¢1 86 BROWN‘S LINE ALDERWOOD CL 5â€"4571 A SPECIAL ... LEAN RINDLESS SIDE BACON . u. 39. SAUSAGES 3 iss. $1 TASTY SMALL LINK AT THESE PRICES â€" HERE‘S PROOF â€" youurt save on ALl YOUR WEEKLY MEAT SHOPPING REQUIREMENTS WHEN YOU SHOP AT ALDER FARM ! It‘s a matter of dollars and sense. The average family with three, etc. On ten lbs. of fresh meat you can visualize a saving of at four children or more will spend approximately $8.00 to $12.00 least $2.00 per week. In two years this amounts to over 81“00. or more a week on meat o’:mo in !toir ftood budget. When you Then your home food freezer will save you easily up to $100.00 buy meat in bulk from Alder Farm, whether it be beetf, pork or on ‘‘in season‘" low cost produce purchases . . . (such as fresh lamb, your savings will average between 20c and 35c per pound strawberries â€" raspberries late this June and ecarly July). With dependent on the store selling price of different cuts, roasts, Alder Farm‘s automated butchering methods, high volume sales, we can afford to sell quoll? Gov‘t. inspected meats at the lowest prices in western Metropolitan Toronto, Port Credit, Brampton, PLEASE "OTE Georgetown and Oakville area. All Home Freezer Orders Are Cut Labelled and Packaged Free of Charge to Your Specifications. Johnny of Alder Farm It‘s a matter of dollars and sense. The average family with three, four children or more will spend approximately $8.00 to $12.00 or more a week on meat o’:mo in rtoir ftood budget. When you buy meat in bulk from Alder Farm, whether it be beetf, pork or lamb, your savings will average between 20c and 35c per pound dependent on the store selling price of different cuts, roasts, PORK s ROUND C 22e STEAKS ) is MJ or C ROASTS â€" ALDERWOOD â€" GEORGETOWN â€" BRAMPTON â€" OAKVILLE ON HIGHWAY 27, } MILE SOUTH OF THE QUEEN ELIZABETH M E A T HERE‘S HOW YOU CAN DO IT! COLD CUTS 39c is ASSORTED To all previous home freezer owners and our past customers we offer four pounds of butter absolutely free with your home freezer order from now until 6 p.m. June 29, 1963. If you will buy or have bought a home freezer from an authâ€" orized appliance retailer between May 18, 1963, and June 29th, 1963, as a special introductory offer to our home freezer order service you will receive four tender, juicy Red or Blue Brond sirloin steaks absolutely free with your order of $25.00 or more. (Food club, food plan, home freezer purchasers are not accepted in this offer). On all HOME FREEZER ORDERS ($25. or more) from now until 6 p.m., June 29/63 We cut and wrap all freezer orders to your specifications at NO EXTRA CHARGE M A R K ET $ FRESH White or Brown, 24â€"01. Loat B f 49 WEINERS 3 1ss. $1 FRESH SKINLESS rork 39 SIDE of Statistics reveal the disproporâ€" tionately large number of traffic fatalities in which the sixteen to 1twenty-four yearâ€"old class is inâ€" | volved. A remedy seems obvious. The younger drivers must be made more responsible. While they have the physical requireâ€" ments, they often lack the prudâ€" ence and judgment careful carâ€" | handting demands. $23,000 Blaze Could Have Been Avoided Says Chief If Firemen Called Earlier | gas tank. The chief feels that gas \ must have been spilt, because \ when the machine was started, it ignited a blaze which shot up \the walls of a small teanâ€"to at the back of 243â€"7th Street. . _ The youth and his father, Lesâ€" lie, tried fighting the conflagraâ€" tion with pails of water for five ‘minutes before calling the fireâ€" ‘men, according to the chief. Others besides the driver, howâ€" ever, share blame for highway deaths; particularly parents who allow teenagers behind the wheel too soon, or too often. No car keys should be handed over to boys or girls unless their ts are convinced that they flve the sense of moral responsiâ€" bility which driving entails, If parents think a boy‘s sixteenth mature youngster eager to marty. After all, his life‘s happiness is at stake. But these same parents will often give in to this same ‘hoycq..o-.-oyutfl birthday or his ability to pass a driving test gives this sense of moral values, they sct like the juvenile himself. _ Every sensible parent has defiâ€" nite ideas about his child‘s age and maturity when it comes to firm against a too young, too im« We are aghast at the mental picture of the dead at Hiroshima following the first atom bomb used in war the editorial said. But there have been many times this number killed by cars in the United States and Canada since World War II. And there is only the annual expectation that trafâ€" fic deaths will go on increasing with the added number of drivâ€" ers and vehicles each year. A $23,000 fire that drove six families into the street in New Toronto late ‘Friday could posâ€" sibly have been avoided if fireâ€" men had been called earlier acâ€" cording to Chief Frederick Campbell. ‘ which is over 70 years old. Driven into the streets were Claud Jacobs, his wife, and two "Accomplices In Murder" was the headline to an editorial in the respected Canadian Register, quoted by the Ontario Safety League. The reference was to paâ€" rents whose children, illâ€"preparâ€" ed for the responsibilities of driving, shed blood en the road. The chief said that Hugh Robâ€" ertshaw, 18, had been cleaning a gas line on a motorcycle which necessitated the removal of a "The flames just rolled right up the wall and along the roof," the senior Robertshaw said. children; Homer Gauvin, his By this time the fire had too good a hold. It had travelled through an open trap door and shot into a common attic shared by the six units of the structure A PAIR OF QUEENS was the winning hand at Royal York Colâ€" legiate last week, when "‘Posture Queens‘ were chosen by Z. L D3 m 4s mERt 1. EL Loo 1 C " B C T bo ue sn e e e en eo es H. Boyko D.C., of the Yorkâ€"Peel Chiropractic Council. Senior queen Donna Duncan looks at the rules of good posture and finds junior queen Barb Russell is sitting properly. The two were chosen from six finalists in each category. . THE ADVERTISER â€"â€" Worse Than Hiroshima Are You A Square? The Salvation Army aided any of the victims who requested it Twain‘s day, "square" was one of the best words in the lan« better for the firemen to go up to a fuvelnd not have to do anyâ€" "You gave him a square meal when he was hungry. When you got out of debt, you were square with the world. And that was when you could look your fellow man square in the eye." Then a lot of characters yan down the word. Result; "A square today is a man who never learn= ed to get away‘with it; a Joe who volunteers when he doesn‘t 10; * #u9 who gets his KitK frome Etobicoke fire departments fought side by side 1 mutual aid agreement. ture, clothing or lodging. calling them, which could and does, develop into great big fires. Yejt here, many lives are at stake. Irresponsible driving among young people, alas, often points behind them to irresponsible paâ€" rents who hand over car keys too foursquare to restore a sixâ€"letter word to its proper place in everyâ€" day talk. The word is "square." We think he‘s got hold of someâ€" square deal if you were honest. [He adds:) bprnts Pronptdvmenie Prosorap ibnantcid T. Mrs. Cox owned their homes and had insurance, and Gibson ownâ€" ed his but had no insurance. rest smoke and water damage. Firemen fought the blaze from omllp.gn.r'ljx’rummd firemen battled the blaze,. Memâ€" CECCsge WEmmnerolh ..“.“l Brower dares us to â€" get Mb&-# beliefs in such things as Robert Mercure and family, Lesâ€" ter Robertshaw, his wife, and eight children, Mrs. Olive Cox, a widow, and three children, and the Gibson family of five. A Madison Adam Charles H. Brower reâ€" little