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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-05-14, Page 5• it THURHDA'xt,.lflAY !Mit, 1942 '. • �lrheatr� e m Lc__ W I NGHAM Two• Showa Saturday Mght. Thursday, Friday, Saturday May '14, 15(• 16 .SPECIAL „• . °rime ' ea ono foot in .hvay.n— • 'souse they're hsdd-ovsrAtils In loyal' rr. A- WARNER_BRQS,_HII, With _.:. _._ BEULAH BONDI• GENE LOCKHART ELISABETH FRASER • HARRY DAVENPORT (AURA. HOPE CREWS • GRANT MITCHELL Oirectierby 1RVING RAPPER • Inure N...YG.,•, Rolm,.,•?. ��lh,!�i4 .0, H,l..0 S.•.Q L_ n I b Ma.1 •A W.I.U.,.L,M 4.11..1 ,Id.0 A A NOTE:' There will ,be TWO SHOWS EACH NIGHT at 8.00 p.m. & 10.00 p.m. Saturday night. at; 7:45 and 9.45. On. Matinee Sat. ' Afternoon 2.:O 'PARAMOUNT We congratulate Donald Hamilton on• having passed his Grade 8 exams Mr. and Mrs. Orland Richards, 'George and Jean Ann spent Sunday- ' with Mrs. -,Richard's parents, Mr. and • Mrs.' Tom MacDonald. 1Vir. Jas. Reid has returned home after spending a few days in Toron- to.. • 1 I Monday, Tuesday, 'Wednesday ROBERT. TAYLOR LANA TURNER *hn May. '18, '19, 20. "JOHNNY EAGER"' Lana Turner and Robert Tay- lor teamed . in the roinautic sensation of the year. • Also "Traveltalk't. I Mrs.• A. Ketchabaw. and William spent Thursday in Galt. iVir. and Mrs. J. McIntosh and Bob. • spyit Sunday with Mrs. L Hether- ington, Goderich. , • Mr. Jas„ McDonald is considerably ireiproved' in health following a ser-., leus illness and was, able to visit on Sunday' with his daughter,. Mrs. Wm. Kernptop.: ` • IVliss Mary -Cook, R.N., returned tp New York after spending a, few 1 •days:- with her parents. .j Ars. Frank: '19IcCharles, . Mrs J. MacIntesh,Mrs. Robt._Ianiiltokrat- Lcricted,••the meeting„ of ..the Bruce Presbyterial W.M.S. • of the ;:United • church in Kincardine. Mrs. B. Cudney of Galt spent the eek -end with her • mother, Mrs. A. '•etchaba ' . k w THE 'LVCKNOW SENTINEL, LVcsNowt atARIt DUNGANNON • ' Miss Melba Fowler, Mr. and Mrs. Dynes Campbell visited their aunt Mrs. Roy Burchill at Dublin on Sun, day. Ur. and Mrs. Arthur Sparks, Port Elgin visited Mr, . Wm. Mole and mmembers of his family on Sunday: We are glad to report that Mr. Mole is able to be about a little, seeming to, • be improved. Attention is drawn to all in this community for the Salvage collect- ion next week. 'You• are asked'to have your garbage, of paper, iron, ragsand especially rubber ready.. Tin is not to be included this time. Trucks wills: call for. your. donation. Mrt• Chas. Durnin and children Margaret, Joy and: ' 3. C: of• Parryo Sound are visiting' her patents, Mr. and Mrs. W. IL 'McClure:, • Mr. Herb: Stothers spirit a• .few' -days in Goderich'.. recently visiting Mr: and Mrs Henry Bradley {Xt:.eo. Lenore StothereaCongratulations'an the arrival et their baby daughter; Sandra. Lenore Joan. • A rally of the Women's ' Associa- tiori:nt.Dunga_nnon, CrewPort_ Al- bert, and Nile will be Frr y, May 15th. in the. Dungannon .Un- ited church, MO." Richard McWhin- ney cWhin ney will be the guest speaker. The meeting will commence at 2.30 p.m: • The •service in Erskine Presbyter= 'ian church, Dungannon was with- drawn Sunday for the speetal ser- vice, of Mothers ,Day and anniver-• sary in the : Presbyterian . church, Lucknow. A number from here at- tended. _Mrs: Swart Taylor, ,Lucknow, vis- ited her sister, ]Irs herb ,Stothers 'one day this week'. Mr. and Mrs. John Blake spent a couple of days last week at Wing - ham. Visitors with. Mrs, David . Sproul, Sunday, were Mr. ' and, Mrs. J. I/ Hesson, Miss Clara Sproul;', Strat- ford, Mrs. Root, Wilson, M Sr., r• and. Mrs. Robt. Wilson'and little' daugh- ter and Mr; and Mrs: Chas. Wilson•. 'and• little daughter, Goderich. • 'Miss Helen Stothers has cornplet- ed' her high school work at the God- erich. Collegiate Institute andwill attend Stratford Normal school • in the fall. Rev, . W. P. Newman, pastor of the Dungannon. United Churchfor t tel past ' three years and invited for a fourth term, hes •. accepted a. pastor- ate at Brownsville, six miles -from Ingersoll. . ' Mrs, Thos. Dickson, Sr.,' gave her f r"rAFEKI NG Mrs. Thos. Anderson attended the Presbyterial W.; M. S. at Clinton on Tuesday last. , During the week, visitors with Mr. and Mrs. H..Horton; were Dr, Carman, Stothers, S. B,w•Stothers.and daughter. day, Mrs, E. G. 