Clarington Digital Newspaper Collections

Canadian Statesman (Bowmanville, ON), 25 Apr 1984, p. 33

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i I Section Two The Canadian Statesman, Bowmanville, April 25,1984 13 Prices effective thru Sat., April 28th, 1984 A&P reserves the right to limit quantities to normal family requirments SAVINGS SHOWN IN THIS AD BASED ON A&P CURRENT REGULAR RETAILS SUPER BUY! CAPRI, WHITE, YELLOW OR BEIGE, 1-PLY Bathroom Tissue PKG OF 4 ROLLS WHITE SWAN, 2-PLY, PRINTED ORANGE, GREEN OR GOLD Decorator Towels PKG OF 2 ROLLS 99 .99 AUTOMATIC, FILTER OR REGULAR GRIND Maxwell House COFFEE-369 g VAC PAC 2» Youll do better at with Supermarket prices SAVE 11.327kg ■60 lb CUT FROM CANADA'S FINEST GRADE 'A' BEEF SEMI-BONELESS Blade chuck Rib Roasts 4'71 lb îTïITÏ SAVE 1.32/kg-. CUT FROM CANADA'S FINEST GRADE 'A' BEEF EXCELLENT FOR BRÀISING SAVE 1.10/kg-.50 Blade Steaks 4V/1 lb PICNIC SHOULDER OR SHOULDER BUTT Pork Chops 028/149 /kg / I lb POINT BLADE, CHUCK SHORT RIB OR SHOULDER Boneless Beef Boast 4®l/2?? Brisket Beef (CENTRE CUTS5.49/kg-2J9|^ End Cuts 5"/2 J lb Burns Pride of Canada Week at A&P! SAVE 1.98/kg-. END CUTS (CENTRE CUT PIECE OR SLICED-5.93/kg-2.69 lb) Boneless C27/039 Pork Loins XmJ u* BONELESS SHOULDER Butt Pork Roast 2ÏÏ/1 2 .? FROZEN, NEW ZEALAND, SHOULDER LAMB CHOPS OR SHORT CUT Lamb Legs 4*?/1 99 /kg' 1 lb BURNS PRICE OF CANADA SHAMROCK, STAMPEDE OR AAP REGULAR 1 TUCK Side Bacon BREAKFAST \ Burns Sausage PRIDE OF CANADA, REGULAR OR B.B.O. Burns Wieners PRIDE OF CANADA Smokie Dogs PRIDE OF CANADA, BY THE PIECE Bologna Chunks PRIDE OF CANADA, SWEET PICKLED Cottage Rolls PRIDE OF CANADA, READY-TO-SERVE Vintage Hams MUCK SLICED 500 g 029 vac pac L, 028/149 U/kg/ I lb 450 g 129 vac pac I 450 g 029 Pkg (L 006 /139 U/kg/ I lb £39/199 "t/kg/ I lb 036/079 O/kg/U lb PRIDE OF CANADA, SLICED Cooked Ham GRANULATED 175 g 149 vac pac I PRIDE OF CANADA, SLICED, SUMMER, SALAMI, PEPPERONI, HEADCHEESE 175g QQ vac pac ■ w w 500 g 1 vac pac I 79 375 g 019 bowl Cm /kg PRIDE OF CANADA, 6 VARIETIES INCLUDING MAC 1 CHEESE, SLICED 1759 89 vac pac eVw Cooked Meats Cooked Meats PRIDE OF CANADA Sliced Bologna PRIDE OF CANADA Headcheese PRIDE OF CANADA SLICED, BOLOGNA, CHICKEN, MAC A CHEESE OR LUNCHEON Cooked Meats va 3 c 75 pa 9 = 1 69 BURNS, COIL Polish Sausage BURNS Smoked Sausage 5"/2^5 BURNS PRIDE OF CANADA, SMOKED Back Bacon White Sugar SAVE 1.10 k',m 89 lb aao/hus U /kg / lb .89 Bale of 10-8.90-Save 11.00 LIMIT 10 BAGS PER FAMILY PURCHASE TOMATO OR VEGETABLE Heinz Soups 6 10 II oz 1 lins 1 99 HEINZ Tomato n Paste u 15 V! Il oz 1 tins 1 149 SAVE. TOMATO Heinz Ketchup 1 litre btl 2.29 KOSHER, PLAIN OR GARLIC Heinz Dill i Pickles tit 1 L8 y SAVE 2.00 REG 1 SUGAR FREE GINGER ALE, REG 1 SUGAR FREE OPLUS ORANGE, TONIC WATER OR SODA WATER, WINK OR DR. PEPPER Canada Dry CASE OF 24-280 mL TINS Plus .30 btl deposit SAVE UP TO .54 ORANGE, GRANNY SMITH APPLE, GRAPEFRUIT, FROZEN, CONC Sun Pac Juices 12.5 fl oz tin 1.19 FROZEN, BEEF, CHICKEN OR TURKEY SAVE .20 Swanson Meat Pies 8oz pkg FROZEN, CRISPY CRUST, PEPPERONI OR DELUXE Totino's Pizza 3 P 6 °g 9 MILD, MEDIUM, OLD WHITE OR COLOURED SAVE UP TO .66 SAVES) 2.69 MILD, MEDIUM, OLD WHITE OR COLOURED SAVE UP TO j6 Schneider's Cheese w 3 s3,19 SILHOUETTE, PLAIN OR ASSORTED Delisle Yogourt SILHOUETTE, PLAIN OR ASSORTED FLAVOURS SAVE .44 SOOgl AQ ctn la *13 SAVE .56 SOFT MARGARINE, TWIN PACK Blue Bonnet pkg of 2 Bozlubs .99 SEALTEST, LIGHT 'N LIVELY, ASSORTED FUVOURS SAVE .40 Ice Milk z r2.79 GOLDEN SKILLET, FROZEN, HONEY DIPPED (WINGS 5.05/kg-2.29 lb) Chicken BreastsorLegs 5^/i2^b FROZEN, IN BATTER, STICKS OR FRIES SAVE 1.00 High Liner Fish Z 9 3.39 ASSORTED VARIETIES, FROZEN, STOUFFER'S Lean Cuisine 2 P K 1 g 9 STOUFFER'S, FROZEN (SINGLE SERVING USAGNA 298 g-2.69), Mac & Cheese SAVE jO 2.99 'S'1.49 MILUPA, ASSORTED VARIETIES INCLUDING OATMEAL 1 APPLES SAVE JA Infant Food $1,99 BABY FEEDING SAVE .20 