The Lucknow Sentinel, 1954-03-03, Page 11' t
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^fjDNESPAY* MARCH 3rd, 1954
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THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO
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, PAGE ELEVEN >
DUNGANNON
Mr. and Mrs. B. F, Comfort,
St. Catharines, were recent visi- . . . .tors with. Mr. and Mrs, Cecil < down with a form of rhsu-
Blake. | in at ism, a few weeks ago, has
Robt. Irvin. Mrs. Smith is a sis-
ter of Mrs. Irvin. "
Miss Ada Webster, who was
The World. Day of■ Prayer will
te observed in the village at Ers-1
kine Presbyterian church on Fri
day at 2.30 p.m. Rev, C. A. Wiinn
"will be th£. speaker; St. Paul’s
Anglican church and the United,
church members are invited to j
attend. . ■ . ‘
Mrs. S. J. Kilpatrick observed
her 78th birthday oh Sunday at
her home. Besides. members ' of
her faimily~being present for the
day, her cousins, Mr. and Mrs.
j; ‘D. Hesson of Stratford were
present. Many happy returns of
the day, Mrs. Kilpatrick.
. Mrs, Doug Freeman of Clinton
visited her mother, Mrs. Abner'
Morris, one day last week. '
Miss Clara Sproul of Stratford
•been cared, for at the home of
Mrs, S. J. Kilpatrick, If possible
she will be moved ’to her home
in Lucknow this vveek, Mrs. Wal
ter. Tiger_t has .been supplying at
Crewe school diiring her * ab
sence.
ATTEND FUNERAL OF
TORONTO NONAGENARIAN
^D_R.McKenzieof--Lochalsh/
Roy McKenzie of Ripley ..and
-MAlvi11e—Sc o tt-1-of—th e—So u th—tin e-
aftended the funeral in Toronto
6n. February l'3th of Mr. Neil
McKenzie, who pass.ed .away, at
the age of 93. He was a former
resident of Con. 12, Ashfield. .
two ' daughters, Miss Mary ~M~c-
Kenzie with whom he. made his
home; and Mrs. Florence John
ston.-'* . •
1
the age of 93. He was a former
I resident of Con. 12, Ashfield. .
| Mr. McKenzie is survived by
. - . t\,w' d.< ■ ■ ■ ■■ ■•'
visited her sisters, Misses Nettie Kenzie
~ and , Rebina- Sproul. '
Mrs’. Melvin Reed and son Gir- .
vin attended the funeral of the j
former’s sister-in-law, Mrs. W. P.
Reed, at St. Marys on, Wednes-1 *
day of last,,week. '
Miss Barbara, Wilsop has been I
notified.“that in her music stud
ies this season, she has been suc
cessful in Obtaining first class
honors, Grade III harmony. Mrs.
Gerald Dustow is tier teacher.
Mrs. Allan Reed, and Mrs. Herb
’Stothers were invited to sing
duets on Sunday : at. Ashfield Presbyterian church. They were
guests of Mrs. Reed’s aunt, Mrs.
Dan Wvlds. . o
Village- residents were called
to a fire at the home of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Park, Jr., on Mon-
j day night about modiiight, wheii
stove pipes and chimney took
fire. Mr. aind Mrs. Park were
away for the evening and Mrs.
Chas. Fowler was baby-sitting for
their four small children. Fort-
: unately the pipes and. chimney •
took their own course at burning
out without further damage; but ’
the storm and high wind that i
night was something to worry j
about. ,1 .
Mrs, K. K. Dawson is a patient I
at Wingham Hospital.
Visiting and calling on Mr. &
Mrs. . W; A'. Culbert on Sunday
were members of their family,
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Sherwood and*
. family, Carlow and Mr. and Mrs.
Leonard Crawford and family of
Wingham.
Mrs. W. R. Andrew wais pleas
antly surprised Wednesday of last
week When her nephew^ Mr.
Cluny Evans, Mrs. Evans and 21
sons of Leduc dropped in on- her,
for a visit. Mrs.. Andrews acconb •
. panied them on their return and |
--^lUHpay^a-suiprisie-visit^ith-^TOr2—
, sister, Mrs. Dolly Evans at ^Kan-1
sas City. Mrs. Andrews will be
gone for. a few weeks. I
Mr. W. A. Culbert and ^ons ’
Howard and. Bill made a business I
trp to Guelph on Monday. They 1
experenced quite varied weather ‘
to their surprise. The weather
here onthe start of their trip
was quite wintry. Half way there
and in the Listowel. district it
was quiite a good deal worse and
arriving at Guelph, there was
very little trace of anything like
winter. \
Mts-. Wm. Sproul, a patient at
Goderich Hospital, was hot quite
so well last week, but it' is
thought she might be a little
better "now, but still pretty weak.
