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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1976-12-22, Page 32SEE . .• Rosy Apples 18c ves 0** 3rt 4%* Olfr .3.04 SILVER WOODS 44N Cake Roll $1 65 SILVERWOODS SnOsinien• 489 • EACH At EA Cti • • A/4 • A'. :00 • • kt, V). •:t+f• We: -031g i(4)1. -aop,i• '014 *Pc .14•11, aqo le* alt Ring the bells with Christmas 'cheer, as we take a moment to send all of you our warmest wishes for a happy holiday and much gratitude for your loyal support. It's been a pleasure to serve you. ASHTON 'S LADIES' ACID MEN'S WEAR SYKE AND JIM SUTHERLAND see .them ,after New Years, and I upheld the 'Irish' wi in ,some real close , gain cribbage. There. were close to NW convention - Lorne Luther, C and I attended from this Mav'mc'W President Local 335, Fight the cripplers Emphysema, Asthma Tuber( ii!r;i Chronic Bronchitis. Air Poliutirir , Use Christmas Seal it's a matter of life and bred PAGE THIRTY-TWO THEA,ucKNow SENINNEL, L,UCKNOW, oNTARK) Friday Afternoon, December SPONSORED BY LUCKNOW BUSINESS ASSOC WEDNESDAY, DgCEiVIECR 22, 24 SKATING AT LUCKNOW ARENA • *Iry •• 66666 • • • Santa's delivering our cheery wisk to all, plus many thanks for your kindness. BAIN'S GROCETERIA Dorothy and. Jim Allan McCharles Died Al Age 40 ALLAN,McCHARLES ••••••••••;*~~44•••••##•••••••••• Last Sentinel.. For This Year • By The Sentinel THAT Due to an oversight, the election thank you for Bud Hamiltan was- omitted from last week's' issue and appears this week, In Europe they call us "Canada Fats': This weeks issue of The Sentinel will be the last -until Wednesday, January 5th. As has been the :habit in the past, there will be no paper published the week between Christmas and New Years. Sentinel 'correspondents area re- quested to send 'in their holiday news as it happens allowing us to process- the material as it is received. The Sentinel will be operi for business, as usual, despite the fact that no 'paper will be published., Phone us at 528-2822 with your personals or' other, news stories. We'll be happy to hear from you. 9••••••••••••••••••m•••••••••••• Friends in this area were saddened to learn of the death of Allan Frank McCharles of. Beacons- field, Quebec, who died in Royal Victoria . Hospital, Montreal, on December 2nd at the age of 40 years. The victim of cancer, it is seven months since Allan had his first surgery when" Melanoma was detected. . Born on March 14th, 1936, Allan is the son of" OliverA. and Marion .McCharles of •Lochalsh. He attended elementary school at Paramount, being a member of the last graduating class before the school Closed. Following gradua- tion from grade 13 at Ripley District High School, he went to work for Bell Telephone in Toronto, as a summer job, later deciding to continue with them. He received further education in accounting and was just recently promoted to the Board of Management as supervis- or of accounting: For eleven years he worked for Bell in Toronto, tranSferring in September 1966 to the 'head office in Montreal where he spent the next 'ten years. On April 14, 1962, he married Jean l'Atison at St. Johns United Church in Oakville. Surviving are his wife Jean, daughters Susan •12, Karen 8 and son Gregg Allan, age 5; his parents . Oliver .and Marion McCharles and broth ers Donald A. of Chatham and John A. of Petrolia. Allan was a member of Beacons- field United. Church,, served as an elder, on the board of stewards and as chairman of the property committee. The body rested at the Russell and Morden Funeral Home in Oakville for service on December . 6th at 2 p.m. Burial was at Trafalgar Lawn. Cemetery, :Oak- ' ville. Services were conducted by Rev. K. Jains Campbell. Pallbearers were Dr. DOnald MacDonald, J. Farquhar MacDon- ald, John D. MacArthur, Wayne Johnston, Hugh Vasey and John Naudie. Homirary pallbearers were Del Bedard; Pete Cowie, Ian Smith, Mervin .Courtney, Lloyd Wylds, David McTaviSh, John Naprawa, Bill Nihon. • Let Us Know! Away for Christmas Or New Years. Have some visitors? Call us' at The Lucknow Sentinel 528-2822, and tell us about them. We'd. like to hear from you. If you have a rural correspondent in your area, give her a call. • Tangerines e, 1 /45',t. AO 89' Doz. 1*r ,,,...0„, ,,, . 40 • Olt Aft 01 OP .• OA' 0/1 v.t.• OA sir 00 M."Tior AO -70-1?ir Arei 4"4 •vel-tiOt Alr drr dii SILVER W 00 DS Flaming Snowballs $1.39 EACH LUCKNOW 528-342 '( • WE DELIVER Attend Convention As At Edmont( LETTER TO THE EDITOR December 13,-1976. Dear Don, Charlie and I have spent the past week at the National Farmers Union Convention in Edmonton. This was a real "working conven- tion" with everyone - men, women and youth taking an active part in discussion and debates. As the media are quick to note, NFU membership is down - yes, we are no longer made up of every farmer we can persuade to part with $25, but, instead are farmers who are serious about the farm situation and consider it important enough to put some effort on their own to better their conditions. When you talk' to people from right across Canada, you ,find that their problem's are very similar to yours, and you're all striving for the dame goal - a profitable fartn operation and the preservation of, the family farm. • While'it. Edmonton, we visited' with Jack and Bernice Webster. "Big Jack" wanted to be remem- bered to his friends at Lucknow .and to tell them he'd be down to Oranges (EXTRA LARGE) SEL VER WOODS Holiday Squares $1 • 49 EACH