'Crispin end' two. sons. • • Phis ; district was represented at tyre cenventioe of the Huron Pres- bytery . Y.P.U. held in North Street United church, Goderich ,on Monday afternoon• and evening. Mr: and Mrs. Harvey Webb and family, Mr... and Mrs.C. • Hodgins. silent Mother's day at Anderson's.., Mr. and Mrs. C.Hallam and fam- ily visited Mrs. Christopher Dab, bear Seaforth on Sunday. Mr. ,and Mrs. Fitzsiniinons spent the week -end at Mr. and Mrs. Cecil Johnston's.. 0 Mr.• and. Mrs: " George Saunders had their family home, for Mother's • ffi . with having a car in op- eration that was not safe .to' be on a highway, David Houston, . Jr:, of WAR TIME • PRESS CONVENTION HELD . The war time convention of the Ontario -Quebec division • of the. Can- adian Weekly Newspapers Associa- tion was held in the Royal York hotel on Friday and Saturday, with attention focused on the part the weeklies can and are playing .in the • war effort. The association pledged full support:,to any and all essential war -time publicity campaigns. Highlights of the business sessions were addresses by Mr. John Atkins, administrator of Printing and • Pub- lishing for • the Wartime Prices and Trade Board and by .Mr. E. M. Lit= tie of Ottawa, director of. National Selective.: Service. • Other .• interesting business sessibn addresses• were given by Aifdy Clark of "Neighbourly ' News" and' by ,Hugh, Templ'in on his trip, to'.Britafr. Other 'speakers dealt' with • mat; ters G.P.practical -.interest to• Publish -- era, oiie uof'which was. pn frees pub- licity, in which Sam Curry of Tweed urged publishers. to 'stop "playing Santa Claus"..in.this, regard. • ' Dept _--- , Visit_.Manning Dep__f _-- Friday noon the'press •party vis- ited Manning Depot,; where thea' . . had luncheon in •'the vast mess hall that ,seats •approximately 150;0 air- men at one time. Broiled fish,, or ` meat • pie, mashed potatoes,: boiled beans, soup ' and pie, with . cheese, brown .and . white bread, and • tea, made up the regular menu for that •• The party was welcomed by Com- manding' Officer H.:.0.; MacDonald.• A .dr -.ill display -and a. march past was demonstrated • by upwards to 1000 new. air force recruits., none of.. whore had been. at .the Depot more than two weeks. ,A 50 -piece air force band' headed, the march past with- the .Officer Coninianding' tak ing the salute. • • •' • • The party was. then taken on a tour of the Depbt, ,situated princi- pally in the Coliseum at Exh`'ibition, park, and which is 'equipped :and administered very, efficiently . and with .a. view to meeting .all the needs of the airmen, ineluding••facilities for recreation and leisure.' . Speeding Production A visit ib the ' John Inglis Co. plant,' was• most revealin and the expansion. and s • eed wit which this Company it ''forging ahead places it well , up with the leading industrial, plants -on the continent in regards the production of vital war equipment. Facts and figures in many cases are off the record but in all arm- ament .• output, such as marine en-. ro , • . s .011.i. ,, $pBn 'machine Vearekla being "The church, the household-uf : gins 3?svg' -rimae faith". An interestingprogram was • Boys anti-tank rifles, the Company given; readings 'being contributed is ahead of p d t' by Mrs. Jas., Finnigan, Mrs. .Win.. Menary; Mrs. Elliott and'a solo by Marietta Stingel. Excellent •reports of ' the Presbyterial held: at Clinton were given by Mrs: Reed. and Mrs. Blake.. The meeting closed with the National 'Anthem. Miss Lytle Taylor, teacher at the. Fourth Con. school held a quilting at the school on Wednesday after- noon: Tickets are being sold on it, when. completed and the proceeds Will go to the Red Cross fund. Mrs. George Hamilton, who has been living in the• &frouse owned by Mr. Allen Reed, has put her house- • hold effects in storage and soon'°ex- pests to go to Nova Scotia with her daughters Ann and Kaye. to join her husband who is stationed near Halifax. ' We are sorry to hear that Mrs. George Irwin is confined to bed this, Week and under the doctor's care.' Y P.U. will' be held in the church. on Friday evening at 8.45 