Farley's Biscuits 3 P 0 k 0 g 9 1.99 EASY ON (ALL FABRIC SIZING 567 g SIZE) SAVE UP TO J6 Speed Starch 567g 1 qq aerosol tin liww SAVE. | KRAFT SALAD DRESSING Miracle Whip BURNS Tenderflaked 4 Ham 1 1.09 Let's Get Growing By Harry VanRelle For Lhe Week of April 16,1984 THE JOY OF EASTER No olher lime during lhe year is as joyful as lhe Easier Season. Plants "play a large part of this celebration, especially especially when Easter is late like it is this year. The foremost plant for this season is of course the Easter Lily with its beautiful white flowers. The crop this year looks excellent and due to the fact that Easter is late they are starting to bloom right on time. They are easy to look after, once you get them from the florist. Water them every other day, and you will notice that when the trumpet opens there are six stems coming out of the centre of the flower which are called stamen, and on the end they will have a ball of orange yellow material which must be removed otherwise otherwise this material will drop on the white trumpet and discolor the pure white flower. After the lily is finished blooming it should be placed in a cool spot in the house and watered about every eight to ten days, and then when the danger of frost if over you can place them in the garden where they will flower once more in the fall season. The bulb should be planted at least six inches deep, and will likely last for several years. Spring pots of Tulips, Hyacinths Hyacinths and tulips make also excellent Easter pots. These can be planted outside after the blooms are finished and should be planted at least six inches deep in the garden, with the exception of the Hyacinth, Hyacinth, it is better planted at four inches. Things to do in the Garden This Week Last week I wrote about applying the Cycon 2E to the soil around the Birch tree for control of Leaf miner, I mentioned that for every inch of tree one ounce of the chemical chemical should be used, this should be for every inch of calibre or the width of the trunk one foot above the soil, one ounce of the Cygon 2E should be put in the soil at the drip line. This should be done now for good' results. There is still time to get that dormant spray on the fruit trees and other trees. The lawns should be raked and the first application of plantfood should be applied to get the lawn in a good shape for the coming season. Use the type that will feed the lawn right away and also will feed the lawn over a period of two months. Shortly you will be able to uncover the roses, depending on the weather, a good rule of thumb is, if the buds are starting to show, or are at least a half inch long the plant can be uncovered. The Hybrid Tea Roses and the Floribunda Roses must be cut back to at least six inches from the soil level so that the new shoots can produce the new branches for this coming season. Climbing Climbing roses are treated a little different. They should be thinned thinned out if they have a lot of heavy stems coming from the base, and the long ends should be pruned back to about six feet, to induce them to produce produce new branches where the flowers will develop, and you will get masses of blooms again this year. Now is a good time to prepare prepare your flower beds for planting. Dig over the soil and add some form of plantfood to the soil, this can be either a chemical fertilizer or a good composted manure, of the two the manure, will give you the best value, it will build up the soil with humus and at the same time it will add plant- food to the soil, just as nature intended it. Until next week, Happy Gardening. AGRICULTURAL NEWS By John E. Finlay, Agricultural Representative Farm Credit Rates Increase Farmers received bad news on Monday, April 9th, when the Federal Agriculture Minister announced increases in Farm Credit Corporation Loan rates. Fixed rate loans will now be offered for five-, ten-, and twenty - year