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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1943-05-27, Page 51 TIl14.1RSi>!AY, MAY 27th, .1943 1Yt0il'Theatre WI NGHAM Two . Show•; ..;Saturday Night Thursday, Friday, Saturday M 27, 28, 29 LANA TURNER, .� ROBERT YOUNG In to Slightly Dangerous ' Comedy 'and`.rotance a lana plays Cinderella. Also "Short Subjects",' ; Matinee Sat. Afternoon 2.30 Monday, Tuesday; Wednesday May` 31,' •.une :1, '2 CARP ,GRANT JEAN ARTHUR, RONALD ,COLEMAN hz '' m The „Talk of the Town A. problem story with ''a tri- angle made up of. favorite Hol- lywood stars: Also "Short Subjects" DISEASE .AFPEARS TO. 'BE ..,_ •'-NG.--OUT..--SMELTS' Biologists in .Canada and the . United States are investigating `.adevastating, disease •which has wiped • opt zillions ..of smelt in. the Great Lakes. ` - The annual • smelt`•run, which, provides thous • ands :of pounds .of°the little fish, _has. faded away to a mere trickle. Admitting the weather'.was partly responsible for - the failure •of this year's run;, the scientists have found millions ..Of ' fish :float- ing lifeless..:to the' surface of. Lakes 'Michigan and . Huron par= ticularly.. • . Progress of t1e :smelt in the past few years has been amazing. Some ears ._a.go�. a _ quantity of . the }ittle f eIlows was. placed in Lake Michigan, .with a view to providing • food . for '.'commercial fish .such; as lake trout. They 'pro- gressed ,• amazingly, . . spreading north into Lake Superior and east into Lake -Huron. :At the 'height of 'the spring runs, when -the fish made•'their ,way upstreams to spawn, they ' were ,easily. caught -b-y- ien-arid- women -who -used- clip .nets, hoop riets and, gni occasion, even buckets. They ,spread into• . the St., Clair River and down. into Lake Erie; where the ,Catch as- surned: tremendous propbr'tions. • Two years ago, the first of .them • appeared in Lake. Ontario. ' Generally,' the fish areabout, sic to `seven inches Icing and' are of the herring family. Their flesh Is, very rich' but exceptionally "•awe€t,-eating'': • In the past two or thre.e years, several comnier-' cial fishing companies have stud- ied the' possibility of cann thenn,..bu•t so far as is kn. n •o .method has been .found to catch them. all year round and, it was .felt that, since • the spring run lasted only a few days; the 'yen tu.re. would • not • be 'commercially. feasible. g Present Radio Program - Huron County schools continue '• • the splendid work in, the sale of. War,, Savings Stamps and. Cer- tificates. The programme on Fri- day, .May 21st over CKNX' was put on by, Mr.° John D.' Martin 'pf school section No. 1, 'and Mrs. Dorothy' Balt of ,school section No. 11., Goderrch Township,. an :'•..a..gr" poor• Theft pupa " f+anzxc:.4 • .4. 444 0 THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW,- ONTARIO • TO I TABULATE HISTOISY OF THOSE IN UNIFORM No. 10 Zone, Canadian Legion" in annual session at Clinton. en- dersed a resolution asking the Dominion Government to .in=' grease allowances of married: sol- diers' :dependents from $40. to $60•• a month, and for single men :from $20 . to -$30. . Another resolution asked that rural` mail carriers be paid.. on a 'mileage basis instead of -the' present system of ..awarding con tracts after, calling for tenders. • Still another request. was that after the war :immigration to Can- ada be,. limited to. peoples of ,the United Nations. • _:N. W. Miller of Clinton, is the. zone •cammander. , and H. S. Turn- er, Goder-ieh, --secretary .. for 'the -ensuing wear, Delegates weds"- present from Goderich, Wingharn, Lucknow, Listowel;: Seaforth, Ex- eter and Clinton. John Graff of Listowel; retiring