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The Wingham Advance-Times, 1983-04-13, Page 23Prod. of USA Can. No.. 1 Head Lettuce Pro! of SSA . an. No. 1 rUS 12 oz. Prod. of Ont. Can. No. 1 Cooking Onions 10 lb. bag 88 Prod. of USA Can. No. 1 Cello Radishes 16 oz. pkg. is FRESH ONT RIOG Crossroads—April 13, 1983—Page 7 Fresh 3 - 4 lb. average Chickens kg. Fresh Whole Cut-up Chicken .44,440.4,01%•!X4p.4/-1,,,,r.' a.tlA.in7,laL;L10. kg./2 16/ Fresh Whole but -up kg.iii , Chicken 9 PIECES 8 Fresh Part Back Attached Chicken Legs kg. 2.16/ 9 Schneiders 175 gr. pkg. p Cooked Round Meats 1. O Schneiders 500 gr. pkg. Sausage Rolls 2.49 Schneiders 175 gr. pkg. �+ p Portion Ham Steaks 1. V O Schneiders 250 gr. pkg. Sandwich Style Rolls .99 Fresh Sliced k g 1.74 n lb. 39 Beef Liver FROM THE DELI Pride of Canada Sliced � ®®® Cooked Ham kg.lb. 2.26 Schneiders Sliced Popular Cooked Meats . kg. 5.50lb. 2.49 Schneiders kg. 5.80 ib.2.63 Polish Sausage Berry Box 24 oz. Raspberry, Strawberry Jam, Marmalade . 1.19 9 Dare 400 gr. pkg. p Breaktime Cookies . O 8 Gold Seal Red Sockeye Salmon 1.89 Baketime 1 kg. bag Regular, Fine, Instant Oats 1.19 Salada pkg. of 120 Orange Pekoe Tea 2.99 Pantry Shelf 28 oz. tin Whole Tomatoes .7 9 Facelle Royale Man Size .99 Facial Tissue York 500 gr. jar Smooth or Crunchy 1.69 Peanut Butter Globe 14 oz. tin .69 Pears MOUNT FOREST STORE ONLY! Visit our in-store Rountry Kitchen Bakery Fresh baked goods 'daily featuring: Assorted Fruit Breads 1.19 61.79 Our own Cream Buns A Ib. lb. ■ Fresh O 4/11 Part Back Attached ChiCkenkg3 Breasts lb. Fresh Chicken Wings g. 1 • lb. Fresh Chicken kg. 1.06/ Livers ... Schneiders 454 gr. pkg. Regular, Red Hot, All Beef, Dinner Franks Wieners 8 Schneiders Vac Pac whole kg. 6 ■ 3 + lb. 2 .99 Rib Eye Steaks sliced kg.6.59 lb. 2.99 Pride of Canada Dinner Pork Shoulders .... kg. ■ . lb: ■ 99 Pride of Canada 500 gr. pkg. Bacon 1.99 Pride of Canada 500 gr. pkg. Shamrock Bacon 1.99 Kitchener Packers Summer Sausage Chubs . Pride of Canada 500 gr. pkg. Pepperoni Sticks . Pride of Canada Smoked Ready -to -Eat Picnics FREIBURGER'S FOOD MARKET 6 Arthur Street North Elmira Open 6 Days a Week 8:30 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Wed. Thurs. Fri. till 9:00 p.rn. 121 Main Street Mount Forest Open 6 Days a Week 8:00 a.m. to 6:00 p.m. Thurs. Fri. till 9:00 p.m. kg. 6.5.9 . �e 2.99 ........2.49 .=2.18 e.99 FREE PARKING AT REAR OF STORES. We reserve the right to limit quantities. When there is something consistently wrong with the service or the product a company provides, the most obvious place to look for the cause is not in the corporate work force, but in the front office. Incompetence tends to seep down from the top. Similarly, when there is a problem between two countries, the place to look for the trouble is not among their diplomats, or in their civil services, but in the offices of the leaders — in this case, the Prime Minis- ter's Office in the Langevin Block and the Oval Office in the White House. The traditional tug of war between Canadian and American interests has been low profile the last few months, but it has started to attract attention again, and no one should be surprised by it. Canada and the U.S. have always had some basic differences. That's under- standable. We are a small country and they're a world power. They were founded on revolution; we waited patiently until colonialism went out of style. They be- lieve in the melting pot ap- proach; we believe in Multi- culturalism. Americans are not hyphenated; Canadians are. We have different values, different national ob- jectives, and totally different perceptions of ourselves. And in all these character- istics and a host of others, there "--are the seeds of trouble. What is new, there- fore, is not that there are problems- in 'U:S =Canadian relations, but that they are being handled so badly. I don't think there is, much doubt any longer about who is at fault. As I said earlier, if you want to track problems, start at the top. It's very dif- ficult to believe that Prime Minister Trudeau and Presi- dent Reagan have much in common. Mr. Trudeau is cool, aloof, a patrician, flu- ently multilingual, Cultured, intellectual and a lousy actor. President Reagan is a knee-jerk conservative, es- sentially plebian, pro-busi- ness, pro -development, vi- olently anit-communist, anti- intellectual, and enough of an . actor to think that a boyish grin is a reasonable substitute for an answer. I would not like to be a fly on the wall at a meeting be- tween those two because I can't stand suffering, even as a bystander. To be honest, I don't think that the present state of U.S.- Canada relations is primari- ly Mr. Trudeau's fault. He has a long track record with the Americans, and it isn't bad. There is a new and viru- lent quality to the disputes we're having now — the acid rain row for example, and Film Board offerings being labelled as foreign propa- ganda. Mr. Reagan doesn't understand Mr. Trudeau, or Canada, and therefore doesn't trust him or us. And he has created an atmos- phere in Washington which is poisoning U.S.-Canadian relations. Unfortunately, there are only a few Americans who know us well enough to realize what is happening. COUNTRY CANADA LOOKS BACK He thought he had it all. A million dollar beef operation. That was in 1978 when Ken Riddell was a guest on CBC Television's Country Canada. Today he's out of the business, selling at a four hundred thousand dollar loss. Then And Now, a three- part special series on Country Canada beginning Sunday, April 24 at 1 p.m. looks back and asks the question, where are they now? Guests from the past return to bring viewers up to date, after one of the most difficult economic times in Canadian history. Allen Wilford went on a starvation diet in jail to bring attention to the grow- ing farm protest movement. Wilford, president of the Canadian Farm Survival Association, was arrested for his involvement in a '30s style penny auction held for a farmer threatened with foreclosure. We take a look at how the movement, created because of high interest rates, has grown over the years, and the effect of the recent publicity.