terms and may be amortized for up to 30 years. The increased rates are 14 percent for a five-year term; 14% percent for a ten-year term; .and 15 percent for a twenty-year term. Farm Credit Corporation's lending rate had been 13 percent since November 22,1983. Tax Treatment of Manufacturer Rebates There is one cheque which does not have to be reported as income. The policy of Revenue Canada permits a manufacturer's manufacturer's rebate to be treated as a nothing. For instance, a farmer negotiates the best deal possible for a new baler (perhaps $9,500.). The cost of the baler for investment tax credit, future capital gains, and initial cost for capital cost allowance is this purchase price. Should the manufacturer, manufacturer, possibly as a marketing plan, send a refund cheque of $500, the cheque does not reduce the purchase price. If the dealer, however, provides provides a refund or discount, the purchase price must be reduced reduced to the net cost for investment investment tax credit calculations, calculations, depreciation, etc. Like many good policies, this one could be changed if abused. However, if a farmer has in 1983 received a rebate from a manufacturer he need not include it in income or reduce the cost of the asset purchased. How to Launder Contaminated Clothing Pesticide residue is picked ■ up on clothing worn during pesticide application. Because pesticides can enter the body through the skin, careful attention to clothing contaminated contaminated by drift or spills is required. Researchers at Iowa State University, Ames, conducted a study to determine the best procedure for laundering the clothing worn by farmers during pesticide application. Heavy weight denim of 100 percent cotton and a polyester - cotton blend cambray fabric were used in the study; pesticides pesticides used were atrazine (a herbicide) and thimet (an insecticide). insecticide). Results of the study showed that normal laundering was adequate in removing the pesticides - 99.8 percent of the chemicals were removed from the clothing. These laundering procedures procedures should be used: clothes worn while applying pesticides pesticides should be washed daily being placed directly in the washing machine or held in a plastic bag; pesticide-contaminated pesticide-contaminated clothes should not be mixed with other laundry; hot water (140 deg. F) heavy duty phosphate detergent and normal laundry methods for heavily-soiled clothing will remove the pesticides; any leftover pesticides should be removed from the washer by running the machine empty through the complete laundering laundering cycle, using detergent. This recommendation is based on preliminary data, but is a good precautionary step. In addition, Dr. Dick Frank, OMAF Pesticide Lab, Guelph, recommends that farmers wear a cap when working with these chemicals. Coveralls should be changed halfway through the day or immediately immediately if a spill occurs. Life on a Farm I have never lived on a farm but I can only imagine what it would be like. Lots of work and animals to keep you busy day and night. Also crops and fields to plant and harvest (to bring in). Some crops would be grain, hay, oats, corn and straw. Many hours would be spent before any of these would be ready to bring in. Animals on a farm might be cows, chickens, pigs, sheep and maybe a horse. My Grandpa had a farm and worked very hard. He worked long hours every day. Life on a farm would be hard work, but it would be great. Carrie Ann Vance Grade 4 Newcastle Public School HAMILTONS INSURANCE SERVICE S/MffSÊ Main St., Orono 1BSSO 983-5115 SERVING YOUR INSURANCE NEEDS FOR 35 YEARS Susan Sawyer JudyWoodbeck Nelda Dawson 983-5270 983-5519 983-9657 MERVYN B. KELLY Law Office General Practice The Federal Building (Post Office) 2nd Floor - Temperance Street Bowmanville, Ontario, L1C 3A0 Telephone 623-4444

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