Ontario Community Newspapers

The Oshawa Times, 14 Jun 1961, p. 21

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PERI Sl CRN ei a Ta a a gi i CC A TE p-- A&P Fancy Quality TOMATO JUICE A&P Fancy Quality 8pecial Blend AP TEA Non Food Feature Wash & Wear, Short Sleeves MEN'S SPORT SHIRTS Frozen Food Features Pancy Sliced AAP Fancy Quality AtP PEAS York Brand RED CHERRIES ro Bhat 23 48-foxtin 29 SOCKEYE SALMON w+ 57: wok 7 Te «1.89 STRAWBERRIES 3 »--:1.00 Reg. 2 pkgs 300--8AVE Pe 8 rox pho: 69 Reg. 8 for 880--8AVE Ce PIES emexey, seer, Turkey 3 sozpies 7 Dc Reg. 2 Ibs B3c--SAVE 11e ==MARGARINE 4:95: S8HIRRIFF'S SCALLOPED & SLICED Reg. pkg 85c--SAVE be INSTANT POTATOES 2-63: KRAFT CALORIE-WISE, CASINO, CATALINA Reg. btl 31c--SAVE 4o FRENCH DRESSING «+27. FACIAL Reg. pkg 310--8AVE 30 KLEENEX TISSUE 2:-s=359 DEL MONTE PINEAPPLE- Reg. tin 37¢c--8AVE bo GRAPEFRUIT JUICE 2.69: STRAINED & JUNIOR Reg. 8 tins 32c--SAVE 8 BABY FOODS crests 10:29 9 CREAM OF TOMATO Reg. 2 tins 27c--8AVE bo HEINZ SOUP Gor GQ. ROSE BRAND Reg. jar 350--8AVE 20 MIXED PICKLES swir < 33. CANNED LUNCHEON MEAT Reg. tin 49¢--SAVE 40 KLIK nen Je GREEN GIANT, KITCHEN Reg. 3 tine 400--8AVE 3c WAX BEANS suceo 201-29: WESTMINSTER Reg. pkg 400--8BAVE 4e TOILET TISSUE oy. 1} wm RoE BRAND »s wy » a AW a he - " CAV eR Ts Cord xi ARR Cl a ge THE OSHAWA TIMES, Wednesday, June 14, 1961 21 Reg. 2 tins 20c--SAVE 2¢ y REY VL Reg. pkg 79¢--SAVE 4¢ maciso J Bc Reg. pkg 29c--8AVE 4e wn lB Reg. Jar 20c--SAVE 2¢ AYLMER FANCY QUALITY TOMATO JUICE RED ROSE TEA BAGS ORANGE PEKOE UTILITY GARBAGE BAGS E. D. SMITH'S PURE RED RASPBERRY JAM 9-fl-oz jar 27. WITH 6 FREE FLINTS Reg. 35c--SAVE 20 LIGHTER FLUID ave 201: 3 3c HELLMANN"S OLD HOMESTEAD Reg. btl 27c--SAVE 4e FRENCH DRESSING «+23 HELLMAN"S Reg. btl 26c--8AVE 20 FRENCH DRESSING «+23 McLAREN'S CORN, SWEET, GREEN -- MIX 'N MATCH RELISH 1ameurc oc HoT DOG 4 90. SUNNYFIELD Reg. pkg 33c--SAVE 4e CASHEWS carts Qe MILD, NIPPY, PIMENTO, SWISS Reg. pkg 250--8AVE 3e CHEESE SLICES wouee 2:47 KRAFT CRACKER BARREL CHEDDAR Rag. 56c--SAVE 20 MEDIUM CHEESE --33: More Super-Right Quality Meat Features JANE PARKER QUALITY Bakery Features! BAKED IN A&Ps OWN BAKERY BY MASTER BAKERS JANE PARKER APPLE PIE = 39 Reg. 48c -- BAVE 10c STOCK UP YOUR FREEZER AT THIS LOW PRICE Reg. 30c--S8AVE 10¢ each 29: Reg. pkg 30¢--S8AVE 100. CINNAMON ROLLS pkg 29c Jane Parker Reg. loaf 19c--SAVE Bo BREAD 60% WHOLE WHEAT 2 24.02 loaves 33¢ Jane Parker Plain or Sugared Reg. 350c--8AVE 6e HOMESTYLE DONUTS dozen pkg 29c Jane Parker Reg. pkg 29c--SAVE 9c OATMEAL COOKIES 2 pkgs 49 Jane Parker Reg. 27c--8SAVE 4c GOLDEN LOAF CAKE each2 3c SPECIAL! OUR OWN MARVEL BRAND, All FI! Avniine ICE CREAM ---79. Jane Parker SPANISH BAR CAKE Jane Parker SHANK PORTION 43 No Centre Slices Removed w 47¢ SHANK HALF SUPER-RIGHT, BROWN 'N SERVE -- ALL ME No Centre Slices Removed. BUTT HALF SE a ar GRADE "A" YOUNG BROILERS -- 4, TO 7-LB AVERAGE TURKEYS oven-reany Here's Proof You Save Cash on A&P Super-Right Quality Meats! COOKED -- READY TO SERVE SMOKED HAMS BUTT PORTION 49 b57¢ SALISAGE DATTIES ore 2 Qe 43. SIDE