Winnipeg Free Press

Thursday, November 13, 2025

Issue date: Thursday, November 13, 2025
Pages available: 32

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  • Publication name: Winnipeg Free Press
  • Location: Winnipeg, Manitoba
  • Pages available: 32
  • Years available: 1872 - 2025
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Winnipeg Free Press (Newspaper) - November 13, 2025, Winnipeg, Manitoba , , 2lbs. Ribeye Steak 2lbs. New York Striploin 3lbs. Pork Back Ribs 4lbs. Beef Patties 3lbs. Top Sirloin Steak 3lbs. Boneless Chicken Breast 4lbs. Pork Chops REG PRICE $235.99 SALE 225 99 /ea FROZEN #2 MEAT PACK FROZEN #10 BBQ PACK Monday – Wednesday 8am – 5pm; Thursday – Saturday 8am – 6pm; Closed Sundays LOGAN LOCATION ONLY. FRESH MEAT PACKS FOR AN ADDITIONAL $10 I N B U S I N E S S S I N C E 1 9 4 3 FOR CURBSIDE PICK-UP AND CONTACTLESS DELIVERY, GO TO WWW.CANTORSMEATS.COM 1445 LOGAN AVENUE 204-774-1679 OR 1-800-874-7770 Logan Location Only! DELI SPECIALS!! Logan & Express Locations 3x1lb. Lean Ground Beef 1x3-4lbs. Beef Roast 4lbs. Pork Butt Steak 4lbs. Chicken Legs 4lbs. Pork Chops 1lb. Bacon REG PRICE $135.99 SALE 125 99 /ea BARTLETT PEARS REGULAR GROUND BEEF *Logan & Cantor’s Express RIB EYE STEAK *Logan & Cantor’s Express OUTSIDE ROUND STEAK or ROAST *Logan & Cantor’s Express PORK SIDE RIBS Sold by the Whole Piece Cut or Whole *Logan & Cantor’s Express BACK ATTACHED CHICKEN BREASTS *Logan & Cantor’s Express BREADED SPICY CHICKEN SLIDERS (FROZEN) *Logan & Cantor’s Express BEEF RIBS Miami, Korean or Short Cut *Logan & Cantor’s Express BONE IN PORK LOIN CHOPS *Logan & Cantor’s Express 6 29 /lb $13.86/kg JERSEY SHORE ONION RINGS *Logan & Cantor’s Express COMPLIMENTS GARDEN SALAD or COLESLAW MIX 340-397g 2 29 /ea ROGERS WHITE SUGAR 2 Kg 3 49 /ea CAMPBELL’S TOP SOUPS Tomato, Cream of Mushroom, Chicken Noodle or Vegetable 284 mL 4/ 5 00 HEINZ SQUEEZE KETCHUP 750mL-1L 5 49 /ea KRAFT MIRACLE WHIP OR REAL MAYONAISE 650-890mL 5 49 /ea HOLIDAY LUNCHEON MEAT 340g 2/ 5 00 COMPLIMENTS BLOCK OR SHREDDED CHEESE 250-400g 6 49 /ea KRAFT SINGLES CHEESE SLICES 60 Count 9 99 /ea LUCERNE SOUR CREAM 500ml 3 49 /ea MCCAINS REGULAR FRIES 800g 2 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS FROZEN PEROGIES 907g 2 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS EGG ROLLS 680g. Beef & Pork or Vegetable 6 99 /ea PRIMO PASTA SAUCES 680mL 2 49 /ea COMPLIMENTS FLAKED MEATS 156g. Turkey, Chicken or Ham 1 99 /ea CLOVERLEAF SKIPJACK TUNA IN WATER 170g 2 29 /ea ALYMERS CANNED TOMATOES 796ml 4/ 9 00 COMPLIMENTS CANNED VEGETABLES 341-398ml 3/ 5 00 ORIGINAL KRAFT DINNER 200g. 3/ 4 00 COMPLIMENTS SALAD DRESSINGS 475ml 2 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS PICKLE JARS 1L 2/ 7 00 FRUITE DRINKS 2L 2/ 5 50 COMPLIMENTS POTATO CHIPS 200g. 2/ 4 00 OLD DUTCH POTATO CHIPS, RIDGIES OR CRISPS 200-235g 2/ 7 00 ACTIVIA YOGURT 650g 4 29 /ea PALMOLIVE DISH WASHING LIQUID 591-828ml 2 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS THAW & SERVE PIES 580-750g 6 99 /ea SUNRYPE FRUIT JUICES 900ml 2/ 5 00 PEARL MILLS PANCAKE MIX 905g OR TABLE SYRUP 710mL 3 99 /ea BECEL ORIGINAL SOFT MARGARINE 1.22Kg 7 99 /ea JIF PEANUT BUTTER 1Kg 5 99 /ea TOTITOS TORTILLA CHIPS or CHEETOS CHEESE SNACKS 245-295g 3 99 /ea TROPICANA ORANGE JUICE 1.36L 4 99 /ea DR OETKER GIUSEPPE FROZEN PIZZAS 439-785g 6 49 /ea IMPERIAL SOFT or QUARTERED MARGARINE 1.28-1.36kg 6 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS FROZEN FRUITS OR BLENDS 400 - 600g 4 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS BAKING CHIPS 225 - 270g 4 69 /ea JELL-O JELLY POWDER OR INSTANT PUDDING MIX 10.1 - 99g 99 ¢ /ea MAGIC BAKING POWDER 450g 5 99 /ea BETTY CROCKER SUPER MOIST CAKE MIXES or FROSTINGS 340-450g 2 49 /ea KOOL AID JAMMERS 10X180ML 4 49 /ea PUREX BATHROOM TISSUE 12 DOUBLE ROLLS 8 49 /ea OLD SPICE KRAKENGARD BODY WASH 987mL 7 99 /ea TIM HORTON’S HOT CHOCOLATE & FRENCH VANILLA PACKETS 30X28g 12 99 /ea AFTER EIGHT CHOCOLATE MINTS 200g 4 99 /ea PUREX LIQUID LAUNDRY DETERGENT 9.24L 19 99 /ea CAVENDISH FLAVOR CRISP FRIES 4.25Kg 14 99 /ea CUISINE ADVENTURES MINI SAUSAGES IN PASTRY 1.1Kg 16 99 /ea GOOD HOST ICED TEA CRYSTALS 2.35Kg 12 99 /ea COMPLIMENTS BREAD 570g WHITE OR WHOLE WHEAT 2 59 /ea KELLOGG’S JUMBO CEREALS 650-1050G 9 99 /ea CHRISTIES SNACKING CRACKERS 180-200g 2/ 6 00 PEPSI, DIET PEPSI, PEPSI ZERO, DR. PEPPER ZERO OR CRUSH RAINBOW PACK CANNED DRINKS 32X355ML 15 99 /ea FRITO LAY ORIGINAL MUNCHIE MIX 1100G 7 99 /ea 4 49 /ea 2 49 /lb $5.49/kg PRICES IN EFFECT THURS., NOV. 13 - WED., NOV. 19 MAPLE LODGE CHICKEN, COOKED, CAJUN or SMOKED VISKING BOLOGNA SMITH’S PEPPERONI OR SALAMI BLACK FOREST or HONEY HAM W.O.C. BBQ LOAF or SPICED HAM MOCK CHICKEN LOAF CANTOR’S OWN PORK COTTAGE ROLLS CANTOR’S OWN PEAMEAL BACON LEAN GROUND PORK FROZEN PORK BUTTONS EAST 40 BACK BACON ENDS PORK BUTT STEAKS 10 lb. Box Frozen PORK NECK BONES 10 lb. Box Frozen JANES ASSORTED FROZEN CHICKEN PRODUCTS 700g 7 49 lb $16.51/kg 8 99 lb $19.81/kg 2 49 lb $5.49/kg 3 99 lb $8.80/kg 6 99 lb $15.41/kg 36 99 ea 17 99 ea 9 99 ea 2 19 /100g $21.90/kg 1 49 /100g 14.90/kg 1 79 /100g $17.90/kg 2 35 /100g $23.50/kg 1 99 /100g 19.90/kg 1 59 /100g 15.90/kg FRESH BLUEBERRIES 1 pint RED or GREEN SEEDLESS GRAPES 13 THU 14 FRI 15 SAT 17 MON 18 TUE 19 WED COMPLIMENTS BAGGED ORANGES 3 lb. bag 2 49 /lb $5.49/kg COmpLImENTS RAINBOW PEPPERS MANDARIN ORANGES Product of China ENGLISH CUCUMBERS GALA, RED DELICIOUS or MACINTOSH APPLES 9 99 /ea 1 Kg Frozen 3 99 /lb $8.80kg 21 99 /lb $48.47/kg 8 99 /lb $19.81/kg 11 99 /lb 26.43kg 3 99 /lb $8.80kg 5 49 /lb $12.10/kg 5 99 /ea 3 Pack 6 99 /ea 4lb box 2 99 /ea 3 69 /lb $8.13/kg 5 49 /ea 9 99 /ea 2 lbs. Made with red onions A8 ● WINNIPEGFREEPRESS.COM TORONTO — Several war memorials previously on display at Hudson’s Bay stores are getting new homes. Plaques from the department store’s Calgary, Winnipeg and Vancouver lo- cations have all been donated to local branches of the Royal Canadian Le- gion, said Franco Perugini, a senior vice-president of real estate and legal at the defunct retailer, in a Wednesday email to The Canadian Press. Another memorial commemorating Simpsons employees who died in the Second World War was given to TD Bank, the financial institution revealed the same day. Simpsons is a former de- partment store HBC bought in 1978. The plaques have been in need of a new home since Hudson’s Bay closed all of its stores earlier this year and started winding down the business. The collapse almost immediately caught the attention of lawyer E. Pat- rick Shea, who sits on the senate of the 48th Highlanders of Canada and is the RCAF Foundation’s secretary. In the spring, he started advocating for HBC’s memorials to be preserved in the same communities they had long been displayed, because he felt they were the last connection many neigh- bourhoods have to the people who went off to war as teens. When he learned the memorials would be saved, he said he was “thrilled to death,” but not surprised. “What has happened was inevitable,” he said. “As soon as I raised the issue, people realized what these memor- ials meant to the public and what they meant to other people, and they focused on getting them to the right home.” The plaque saved in Vancouver hon- ours staff who fought in either the First or Second World War, while those in Calgary and Winnipeg were a tribute to employees who were part of the latter conflict. The Legion will display the plaques and hopes to eventually uncover some of the stories of the people listed on them. “Remembrance takes on even deep- er meaning when people can connect more closely to those who served our country,” explained national spokes- person Nujma Bond in an email. The memorial TD received was labelled a “Roll of Honour” and in- scribed with a message commemorat- ing workers that made the “supreme sacrifice.” It was previously displayed by a bank of elevators at HBC’s Toronto flagship store on Queen Street, where it was flanked by Canadian flags and a wreath of poppies. TD has since moved it several blocks south to a branch on Front Street, which has a public museum displaying arti- facts from the company’s more than 170-year history. The branch is situated where the founder of Simpsons opened a ware- house in 1905 for a mail-order business. Getting to add the HBC memorial to the location was “exciting” because it “helps us connect to the materiality of history” in a way that is more profound than a book or podcast, said Amy Korc- zynski, TD’s corporate heritage collec- tions curator. When