/Pearl Mallough Passes
Miss_ Pearl Mallough, 72, of,
Dundas Crescent, Toronto, passed t„
“• away Tast“ week and was laid to,
Letters To The Editor
FOOD FOR THOUGHT
Due ^chiefly to the Russian
enigma, trouble in* generous por
tions prevails along theintern at-..followed can be traced to the
jona) frpnft. At tuch times it is i
sometimes helpful fo review a of Versailles. If one makes a "com*’
story from the past. '•biped study of history and the .Jan Smuts of South Africa, led present araments race the future • the family! .
an unusually actijVe and eventful presents some puzzling possibili-j
life. At the age of thirty-one we iUes. t ; T.......
find him in command of all the At |he present time ,we agaih {beta! top won’t rust or^ tarnish.
Boer commando^ south. of the find the future, of nations de-, ’* *v’4 ’*u 1
Orange IRiver,’with the rank of pending on the, decisions .,of a
^generaTrrn^tbis unequal~struggle small , group of \ men calledPthe
against the British he fought Big Four. If they, should fail to
~with~grearskni and almost With- reach a decision, what then? An"
out rest. It seemjs stranger than ‘ alert free |world .’would doubtless
fiction that some years later dur- be too much for. any combination
ing World War I when the Allies - of Communist forces, Of import-
were hard pressed by the Ger- ance then is for all of us to ask
nian’armies this same man be- ourselves if we are really on the
came the orator, for the Empire, alert or are we too preoccupied
He went to London, England, and with other local Interests. A. coin- . WJnc,
inspired millions to .greater, ef- mon complaint amongi the sold-1 the inside, of the panes with a -
forts by . his many speeches in iers during the Korean war was solution of an ounce of glycerine
pfaise of. the Empire. ’ . , ' the indifference to the struggle in a pint of rubbing«alcohol.
, Thus for those of us who. cher-..by the public -bgbk Let’s
ish the ideal of a i
of Nations the war ended on a.
happy note. Historians teii us ’
that much of the disillusion that
-
impractical terms of sthe Treaty dther step. When they ' are dry,
Commonwealth think it over.
,iT7' ... ,.......................x .
z —
When painting stairs that the
family use daily, paint every '
> H. - . -r. 1 ■
paint the remaining ones re
membering to leave a sign for
“RANCHO”.
0-0-0-—r-
| The inside of your salt shaker’s
i if you paint’it with nail polish.
•When the lacquer is dry, pust
a~pin_thTOirgh~the^hoTe-^ —
o-o-o—
If you paint your screeds black
on the inside and white on. the
outside, you will be, able to look '
“out—but nobody will be able to
look in, '■ '
—o-o-o----- “
To keep frost from,forming ori
windows in* the. winter time, rub
rest in the family plot in Dun
gannon cemetery on Saturday af^
ternoon. Miss Miallough was born
at .Dungannon, 'being a daughter
...of-the late Mr. and Mrs. Major
. Joseph MallpU'gh, who Were hotel !
keepers iri earlier days on the i
. site of Where the Bank of -Com-,
nierce. West WaWanosh Fire' In?"
q^n,CG Qo; buddings <ndw stand.1
. khs is survied .by two sisters in \
jMay.). Glover, Deceased are Wil-1.
:;...»^yi<^t^yeK0tL^and Dell;>.■-
;a^V,i.“ b. Jenhings of St. Paul’s ,
nghcan church, conducted the :
ervicc at the graveside. The palL j •
bearers We Robt. purnin, ■
wers^ Wm. j; Smith, Wm. Stoth-
Jaick. Caesar and Wrn. Stew-
• ,'-arb'. JL ■
:.anG]-^Mr$7.'j-Jast ^SmitlT*,artd ^1
*,n’ly of Moleswdrth were. VispJ’ I
ws on Sunday with Mr. and Mr& ■
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’PHONE 40, LUCKNOW, ONTARIO
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