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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1953-05-20, Page 8u 1 /. A •’ ■ PAGE EIGHT ■NYLON The greatest thing that eyer happened to sax~trimfit nylons! They wash .in . . dhuriy, dry in a breeze/lq$t practically for ever. In white, soft pastels and high fall shades. < . • ‘ ir r . A: /. DuPont Nylon lined ' • ' ■ ’• • ; 4 . with comfortable Dyrene ^ mercerized cotton. Meng, Ladies and Childrens ■ '.:';\/>/./Wea£.. //.'?■ ■ Piece-Goods and Woollens : AUXILIARY RALLY - (Continued from Page One) J r Mrs. Richardson conducted the election of a new officer,’ a de? pity”'zone comihander, stressing that she had nd authority other than to act .for Ithe Zone com­ mander in case, of illness. Mrs. McCann of the Hdwick branch was elected; ' She and Mrs. Eva Black lyete candidates for the ap- pointment. “ In her address Mrs. Richardson pointed out that Auxiliary con­ ventions had now -grown so large that there were, only four cities in the province that could offer accomodation. The ,1954 conven­ tion will be in London as Wind­ sor could hot handle it. She said ^that a decision had to be/reached as to holding conventions annual­ ly or every second year..Besides presenting-anaccomodationprob? lem annual conventions will mean an increase jn the per capita tax. Twenty new Auxiliaries have THE LUCKNOW. SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO I SEE BY THE SENTINEL ; THAT ^rank Graham was P^o- voked on Monday when a little Bunting bird wasv shot on ‘ his . farm which is a sort of bird “sanctuary”. This little bird and/ July. 1952, . ■ ■■ • o— ■ • ■ ■ - 'its brightly colored mate, have Rested on the Graham farm for two years, and Frank says (they are very rare in these p^arts. As a result af the incident, he has ordered no shooting or tres- passing on his property without . his permission/ 7 , ‘ ? r - » ‘ 7 ’ ' • :;-Q.7‘ THAT Mrs. Keith Blake was >e door prizeWinner Wbndgy. night’s dgnce, sponSorecpby the Ladies’ Auxiliary t^o the Can­ adian Legion. The prize was a water set. THAT George Lockhart discover­ ed the remnants of a United States weather balloon suspen­ ded from.- a tree in, his bush. It has been there several :- months, as the dhte on it was THAT op Tuesday, May 12ith; the Rev. H. L. Jennings, John Me- Quillin, lay ^delegate of . St. Pet­ ter’s, Lucknow, and R. J. Dur? riiri, lay delegate of St. Phul’a, Dunganpon, attended the an­ nual synod of the Diocese of Huron in London._. " ' . * < ' . ri 1 1 ~ ’ . and more, are in the making. There, are thirty^fivie zones Mn the province ^nd membership and: money raised is ybar by~ year set­ ting new records., . $8,000 is donated to; the schol­ arshipfund which'iff* available to veterans’ children. Branch reports showed money raised by card games, bazaars, raffles, tag days, catering, dances, sponsoring^ ball and hockey teams, etc. ' ’; ? All branches aid in providing treats and comforts for hospital­ ized veterans and,, funds . for a weekly bingo. Most auxiliaries have adopted a hospitalized vet­ eran who. has no family or close friends in this/part of the country. • An invitation Was extended by the Exeter branch to' hold the next rally in that town. The 1953 provincial convention will <be in Otitawa-with—Mrs^-EuniceReid as the official delegate. z Gifts were presented to Mrs. Richardson, * Miss Hoyle, Mrs., '.—o—— THAT the omission of the lowly , comma was good for a joke at the Publisher’s expense; In the report of last week’s council ' meeting we said the Board struggled with “complaints from dogs to an estimated in­ crease in the tax rate”. A com­ ma after complaints would —havesparedus.Mostcouncils hear many? a growl but not of the canine variety, and no /doubt at times they may be pretty . well.. convinced that possibly the»adog is still1.man’s ibestfriend. THAT a; good deal of curiosity was . aroused last wdek by a very, badly wrecked car which sat on the side of the highway in front of the Caledonian Park. The smashed ivehicle was being towed from Kincardine by a “junk” dealer, and towing dif­ ficulties .decided him to park the wreck and return later with a truck to remove it. J. Allin; ■ In a lucky draw Mrs. Morris Swanson of Wingham won. a lovely lace table cloth and a serving tray went to an Exeter member.7 Ladies of the local branch served lunch to conclude a very successful rally. WEDNESDAY, MAX 20th, 1953 _ .... aLo