to add that this has nothing to do with Mr. Ara - fat's cause, his politics, or his ethnic background. It's just that most of the men I know are horrified by the thought of actually putting their lips to anyone who isn't soft, who doesn't smell good, and who.isn't a woman to her fingertips. What brings all of this on, of course, is the recent pic- ture in the newspapers of Prince Charles planting a kiss on the cheek of his youngest brother, Prince Edward. The Fleet Street press had a field day with it. The Daily Mail, for example, positively erupted. "The French do it, the Greeks do it, Argentinians and, Sikhs do it, even Russians in the streets do it.. "But the Mail concluded, • somewhat lame- ly, losing the cadence, "The British cannot bring them- selves to do it ... until yes- terday, when the Royals did it." The Daily Express, sug- gesting that the incident might launch a new fashion among British men, com- mented: "In other times in Britain, a kiss between men has been quite the done thing. But then, of course, men - and people in general - were so much more inno- cent of the homosexual over- tones that have complicated the manly kiss for us in this century". I don't know about the U.K., but I don't think it is simply homosexual over- tones which make the manly kiss taboo in North America. For the young male, it is part of the ritual of growing up. Most fathers kiss their child- ren indiscriminately, male as well as female, until the boy objects. At a certain un- definable point, a boy de- cides it is sissy for his father to kiss him, and in most cases, I suspect, they never kiss again. I don't believe for a mo- ment that Prince Charles is trying to set a new style. As a matter of fact, I'd be willing to bet that he was thinking of something else .when he greeted Prince Edward at Cambridge. Or ,someone else. Probably Diana, the Princess of Wales, his Lady wife. Absent-minded. That's what he is. I can't believe that he's a sissy. Prince Philip wouldn'tstand for it. Cooking Corner Potluck shower. By Toni Griffin When Georgia Sadler was planning a wedding shower for soon -to -be -married friends, she thought a kit- chen shower would be fun. Yet, a modern dilemma framed itself around the pro- posed late -afternoon party. Each of the betrothed had already established a house- hold of kitchen equipment. The bride-to-be, Tomes (Tomi) Carmont, and the bridegroom -to -be, physician .. Maurie Markman already - had small serving pieces for entertaining, so Sadler in- vited guests to give the • couple large serving bowls, trays or other containers for larger -scale entertaining. , "Both Tomi and Maurie love to -host parties, so I felt they they would be needing equipment for hosting their collective friends, said Sad- ler. Guests were asked to bring food for a potluck buffet din- ner, using the gift serving pieces to hold appetizers, en- trees and desserts. "Only foolproof or get -out - of -the -kitchen recipes were allowed," said Carmont, "since both of us work and we needed recipes we could count on. The party was a delightfully unique way to taste new foods and gain recipes as well." Now,marri- ed, she 'sa'"ys that she has used many of the recipes al- ready. Gifts ranged from bowls to platters, unusual plates, casserole dishes, cake carrying, pans and pie plates. One , group of guests banded ' together to outfit a large wicker picnic basket with tablecloth, glasses and an entire picnic set. And the foods? They rang- ed in flavor, color and tex- ture with a distinct and deli- cious international scope. Some of the shared recipes were family treasures which the guests had received at their wedding showers. - MARINATED SHRIMP Marinade: 1/ cups salad oil 34 cup white vinegar 11/2 tbsps. salt (less to taste) 2112 tbsps. celery seeds 3 tbsps. capers vs tsp. Tabasco sauce 2 cups sliced red onion rings 2 bags Crab Boil (seebelow 21/2 lbs. large peeled, uncook- ed shrimp 3 qts. water 4 tbsps. salt • THE SUNBURST DESIGN AT RIGHT PRESENTS A, REAL BRAIN SCORCHING PROBLEM. • THE OBJECT IS TO FILL- IN 5 THE SIX MISSING NUMBERS • WHICH MUST APPEAR IN THE CENTER OF TUE EMPTY SUN SPOTS. IN ORDER TO GET YOU STARTED IN THE s RIGHT ''DIRECTION", THE NUMBERS BELONGING IN • • '3" SUN SPOTS WAVE ALREADY BEEN POSITIONED. THE 13Z' SATELLITE NUMBERS U)ulCH HOVER AROUND TUE '4)" 2 • SUN -BURSTS ARE THE KEY DIRECTIVES IN SOLVING THIS PUZZLE. • • SUMSTROKE 0 •®•••••see••e•ee••sem• eo se•w••••ee•••eee••edre••seeseee•st•••••le *1983 Bir :Combine marinade ingre- dients and set aside. Bring water, salt and Crab Boil to fast boil in large pot. Add shrimp,l'eturn to boil, cook2 minutes (or less) . Remove from fire, put shrimp in co- lander and cool with cold ) running water. ,Cool cooking liquid. Wl*n liquid cools, re- turn shrimp to cooking liquid and soak 1 hour. Drain shrimp, add to marinade and refrigerate at least 24 hours. Use toothpicks to serve. About 40 marinated shrimp. Crab Boil: 1/2 cup mustard seed 1/2 cup coriander seeds 2 tbsps. dill seeds 2 whole allspice 2 tsps. dried red pepper 1 tsp. cayenne pepper 6 bay leaves Put all ingredients in cheesecloth and secure with string. Place in boiling water. GREEK CHICKEN ROLL 1 stewing chicken . 4 cups chicken broth 3tbsps. pimiento 2 tbsps. dry mustard 2 tbsps. lemon ,juice 1 tsp. dried mint 1 tsp. salt Bring chicken and broth to boil; reduce heat, cover and simmer 45 minutes. Remove , chicken and set aside to cool. Boil broth until reduced to 3/4 ,cups. Skim off fat and cool until thick and gelatinous. Meanwhile, remove meat from bones and discard skin. Chop meat in 14 -inch pieces (4 cups). In medium bowl, mix jell- ed chicken broth and all sea- sonings. Then stir in chicken. Shape into loaf. Cover and refrigerate until firm. STUFFED PEA PODS Wash Chinese pea pods and dry them. Slit them to make pocket and stuff with cream cheese, using a pastry bag or knife. HONEY -GLAZED CHICKEN WINGS 11/2 to 2 lbs. chicken wings or pieces one-third cup soy sauce 2 tbsps. salad oil . 2 tbsps. chili sauce one-third cup honey 1 tsp. salt 12 tsp. ginger 12 tsp. garlic powder Place chicken in baking pan. Mix remaining, ingredi-, ents, pour on chicken. Cover and refrigerate 1 hour or .more, turning chicken 30-45 minutes in 375-F oven. Re- serve marinade and brush chicken occasionally. CHERRY CHOCOLATE CAKE 14 cup sugar ,4 cup oil 2 eggs 2 tsps. vanilla 2 cups flour 1 tsp. baking soda' 1 tsp. cinnamon I R tsp. salt 1 cup walnuts 1 cup semisweet chocolate chips 1 can cherry pie filling Mix sugar, oil; eggs, vanil- la, flour, baking soda, cin- nairlon • and salt, then add walnuts, chocolate chips,and 'pie filling. Bake in bundt pan in 350-F oven approximately 1 hour. Serve plain or glaze with 1 cup confectioner's sugar mixed with 2 table- spoons ..ilk. • • • •• • • • • • • • •. • • • 0 • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • • 41963 Copley New Service Crossroads -June 13, 1004 -Page 7 Did Y Kn Flying reptiles u By PHYLLIS WEAVER Did you know that the dinosaur family had flying reptiles, too? It was about 2011 million years ago when the fur real- ly flew. These flying reptiles were not scaly, but had fur e warm. keep them arm . In 1970 the remains of a pterosaur, or flying reptile, were discovered. An acci- dent may have caused the creature to sink into the soft bottom mud of alake, here it was preserved in such detail that impressions of wing membranes and a furry covering were evident. The pterosaur ad long, fleecy hair coatiri its entire body. Since its body was not smooth and leathery as ear- lier believed, this flying rep- tile was probably a warm- blooded animal: One species of pterosaur, discovered in Texas, had a wingspan of over 50 feet. Its job was , similar to today's vultures. This jumbo -glider looked for a dead dinosaur, landed and gorged, and kept the earth clean of dead and decaying animals. BOO .3 `ma OA .a 10003WEI 3 0.0 3 30333V a cI 3 0 3 o asap Ma v w a v I o s - S9 3 N I OO" I 0009 1m d num D; oBORIV. MOIO d 3 J. N 1['•111 w VMD£ S 1/110 N I Z MHV 3 o O D 031510 ZON 3 I M ZQVsa s 3 3 3©©w e 11.07 o a a, d °31dWUX3 531119 motley - X13110101 38 lSf1W b38wf1N V 1131HM aS.OdS,21O10dS NOS 31110.1. S1NIOd .IDIS VJONOI11321103111 • CLOSING OUT SALE Starts Thurs. June 14 %o OFF ALL FABRICS (except cottons) SAVE 30-50%- • Printed Cottons • T -Shirting • Flannelette • Curtaining. • Dress Fabrics • Sheers • Polyester Satins Sewing Machines 25% off Many good used machines in stock. Plus many more in-store specials. Mary's Sewing Centre 181 Main St. W. Listowel 291-3445 only at &Jio. Pairnersion 343-2201 (f u, ,u,11 \Ictr:n. \ n 1 Lnl h! ,I Itrt,n, ,2111) 1 111'. 11111d11n, (Mind() /,