p.m. One o'tlie representatives ,whoattended the convention will give a report. • Mrs. Thos. Blake went to Drumbo Kinloss was assessed $5.00 and costs . on Monday to stay with her' daugh- by Magistrate Walker • in police 1 ter . Grad, who is ill with scarlet court at Walkerton. fever. Charged • tickets on a hamper of apples don- atted by Mr•. "Kenneth Cameron had brought $25,40 and proceeds from At Home amounted to over $100.. The larger donations. to war• pro - jets included $50 to the British• War. Victims Fund; $40 to the .Red Cross; and $25 to the . CKNX orphanage fund., The .balance on hand amount- ed to :$118 of which $50 was later voted to the ' Red Cross Society.. Much knitting and .sewing had'been done through the Lucknow Red Cross including ,„the donation of 68 quilts. Over 20 of these. had been made by a group, of ladies• on the 9th concession. It was agreed to. send $5 to the Jam project. 'Mrs..MeKen- zie Webb, Mrs. Gordon McPherson, Mrs, Archie Aitchison and Mrs. ' Charles, MacDonald were' appointed delegates to'the District Annual meeting to.beheld • in • the Kings- bridge Parish hell on May 27. Mrs. Earl Durnin .presented the slate of officers and• the following are el- ected: president, Mrs. Gordon Mc Pherson; 1st' vice, Miss. Mary Mur- ray; . 2nd vice Mrs. Ball; 3rd rice; Mrs..Chas: MacDoinald; `sed'y-trease Mrs.. T. J. Todd; . assist., Mrs. Har old Gaunt; pianist, Mrs._'E. W.. Rice; assist'., Mas -D Philhps;-Convener$,, agriculture, Mrs. Andrew. Gaunt; citizenship, Mrs. Lorne . Woods.; his,. toricaluresearch, Mrs. Gordon; home economics, Mrs. Rice; social welfare, Mrs:. Stanley Todd; .publicity,' Mrs. 'Earl Durnin; war work, Mrs.' W. A. Miller. ' Mrs. Gordon McPherson gave a reading ,"Saving Mother". The topic was in charge of Mrs. Ball who ' gave ' an;interesting talk on' "Pioneering. in Ontario". Mrs. Chas. .McDonald' told the story. of ,her `grandfather;: Mr. Jarvis, -one Of: -the:,. 'pioneers. Lunch .was served. ' with Mrs. R. Woods, Mrs: • Ernest; Gaunt and Mrs..E. J. Thorn as hostesses. The regular 'meeting of the Y.P.U. was held' at` the home of Mckenzie Webb on Monday night with, Earl Durniri presiding.' Isobel Miller read the scripture lesson and Mrs. Me Kenzie Webb read a• poem . "l: he. topic "God hears' 'His .people's cry" was given • by Rev. G. A. Barnarld. The next meeting will be held' at Wel:- lace al- lace Miller's on' , M•onday.0 evening; • Maybe you think your small change cannot help .. : that "total war” means "somebody else." Maybe you're one of the thousands'of housewives who haven't yet 'started to but even;500 it_ week into War Savings, Stamps just a neutral .... ' anyneutrals in -this war! You're a help There aren't hindrance to victory. You can't 'get out' of h. If Or . a •• you spend thoughtlessly you'll -deny our fighting forces the .arnis .they need and. imperil your own future. you—and 2,000,000 other housewives in.• Canada— putrut only 50¢ a week into War Savings Stamps, it p means $1,000,000 a kiveek to help win the war. Which side are you on? Illy. War 5uvings Stamps from banks, pont 'offices, di gdlt s, groan" and other retail st'ore's. National War Finance Z`colimiir1'e. home for the meeting of the W. M. S. of the United church on Friday May 8th. The president, Mrs. Mel Mrs. 'Blake • led _...� .. -io-uc schedule.ion A .surprising 'fact is the large number .of young woOien • who• are Recent visitors with Mr. and Mrs Lorne Woods •included Mr. and Mrs. John Gardner and Caryl • of Zion and Mr. and Mrs. Victor Taylor and family of••Brueefield. . Miss' Irene Woods of Waterloo; Neely Todd and Gordon Miller.of, Stratford were home for -Mother's Day. Mrs, Gordon, Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Miller, Allan Miller and Russell Webb were recent, visitors, at the home of- Mr. J, W. Salkeld, Goder-' ,. PAGE FIVE Spring Round Trip Fares To Western .Canada FROM ALL STATIONS IN EASTERN CANADA , Going Daily May 22 .- 31, 1942, Inclusive RETURN LIMIT -45 days TICKETS . GOOD IN— Coaches, in Tourist Sleeping Cars or in Standard Sleeping Cars at Special Reduced Rates for each: class. Cost of accommodation in Sleeping- Cars additional. BAGGAGE CHECKED. Stopovers at all points en route. Similar Fares from Western to Eastern Canada'During Same Period. 