BACON MINCED BEEF » 35¢ PORK SHOULDERS ®39c POTATO SALAD rcrsiuscon 29 BOILING FOWL SLICED BEEF LIVER 39 CHICKEN LIVERS b39c coLD CUTS assorm a Tn 50 PORK SAUSAGES BACK BACON 203 End Cuts 169: 79 Allgood, 8moked, Sliced, Rindless Hb pkg 5 Qc Smoked, Cooked, Picnic Style Grade "A", Ready to Cook, 4 to 5-lb Average bg 3e Fancy Quality Pure, 8mall Link, Tray Pack 47 Cooked and Breaded SALMON STEAKS THE GREAT ATLANTIC & PACING TEA COMPANY LTB, All Prices In This Ad Guaranteed Through Saturday, June 17, 1961 It's New! on Sic ai A&P! GOLDEN LIBRARY of KNOWLEDGE IN 16 VOLUMES FACTUAL BOOKS FOR YOUNG READERS ILLUSTRATED IN GLORIOUS COLOUR only. 69. each. BOOKS 1 TO 8 NOW ON SALE Mitchell's Vitaminized APPLE JUICE «+-+35. MARGARINE Good Luck 21: - kgs OATMEAL COOKIES Dad's Pe iy CREAMETTE SHELLS For Tasty Salads 2 7-oz pkgs 21e BARBEQUE SAUCE Harry Horne 16-11 oz btl 47¢ SPECIAL 3: OFF This Week's Fresh Fruit & Vegetable Features! wT 5. Hot House, Ontario Grown, No. 1 Grade, 21.29. amt NEW CROP, NAVELS, FANCY GRADE ORANGES Imported, Yellow Flesh, No. 1 Grade PEACHES heaping at box 3 Qe BANANA S 21:29. Ontario Grown, Controlled "Atmospheres Storage, Fancy Grade, Excellent for Baking SPY APPLES ::iceobas 59 Hot House, Ontario Grown, No, 1 Grade, Large Size TOMATOES b29¢ Long Green Slicers CUCUMBERS California, Pascal, No. 1 Grade, Jumbo CELERY STALKS SPINACH California, New Crop, No. 1 Grade CARROTS each 2 5 ¢ Ontario, New Crop, Washed & Trimmed, No. 1 Grade 2 cello pkgs 29: 2 bunches 29: FRESH DAILY: Ontario Grown Head Lettuce, Green Onions, Radishes and Asparagus. SUPER AJAX 349 A&P REGULAR PRICE each 180 COLGATE : DENTAL CREAM LARGE SIZE TUBE FREE WITH FAMILY SIZE Poison Pills Should Not Be Coated MONTREAL (CP)--Drs. Eliz- abeth Hillman and E. R. Harpur of the poison control centre at Montreal Children's Hospital have a strong warning for drug manufacturers: 'Tablets of ex- treme toxicity such as quinine should never be coated or made palatable in any way." In 4 medical report on a case of poisoning, the doctors drove home graphically the dangers of making such tablets attractive to youngsters. They reported that two boys --aged three and five -- were brought to the hospital by police car from their suburban home after their mother found them in a room, pale and nauseated. Nearby was an open box of quinine pills and only three of the original 25 remained. The tablets were intended for the children's father to relieve muscle cramps. The mother believed the chil dren had taken the pills at about 11 a.m. She reached the hospital with them at about 1:15 p.m. WENT INTO CONVULSIONS On admission, both children were suffering convulsions. These were brought under con- trol by emergency treatment. By 2 p.m. the boys were trans- ferred to a ward. But a few minutes later the boys' pulses became weak, blood pressure could not be obtained and their hearts stopped. Doctors opened their chests and massaged their hearts. The older boy responded to the treatment and returned home five days later showing no after-effects from taking the pills. But efforts to