UM I) ■B.II —f9 w.11iff-liBto >! WANTED GIRL I . or. married woman toleam TELEPHONE OPERATING .omu — u■mHwaaeuB'qwmoW FIVE NIGHTS FER WEEK Permanent Position — Ages 25 to 40 REGULAR WAGE INCREASES Si Pleasant Working Conations APPLY J'''. Miss C. M. McIntosh,-Chief Operator BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY OF CANADA i LUCKNOW, ONTARIO | Mrs. Harold the Guild prayer in unison led by the president, Mrs. A. Foster. Business was discussed, regarding equipment for the church. Rev. H. L; Jennings closed the meeting with prayer. Aj dainty lunch was: serived by the hostess and hen daughter Isabel. Mrs. Harold Adams will be hostess for ithe June meeting, i as-guest^arid- enjoyedrUier-^-talk- on “A Good Mather”. She re­ ferred and spoke kindly of the late Mrs. Stimsqn. A pleasing duet was rendered by Mrs. Joy nt and Mrs. HaD with Mrs? Meikle- jbhn as accompanist. Mrs. Rich­ ards gave an interesting sketch of the home life and life history of the poetess, Edna Jukes. Mrs. Jdhri Wraith and Mrs. A7 Hav- ens reaebtwo jpf^her^paemsrALn- . interesting “contest was conduct-1 ed and a dainty lunch was serv­ ed* by the committee in charge. Port Albert Ladies Guild The ladies of the Anglican Church, Port Albert, met at the home of Mrs. 'Walter Tigert for their May meeting. The meeting opened by singing—the hymn “O God, our? Help im Ages Past”. The scripture lesson was read by ENGAGEMENTS The engagement is announced of Ethel Mary MacKenzie,-daugh­ ter of Mrs. Roderich MacKenzie of Ashfield, and the late Mr. Mac- Kenzie, to Mr. Gliff JR. Jackman. son of Mr. and Mrs. R. Jackman of Toronto. The marriage to take place' in Ashfield Presbyterian Church on Saturday, June 6th at 3.00 p.m., DJS.T. 39c 39c 19c Radish WISE BUYS to SAVE your FOOD Chase & Sanborn Instant Coffee 57c Lipton’s Tea Bags, 30’s .... 29c Challenger Salmon, fancy pink, tall .7. Breakfast Club Strawberry Jam I.G.A. Margene, lb. 34c Red Bird Matches .... 3 for 25c Oranges, .r o?; 29c Green Onions / ’ -1 been organized during the year Hall, Mrs. MacMillan and Mrs. Libby’s Tomato Juice, 48 oz. .... 27c Banannas, lb. ... Leaf Lettuce 4 SMITH’S FOOD MARKET ......... \ T ’ . .. Hunter-Kilpatrick Group The May meeting of Group III of .t he W.A. of the United Church was held in the church basement on Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. V, Hunter was 'in charge of the opr ening-exercises. The meeting op­ ened by singing .hymn 502 fol­ lowed by prayer by Mrs.; McNab. Mrs. Humphrey gave the scrip­ ture reading.. The roll call was answered ,by sixteen members and, was answered by “a hat I remember” which proved very interesting. The Group is respon- siblerfor the flowers in-church for May and June. Mrs. Hunter gave-a-splendid-report-of-the^W. A. Presbytery which was held at Underwood last week; Mrs. Orland Ribhards took the , chair for’ tile program; We were pleas­ ed to have MisS Annie MacKay l H * LONG ■ .< •< ■ < L .■ •< / ■ ■ ■<; ■ < .' < ■ '< ■ < I-' ' ■.; ,r- ■ ’:' < . < ' . < ■ '■ < ■ < ’ . .< 7 ^g»T25c~~^ D. R. FINLAYSON ’Phone 91* Lucknow, Opt. . ■ > . ■ ' i dk A A,i A A A <• A A ■ ► ■■ * ■ Pasture Mixture ► ► ► ' ► ► ► ► ► ► ► A f 3 “24 Pounds to Acre” I ■ Z Brome-Grass~77^T—~7^7-5~lbsr Orchard Grass ...........4 lbs. Timothy ............ 4 lbs. Meadow Fescue ........ 3 lbs. Canadian Blue .......... ..... 1 lb. Kentucky Blue ........../...... 1 lb. Ladino Clover ............ 1 lb.« White Dutch .............. 1 lb. Alfalfa ............................... A lbs. 24 lbs. Recommended by Ontario Department of Agriculture PUT UP IN 24 LB. BAGS PRICE PER ACRE $10.00 ■ > CERTIFIED SEEQ POTATOES Cobbler, Kathadin, Sebago, Green Mountain ► > » > > Royal Puf pie Garden Seeds - >- Tfc MARKET STORE LADIES’ GABARDINE SKIRTS Sizes 12, 14, 16, 18 f Gold, aqua, fawn-—wonderful’ weight < and quality, Only $4.50 Each f) N LADIES’ KRISkAY BLOUSES All colors ~ sizes 12 to 20 Only $1.98 Each f COTTON SKIRTS Floral and Multi JP<tteihs. Only $2.98 Each ... ........................■ ,.i MEN’S DRESS SOCKS Cotton; nylon of wool-all' patterns, colors and sizes. from 69c to $1:59" W«Y LOOK FURTHER? Don’t forget to see our grand artay of Children’s Sunsuits and Sundresses Priced from 69c to $2.98 ...... . . ■ .. . •-^7. ....... MEN! Don’t let your hair blow in your eyes while taking that summer drive this year. Sec our grand selection of , SUMMER CAPS ..../- ■ - - Priced from 59c each 5 «.' \*