'Tickets, Sleeping Car Reservations and.all Information from any Agent. ASK FOR HANDBILL T.2-84 CANADIAN NATIONAL Irilxss 1 aririne Meer, R .r ,a o'F e- Wingham . hospital staff is .spending ,a two -weeks vacation at her hpme • here. • . employed throughout this vast plaht oli'erating many types of machines as efficient* and speed- ily as men. ; The tour coricluded i with a visit to the testing`xoom, where' guns are given their filial • inspectionand tested . foraccuracy on, the plant's underground firing range. • Bishop Renison Spoke At ..Friday night's banquet, the guest speaker was Bishop' R. J... Renison ;9f ,St. Paul's Church, Tor- onto. Bishop Renison was a member of the Canadian' press group which recently visited England and he ' gave a very delightful' address, with many sobering . thoughts, but nat without humor., Bishop Renison marvelled at what the British Isles, "a postage stainp l on the Atlantic", have done to ' save democracy in the face of overwhelming odds which' she withstood alone in earlier days of the, war. • For Canada lie sees a greater fut- irre ' in the economic and political life of the Empire and the World. • Donate To R. C. Fund n . On Saturdaynoon the party were luncheon guests of the Toronto Daily Star, in the Star Library, at which time the =Association present- ed a check for $200.00 to the Star's, Red Cross Bomb Victims' Fund. Presentation of the newspaper competition trophies were shade at that time, inchiding the . Joseph Clark trophy to the best all-round newspaper' in tovVns of 1500 ,or un- der. 'Gregory Clark presented` this trophy, in memory of his late fath- _ er, to• Frank McIntyre of the Dun- dalk Herald who is the retiring. president. Mr. McIntyre has now `won this award two,years in succes- sion. A visit • to the College St. Red Cross • rooms, where ,prisoner -of -war boxes arepacked; then on to the Blood Donor Clinic, and finally to York Mills as afternoon tea 'gueSts of the Newmarket Era publisher, concluded the convention. ST. HELENS' I KINLOU+GH Mr. and Mrs., Albert Crang have returned . from Toronto to Kinloss for the summer months and called on friends here during the week. Mrs. B. Orr of .Langside visited, Monday with relatives on the line. Members from the Presbyterian• W.M.S. attended the Presbyterial: in Teeswater on Tuesday: Mrs. Don McCosh was hostess to •the Wornen's Institute. on Thursday. Mr. and. Mrs. Alex Percyeand Mr. Spence McFarlan motored to Lon- don Monday.' Mr• Caddell of Huron College had,' charge of the Anglican service on Sunday last and next Sunday, May 17th, tiie Dean of the College will be here to conduct a Helys'conimurr- ion service at 7.30 p.m. • - Miss Jean Orr visited during the week with her sister's here. Mrs. M. . Pierson of Millarton vis- ited Monday with relatives here. Friends from here attended the funeral mass at Holyrood R. C.. Church on Monday, morning for the late Mrs. Dan McKihnon, Sympathy goes out to • the bereaved ones. Mrs. Perry Hodgids,'Mrs. W. Lapp and Douglas, Misses. Edna and. May Boyle attended the women's Insti- tute May day at Ripley on: Wednes- day last, ' Mr• and. Mrs. George llaldenby and Ethel called on relatives •near Teeswater Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Jack Scott and. little Billy of Arron visited with Mr. and Mrs., W. D. Cox, Sunday. ' • Mr. W. Boyle was in London Tuesday attending 'the Diocesan Synod. W I. Had Busy Year ' Reports presented by the sec'y-t'r'ead. and the war work congener at the annual meeting of the St.:Helen's Women's Institute showed that muchtime and money have been expended in fathering the war ef- fort., f-fart , Mrs. Durnin 'Phillips presided and: fifteen ladies responded to the roll call by the payment .,of fees. The treasurer reported the assets of the year to have been $433.28. Of. this $137.92 had been raised by the Making of ari autograph quilt and the sale of tickets on it and, ainother Mrs. Wm. Pinnell -rind Mildred, Gyle, Lucknow. the treasury by over $75. Sale of visited Friday with Mr. and. s. l gi.tilt •,Victory nights .irad° enriched • E Clear telephone lines for ALL-DUT. pgDLCTWt - Your telephone is part of ; a ''vast interlocking dl s d ham;