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A CHRISTMAS SUGGESTIO
HINDI&
S'TAMPS'
From
THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL
ESPAY. DECEMBER I% lin
THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO
PAGE THREE
itt•T•94"nmortntimlimm“I"'Irnryitillo
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PHOiE
528-3001
STORE
CF.
, es, 'tcoN*,
Store 600,0001s. Of Imported New
Zealand Butter At Teeswater Creammy,
Manufacturers Find Milk Shodage
,t0CAL BRIEFS
Havens of Lucknow is
fro Wingham and District
, where he was a patient
weeks with pneumonia.
Invin of Sault Ste.
was an overnight caller
y with •his parents Mr. and
Since Invin. Lucknow.
drives a transport between
Ste, Marie and Toronto.
John Kilpatrick will return
to live the end of this
It will be coming "ba?k
fit Mts. Kilpatrick who
.0i in the Oliver
apartments on mairnstreet
nick home when they
km a number of years ago.
nick• has been living
• John's death occurred
%oaths ago.
111 Thom of Lucknow is a
hingharn and District
Her daughter Mrs. Ron
of mood , visited with
ilaucknow last week end.
'may enjoy receiving
""' the Sentinel each
wenld miss it very much
not find Win our mail
Thursday" writes Mrs .
Mr. and Mrs. John Cameron of
St. Helens are spending the winter
months in the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Percy Newbold on Havelock
Street in Lucknow.
Mr. and Mrs. Wallace tWarn-s
ley of London visited one day last
week with their cousins Mr. and
Mrs. Wilfred Drennan.
Jack Curran of Ashfield is .a
patient in Alexandra and Marine
Hospital, Goderich, He was ad-
mitted on Wednesday of last week
Mrs. Harold Greer of Lucknow
returned home on Thursday of last
week from St. Joseph's Hospital,
London where she had been .a pcit-
ient for two weeks.
Mr. and Mrs. Ken Laidlaw of
London Visited on Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. G. Flunter of
Lucknow and other relatives in the
area.
A 'Sentinel :Gift
Sybscription
0011) Coll of 4 ,
For that Christmas gift, one
which will be appreciated all
year long, give a new Or renew-
al subscription to The Lucknow
Sentinel $6 per year in Canada,
$8 for foreign. An' attractive gift
Cart Will be sent.
, 600,000 lbs. Of butter imported
from New Zealand, by the. Canad-
ian Dairy Commissionhas been
stored at the Teeswater Creamery
Plant in Teeswiter.
The unloading of the butter 'has
taken place in recent weeks from
railway 'cats shipped into Tees-
water. More shipments are ex-
ipeeted early in the year..
Ma ny dairy' farmers and official:
in the Canadian dairy, industry .
would not have ever guessed that
shortages of butter,like the present'
day shortages , would ever exist
in this country,
A few years ago., with a large
surplk in the dairy industry, milk
quotas were assigned to dairy
'farmers and, the resulting deerease
in surplus and stronger prices was
ceared towards the interest of
NEW STORE -
CONTINUED. FROM PAGE 1
ing °IA .sale of all stock this past
Fall . The nusiness was closed
and the store is now being used on
a temporary basis by Mr, and Mrs
Ken Taylor` ,of Ashfield.
Lloyd Ashton of Lucknow is
owner of the property.
the farmers.
But the quota system has not
worked as well as planned. In
theory, when the quota system
was planned, it was' thought that'
when more production was needed
quotas could be increased and
production immediately increas-
ed •
The Dairy Commission find
many farmers not willing to jump
into increased quotas and the prob
lenis and• restrictions involved
without assurance of a 'better price
and net return for their product.
So with the potential of a dairy
industry in Canada that can more
than supply the needs of the coun-
try. Canada now finds a shortage
in dairy products.
Firms like Teeswater Creamery
CONTINUED ON PAGE 22
4111