zone command- er presided. • A program was decided 'upon do tabulate the histories of all men and women in its territory who. are serving. or; •may serve ' with:. the active forces in the present ...war. The assistance of parents of the lessens learnedfrom the or guardians • or : other relatives last -war. ' li U LANGSIDE NORTH LAC. Donald MacD9nald of the R.C.A.F. at Clinton spent' a week endrecently: with his cousin,, Miss Katherine .MacPherson. i Mr. and Mrs. :Robert MacQui:l- lira, •Mr. Bill r MacKenzie Sr friend of Hamilton spent the week -end at the home .of Mr. and Mrs..WM.. MacKenzie. :. . Miss : Winnifred Donaldson spent the. ,,week.-.en.d' -with her. grandfather,. - . • , Miss Katherine, , MacPherson spent the weekend with Miss. Marjory Arther 'at Auburn. The 'United `W. ' M.' 5. meeting will be held at the home of Mrs. Wrn. Frown on Wednesday, June. k2nd. Mrs. R. D.:Craik "Of Hamilton -and Mrs ;T:. . Ra s •of'1'eesv rater called on friends : here last week. Mr. and • Mrs. Roy Graham, •Ronnie and Gary visited, Sunday evening with Mr.. and Mrs. Par- ish Moffat,' and of'niunjcipal councils is being enlisted. Official 'records, it was agreed, are insufficient for '•Leg;-, ion, purposes. This has been one DOESN'T HAVE TOr KNOW MUCH • The farmer does not have to know much. Aside from learning how to,milk, shock wheat, play obstetrician to,a Jersey, cow, train. a dog,°,put_ together a binder, fan grain, build a load of hay or a •v cheat -stack,. judge whether to start 'a. balky . horse, operate • a gasoline: engine, repair general machinery;string fences; fiddle clover seed; trap rats; splice rope, build .sheds, butcher hogs, pre- pare apple, butter, Pitnie trees, vines and bushes, keep, fruit, .piant..corn; potatoes-; : cabbage and - garden truck, sow wheat, oats, barley,' millet. buckwheat and timothy, pick seed corn, cull hens, treat a heifer for a rotten hoof with butter antimony 'or a Worse for the . colic,. harness a horse, fertilize a . field,,; : pull stumps, shingle a roof, watch the markets, breed livestock, weld a broken'. shaft, whittle out a new ' wagon spoke . or a whiffletree, operate some -`twenty different 'kinds of 'machines,• run a radio, and stand off the lightning' rod salesman he ' doesn't • have to know ',more than the average young :m'an could learn in twenty years of intensive training.—The Rotary Rotary Voice. f J,.;tiifh}lr'L•'y• .•l +if .�li r •:;''.�! i. - ...14:4.• .•{ }. •: .'•'v'..$:'.r'' i.l' ' $; ..r 'a5: •.:; : :Cf $;:{: f:' •.!(Jy. ;?$4'w';"' %%`.Y '' • ia' ,ri .•5! :lir .,, V::\;5,�> 3c. i :. •lC::. "`„r:t£•.b2S:C,7!..f.:i.G'rf!•,,,�;•T}• - ,,,•,•. .:r :• r rid ..m••••• • ;}: ti•:si:;j2•iyi�..., �., :. \C,'•L� \\;}, •�:y' Lai: w\: i•i '!. ,?'; :i., . .o•. Immo Mu : unity's comm 1, of ,Power •fo aid°r industries chic seep Y %businesses hominan i disc do ele ito the • flick onto a modern homes, it isfea�it'noee speehaourin When you' a sumn►ons ' instantaneous re- trib►rtion syste h upon Sa ne►a, voltage g e sviitch,. it is 'brings instant be stored er h►g onvert ne to ctrodu Cann eded transform uirem that ' ot. to be. ents. Servant electricity ed as it is ne a pole ' 'req oisr c sponse • • 'be -produced ous-servise suiteble.for your station to Y . • : •'t'mast tors mirac ,equipment and- generating ergY is to provide punt oE�eq eperat- ®From the 9 of electri�eadYat'your • • ' 'enilous am aired ... huge g ilea of omt� tors' flow instantly rovmde tram rlin ,thou ds tr m m h s 1'o et personnel i3 thousands er continuos lyours a clay.organization-. 