The Lucknow Sentinel, 1985-05-01, Page 4Page 4—Lucknow Sentinel, Wednesday, May 1, 1985.
Re-elect ELSTON
ON MAY 2
A VOTE FOR ELSTON IN HURON -BRUCE ISA VOTE FOR
EXPERIENCE
v ENTHUSIASM
✓ ENERGY
✓ EMPLOYMENT
✓ EDUCATION
✓ ENVIRONMENT
Huron -Bruce NEEDS
'Murray Elston He Cares
aka\
IBERAL
For election information or a ride to the polls call:
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Lucknow firemen were called to the property of Robert, Symes of Lucknow where a trailer
near a bonfire was destroyed by fire last Thursday. (Photo by Alan Rivett)
Lucknow fire department
answers three calls
The Lucknow Fire Department has been call at the home of Robert Irwin of R. 11 3;
busy over the last two weeks with a number Lucknow. A tractor, parked beside a barn
of fires in the area. caught fire due to faulty wiring in the
tractor. The fire was put out before it could ..
spread to the barn, said Mr. Hamilton. The
estimated damage to, the tractor was
$2,000..
On Thursday, April 25; firemen were'
called to the property of Robert Symes' of
Luclnaow. A trailer, parked too near a
bonfire, was ignited from a spark from the
bonfire, said Mr. Hamilton. The trailer Was
not insured.
A spark from a cutting torch resulted in a
small grass fire on the property of
Raymond Forgett of Kintail on Thursday,
April 18. lire chief Bud Hamilton said the
fire could have endangered the house and
the welding shop if it wasn't put out
immediately, There was no, damage from
'the fire, .
On the same day, firemen responded to a
Presentedwith quilt...
from page 3
Wingham High School.
The lion Club also. offered • Mr.
Chisholm a chance to travel to their yearly
conventions. He has travelled to Honolulu,
Hawaii, Dallas, New Orleans, Chicago,
Phoenix, Montreal and San Francisco on
behalf of the lions Club.
Mr. Chisholm has won many awards
through his efforts with the organization.
He has won Extension Awards for forming
new clubs, the Governors Award for
meeting the requirements of the Interna-
tional Lions Club and, in 1983, he was
given the, International President's Ap-
preciation award. He says, however, that
the quilt from the Lioness Clubs "tops
them all".
This year, he • is still a member of the
Lucknow Lions dub and hopes next year he
will be asked by the Governor to serve as
the Lioness chairman for the tenth year. He
still continues to write the bulletins of the
Lucknow Lions meetings and wrote a short
history of the lions in the book entitled A
Glimpse of the Past. .
He says the most rewarding part of
being in the Lions Club over the past 23
years has been meeting the people and
contributing to ' worthy causes in the
community. -
"It's interesting in that. you work with
the finest people in the country and get to
)make friends with them. Sometimes you
get a little tired of it (the work) but you get '
refreshed and get going again.
"There isn't a place where I can go that I
can't look up a Lion member to talk to,"
says Mr. Chisholm.
Real-life storiesin play
BLYTH - A nurse's career is ruined byher
abuse. of over-the-counter and prescription
drugs, leading her to attempt suicide. A
mother of six, with an unappreciative and
sometimes violent husband, is offered
medication to handle her frustration with
her life.
Two pharmaceutical company executives
look for a new disease so they can promote
drugs to cure it. They also plot to send
shipments of drugs banned in the US' to
Brazil through Guatemala; because Brazil's
laws) forbid importation of products banned
in the "country of origin."
A poor Third World womrin, sells her
children's only source of high protein eggs:
her chicken. Ityv111 enable her to buy some
of the useless and perhaps dangerous
preparations her doctor has prescribed,
such as cough syrup, tonics and "growth
hormones" (anabolic steroids) which can
hage disastrous side effects in children, but•
which drug companies are promoting in the
Third World as a "cure" for malnutrition,
These real-life stories are among the in-
terwoven tales of women's lives portrayed
in the moving, hilarious, dramatic,
satirical, educational and always entertain-
ing play Side Effects, produced by The
Great Canadian Theatre Company of Ot-
tawa, and Women's Health Interadion, an
Ottawa -based coalition. It was previewed at
a public showing at the Canadian Health
Coalition conference in Ottawa on
November 24.
Side Effects is being brought to the area
by Women Today.
The production will be staged at the Blyth
Memorial Hall on Tuesday, May 7 at 8 p.m.
The cleverly written script, with its fre-
quent changes in temp, setting and style,
holds the audience's attention. Continuity is
provided ,by several storylines running
through the one -and -a -half hour play.
Five professional actresses play multiple
roles and •produce a tapestry of emotions in
the audience: indignation, sympathy, hilari-
ty, anger - while conveying a sense of the
importance of the lives of the women por-
trayed.
Quite a lot of information is' put across:
the extent of drug use among Canadian
women and how it is promoted by drug con-'
paries through doctors, often with -the
passive compliance of us, the patients, as
"doctor knows best"; information on many
drugs such as valium and D.E.S.; some of
the exploitative marketing practices of drug
companies in Third World countries, and '
Turn to .page 5