Oakville Beaver, 16 Oct 1994, p. 20

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Fall meals are healthy and hearty with Product of Italy Buitoni Pasta, 79 cents per 500g package. Cut from Canada A Grades of Beef, juicy Boneless Blade Roasts are $1.99 a pound, $4.38/kg. At their peak of flavor this time of year, Product of Ontario Field Tomatoes are 69 cents a pound, $1.52/kg. I I I i Garrie Chris‘ No Frills j is 79 cents a pound, $1.74/kg. | . Oakville fans will have the chance to 3 a meet cartoonist Johnston, when she : Lon g o‘s Fruit Market : autographs her latest comic collection â€" I Fall meals are healthy and hearty with Product of Italy Buitoni Pasta, 79 1 the 15th Anniversary book ‘"‘It‘s The j cents per 5009 package. Cut from Canada A Grades of Beef, juicy Boneless 1 Thought That Counts" â€" at Quest I Blade Roasts are $1.99 a pound, $4.38/kg. At their peak of flavor this time of j Booksellers this Wednesday, from 12:30 j year Product of Ontario Field Tomatoes are 69 cents a pound, $1.52/kg. | pm. to 1:30 p.m. o 3 u. Johnston was working as a commerâ€" : Garrie Chris‘ No Frills : cial artist when her obstetrician in | _ Homemade fruit pies and moist loaves for lunches start with Five Roses j Hamilton, Dr. Murray Enkin, suggested J Allâ€"Purpose Flour, 10kg bag, $3.99. Savor the tropical taste of sweet juicy J she do some cartoons for the ceiling of J Fresh Cantaloupe, large size 18s, 69 cents each. Always versatile, Fresh J his examining roomâ€"so women would J Split Chicken Breasts are $1.99 a pound, $4.39/kg. J have something to look at (and laugh at) : Watch for more great buys next week in your Sunday Oakville Beaver. : glhg:;g::g on their backs during prenaâ€" Happy Shopp’ng" 8 #Thaea nartnane hanamaa kant and j _ For suppertime simplicity, stock up on Primo Pasta or Sauce, 900kg q strip that runs in most major newspaâ€" package or 680mL tin, 79 cents each. Brighten up lunches with sweet Fresh q pers. The strip‘s popularity continues to Outspan Oranges, size 88s, 12 for $1.99. Economical Pork Shoulder Roast 1 increase, despite occasional controversy. 3 is 79 cents a pound, $1.74/kg. p _ Oakville fans will have the chance to is | TTA or the past fifteen years, the For From the meat department, Fresh No. 1 Grade Chicken Leg Quarters, 1 4 Better or For Worse family has are 59 cents a pound, $1.30/kg. Sunday dinner is a classic with Boneless 1 A. _ been entertaining readers across Outside Round Roast â€" $2.48 a pound, $5.47/kg. Treat yourself to yummy, [ North America. Syndicated cartoonist meltâ€"inâ€"yourâ€"mouth Viva Puffs, 400â€"450g box, $1.79 with Supersaver Card. _ q Lynn Johnston tells the stories of the a J Pattersons and their children Michael, _Food City J Elizabeth, and April, in a daily comic 1‘ % P ADVERTISING FEATURE | 4 [ S a FAAA L eeuhis weekly series highlights some of the best advertised values for food q ‘ and household items offered by our featured grocery advertisers. We | hope it will help you and your family to stretch those allâ€"important food | By TERESA PITMAN buying dollars. Here are this week‘s best buys: | Special to the Beaver AP For Better or For Worse cartoonist 1 in town for booksigning Wednesday Those cartoons became a book, and ""I wanted another baby myself, but couldn‘t have one," Johnston explains. ""So I did the next best thing â€" I had a baby in the comic strip." Johnston feels she has more flexibiliâ€" ty with April because she isn‘t based on that became three books, and then the strip evolved out of that," Johnston explains. The adventures of the Patterson famâ€" ily are loosely based on Johnston‘s own family life, but while the Johnstons have a son and a daughter, the Pattersons had a new addition â€" baby April â€" in 1991. Lynn Johnston Combating that isolation is one reaâ€" son Johnston looks forward to the proâ€" motional tours, such as the one planned for next week. She values the experiâ€" ence of meeting her readers and hearing the reactions to her work. "It‘s like invitâ€" ing other people into your fantasy," she says. ‘TI‘ve created this family, these stoâ€" ries, and it‘s amazing to me how many people say it‘s just like their family, or that the same thing happened to them." "Some people said issues like child abuse don‘t belong in a comic strip, that it wasn‘t funny," Johnston says. "But I‘ve never been out just for laughs â€" this is about real life, the hard times as well as the fun." Writing the strip each week is someâ€" times a challenge, especially as the charâ€" acters grow older. "It might have been easier if I‘d kept them at the same age," Johnston suggests. "Now we have less of the cute little kids stuff. But I‘ve changed, too, as my children have grown, so I think it‘s good that the charâ€" acters are growing with me." Another challenge â€" one faced by most cartoonists and writers â€" is the isoâ€" lation that Johnston works in. "Right now I‘m working on the December strips, and I won‘t get a reaction to them for months. I really need that input from others because, sometimes, I think something is funny but no one else does â€" you just have to be mature enough to throw it away and start over." There was also some controversy when Gordon (another friend of Michael‘s in the strip) told his friends that his dad had beaten him. She‘s also tried to make a point about Lawrence‘s continuing role in the strip. "Lawrence has continued to be part of many stories â€" he helped Gordon move, for example, he‘s been part of the high school graduation. The most important part about Lawrence isn‘t that he‘s gay, it‘s that he‘s a good person and Michael‘s friend." For a comic strip noted for its warmth and affectionate humor, For Better or For Worse has also been the topic of controversy. The Patterson‘s son Michael‘s friend announced to Michael that he was gay, and readers all across North America reacted. Johnston says there was some negative reaction priâ€" marily in the United States, but that she received over 3,000 letters about the topic and most were positive. a specific person â€" ""She can be as outraâ€" geous as I want. She‘s maybe based a little more on me â€" I was a little devil growing up."

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