'T oprov i e lams • t ansEor• • ing plants on Ernes • ' gcommandby the fingertips 2necessitatairrtain'in9 egrP- transmission our - this service alert, to weather at Y stormy s�► that stations ...all erato in constant constantly a :air arid °dem flick of st be. our needs. meat *rough r roug9 all use of toms •m ecally rs !cry • eel Y ,. lip he generators ¢O meet ales, semi- . . hove the switch' ' operation,tcally. controlt Ibad, 9ov rn you moat the flick of a down the servant Hydro service, Automatically change r aces mighty and well:: five to of Water that r generator •day` this economy the'flo through the turbinethe plunging �+ %sential t n, etre fight •for ,cculd not penstocks ert the ower The power, which to electrical. energy.. a network water toout over ae flpws the azing, thus created, d lines at Second. oI ,trans1 r 000 "miles p lines to per speed cf. 186, transmission Out along rt stations and energy, a ' transformer this tireless • the flows substations• s0 is vital ► industries without which . our in is eed the without theWar equipment die vll produce our fighting for which vac counts. daywoof Victory the year• that cos -working:, This �s y� • *rattl PAGE FIVE FINI]AYSf4 BRO:S ;' "LUCK,NOW PREMTEI , ABiJRHART DIES= Hon. William Aberhart; pre- mier, ; of Alberta, .died in : Vac., couver. on Sunday morning: 'He was 64. Mr.. Aberhart was born on . a far..n -n ear Kippers, atfendeed_ high 'school at, Sedforth, and taught school at VVingham before attending business. ` college at , Chatham. He' specialized'in'math- ematics and commerce at Queen's University and went West in 191.0,.' where he became a 'well known teacher and bible class leader in Calgary. .An exponent of Social Credit, Mr.. Aberhart 'became 'leader of the party when it swept ' into power in. 1935; in 'Alberta and to the end remainedhopeful' that • his .economic theories would ,. eventu,ally.be implemented.. His mother and two brothers reside at Seaforth, a brother. in • WO OdS t ock Viand asister r n:De troit. . C JL OSS --CO E1 Mr. and 111m:7Jas.--.Wraith and Gertievisited '.'Mr. and . rs•. El= mer Walt Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Morell Bell, Doug • and Donald spent the week -end holiday' with Mr: and Mrs. Han- ria. ---Mr, and Mrs. Frank Thompson and.': Ronnie visited in Kincardine -. en S,triday. Mr. and 'Mrs. Thos.. McPherson; -Mr and 14rs-.- oe-Wall -fi 'Grant spent an `'evening last week with . Mr. and : Mrs. Earle. Hodgins. Miss rEleanor , Murray. ited Miss Shirle, Hodgiris .rec ntly'. - Mrs: Charlie Hodgins spent a . couple of days with her._parerits.^-.. 'Mr: -and Mr's. -Anderson..'' ID: NEWS- The EW a The Girl Guides had roll' call outside again. ,When ! they. tool horseshoe 'formation Mrs. Calvert gave badges to Guides who had' won them: Some of the badges ve re: Needlewoman's, toyrnakers, ' hecond.'class and pathfinder. Then Mrs... Calvert' told 'the girls to make out a menu . for dinner' and the girls trying the first class'. hike, wereto make out the sup=, Per menu. After ' making out 'the •• menus they played a game. They hiked out to the Twelfth on Saturday., After getting' din- ner and cleaning up ° they studied nature, birds and • woodcraft:' They. wentin groups with one of the Older girls as a leader. . • -They had- su firer. ready at 'five when Mrs. McKim arrived"'to see if the girls could cook well en ough' to pass the -test: After sup- per, when the fires .were put out,,.. and paper, etc., burned, they re- turned homne, tired but happy. KINCARDINEMERCHANTSre- mained deadlocked fast vk eek' on the mattei..of extending the clos- ing', hotir on Saturday night from. • 10 to. 11 'o'clock. . "How did yeti : get that black eye". It's. a birth mark" • "What do tSrou mean, a birth - . ,mark" ' ""t"goi mn'the wrong .one on the train last night'.