the bank unveiled the memor- ial in its new home on Monday, Shea said there were military members and veterans from the same regiments as people listed on the plaque. “So, it was a bit of a homecoming,” he said. His efforts to preserve war memor- ials will continue at St. James Garlick- hythe Anglican Church in England, where HBC was headquartered before it shifted home base to Canada in 1970. The church has two marble plaques honouring HBC employees who lost their lives in the First and Second World War, but on a recent visit, Shea learned they’re tucked away in a bell tower. He thinks they deserve to be more accessible and is now working with the priest to relocate them to a more prom- inent space, when the church does up- coming renovations. He is also advocating for a plaque to be added to memorialize Indigenous employees who served in the wars, but were missing from the list. “Until all Hudson Bay memorials and every other memorial have a safe and secure place, my job is not done,” Shea said. — The Canadian Press NEWS I CANADA THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 2025 SCOTT YOUNG PHOTO Scott Young, astronomer at the Manitoba Museum planetarium, says the aurora borealis was one of the brightest red auroras he’s seen in his lifetime — even from inside the city. Rare red auroras dazzle as part of Manitoba light show S OLAR storm chasers rejoice: 2025 was an excellent year for aurora borealis, and the remainder of the year could be just as active. Tuesday night’s dazzling display of crimson northern lights grabbed the attention of sky gazers across Manitoba. “The colours were striking even from inside the city,” said Scott Young, an astronomer at the Manitoba Museum Planet- arium. “It was one of the brightest red auroras that I remem- ber in my lifetime.” Young noticed a grey haze in the sky but didn’t think it was the northern lights, which were forecast to appear the follow- ing evening. Then a red blotch appeared, and he knew the show had begun early. “I took out my phone and all the colours just lit up because our phone’s cameras are more sensitive to seeing that stuff,” Young said. Aurora borealis are caused by solar winds on the sun’s sur- face interacting with the gas in the upper atmosphere of the earth. What results are curtains of coloured light flickering through the night sky. The show was seen across several provinces, and social media lit up with photos from around the U.S. and parts of Eur- ope. Depending on the particles in the atmosphere, different colours emerge. Green and purple are most common. The human eye’s lack of sensitivity to red means the colour is not usually detected. The burst of red meant plenty of nitrogen particles and other compounds in the atmosphere. “There was so much energy … there was red everywhere,” Young said of the show. The increase in northern lights this year is because the sun is at the peak of its 11-year cycle and activity is at its strong- est, resulting in more solar gusts. Less daylight helps, too. “There’s northern lights happening above us right now, we just can’t see it because of the sun,” Young said. The remainder of the year looks bright, too. Wednesday night’s forecast was to include the tail end of Tuesday’s solar storm, but some astronomers predicted it would be the beginning of a new storm with more vibrant colours. Ultimately, the outcome is at the whim of the solar gusts. “Sometimes, you expect a big show and nothing happens. Sometimes, you expect nothing and it’s the show of a life- time,” Young said. “It can change on a dime. It’s fickle, and that’s part of the fun. It’s like you’re chasing something that feels like it doesn’t really want to be caught.” nicole.buffie@freepress.mb.ca NICOLE BUFFIE OWEN HUMPHREYS / PA The aurora borealis glows in the sky over St. Mary’s Lighthouse in Whitley Bay, England, Wednesday. GIORDANO CIAMPINI / THE CANADIAN PRESS FILES Hudson’s Bay finds new homes for war memorials TARA DESCHAMPS E. PATRICK SHEA A Hudson’s Bay war memorial at St. James Garlickhythe Anglican Church in England. The Roll of Honour, a memorial to employ- ees of the defunct retailer Simpson’s who served with the Canadian Forces and were killed during the Second World War, at the Hudson’s Bay store in Toronto. ;