resuscitate the younger boy failed. By 5:30 p.m. he was dead. The doctors say that if the tablets hadn't been palatable, such an accident might have been avoided. "It is interesting that in the tropics quinine tablets are never coated," they say. "Des- pite extensive use of the drug, accidental poisoning is virtually unknown." Ancesters May Be Just Electrons By A. R. JENSEN WELLINGTON, New Zealand (Reuters)--Experiments at Vie- toria University here may re- veal that life on this planet started from the electrification of complex molecules formed on the surface of a puddle. Passing arcs of 20,000 volts of electricity through liquids and gases simulating the earth's pri- meval atmosphere, the univer- sity's senior lecturer in applied chemistry, Dr. A. T. Wilson, has succeeded in evolving complex ' |hydrocarbon molecules which he believes are the fore-runners of protein, a vital component of living substances. With a completely different approach to the same subject, M. H. Briggs, lecturer in bio- chemistry, has worked on a meteorite containing carbon which fell in Wanganui, 100 miles north of here, in 1908. - Only 12 meteorites containing carbon, a basic substance in all living things, are known. Using various tests with his small amount of basic material, Briggs is working on a theory that life on earth was brought by complex organic molecules from another planet in the solar system. BASIC AGREEMENT Both scientists accept the same basic outlook of the earth before life evolved. This as- sumes a period of between two to three billion years, during which the planet was settling down after its creation. Its atmosphere was composed of gases such as methane and ammonia, its surface was erupt- ing with 'convulsive geothermal rataclvsms. The atmosphere and the earifi and ile walers beneath were rent with violent electrical discharges, and by showers of meteorites from space. Dr. Wilson suggested that the early steps in the chemical evo- lution of life may have been based on catalysts of hydrocar- bon type. Here Dr. Wilson's work links with that of Briggs, and with that of earlier scientificeworkers on carbon - containing meteor- ites. He speculates that the clouds of Venus may contain similar carbon material of high molecular weight. METEORITE CLUE One of the compounds brought to earth inside a meteorite has been linked with nucleic acid. This. acid is the basis of such living things as the human chromosome, which determines the hereditary factors passed from parent to child. Briggs believes that these complex carbon compounds ar- riving from outer space had per- haps plunged into a "soup" of complex molecules such as had been concocted by Dr. Wilson's experiments. This, he considers, could have been the catalyst for the first life on earth, a simple one-cell creature. Perhaps a scum of complex molecules had formed on the surface of a puddle. Here the flash of an electrical discharge or the extra - terrestrial sub- stances brought in by a meteor- ite had worked the miracle ~hioh save lifa ta agrth.

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