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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1949-07-14, Page 74 THURSDAY; JUL?. 14th, 1949 TH>+ LIUCKNOW SENTINEL, • LUCKNOW,. ONTARIO ' • NO EVENING SERVICE During the . suarnaler months 'wthile the congregat nsw of the Presbyterian and ` United 'Church " are meeting together, there will. ' be no evening service. .During July Rev.. W. J„.. Wiatt, of .Whitechurch is .preaching the Presbyterian church each morning, and in August Rev: C. H, kM'acDonald 'will have charge of. the •seij $ ces in. the United Church: • Start Building School After a gooddeal of delay in awaiting official; -...approval, work of • constructingRipley's. .new, ; Continuation •School, is mow get- ti ,: underway. ,the MacDougall Conistruction Cotlpany 'Of Wing, Wing.- ham :has`' the .contract: Ther .new. sch.00l,irepi;acrng: ;the one destroy- ed :ib'y 'dire; is expected'. to !be ready for, occupancy ••in. the :.fall, 'but not for. the opening . of .the • term:. To. Return To Wingham and!=Mrs...Anthony ` Doyle; • of Evanston,., Il,linois,. .spent •. the past ` week 'visiting with 1Vlr. , Doyle's daughters, . •. Mrs. TRody.. Inglis; .near ',Whitechurch,, and Mrs` Oscar iceiffer, near: 13e1,- * sided lief;*'sided here and.. Mr. ` and •Mrs. `• Doyle hope.. to return. .•` td Wing-, ham in the near,. future to con- duct.; a • business. =, Adivance- Timetis. ' ea Dealer tt y Beatty Deep;' Well Pumps Beatty ' Three -Way Pumps 'In' •Stock Gilson and 'Dominion. WASHING , MAC ffl . S Plumbing and; Heating and Pump and Windmill Repairing • ti FITIPATR IC•K RAL 3, Goderich• •'Phone 12-r-3 ..Dungannon E ORI M ALS��� WINGHA'MVI MEMORIAL SHOP famous. for Artistic Memo riais at ver''reason reasonable •c Y � e ori es. Always ys a; large stock 1n .. choicest granites to . choose from.. Cemetery lettering a specialty. All modern.' mach n r � ey. R. A. SPO xToN 'Phone 256 Wuigham, Ont.. A •family plot. should' `.be. 4r.a ;ed -:with': the- shrine=like- ,beauty of, a monument which will be everlastingly. :'a'tribute to those at' rest. We have many classic .styles, to suggest;' and will • work ` with you `, on ..cus- tom. designs: : Except'ionall low Y ow.,, prices, -No canvassing,: which elimin- " ates sales; commissions; Inscriptions. • •• R'epairirlg 'Sandblasting Memorials .25 Years'•; Experience ' The, latest 'in 'Portable Sandblast . Equipment Ml. w•ork; personally'' executed• • 'PAGE SEVEN 'med NEW L/ W D 1 SRY . 1 Infoi'• Of. Plant Faciiiit%es ° • Foilawing the recent • f urnxture 'HAS LOCALTOUCH factory- .fire at..Southampton, • haarriipton, Mr. yW • Pappas, preside The d • � of'the discovery of . a newsyn-., local Chan fiber of CoRrirnerce, was thetic fur, which may ushers 'in' in .tele hone : conversation with ,an era of ;:$100 fur coats, isan- the manager of: the Southampton. nounced , at Ottawa,' with chief plant to : inform: him of factory• credit far the . discovery going to accommodationavailable here: •W.. E, Cowie, a .'son, -in-law of ' The Southar..tan exe cutiive was' . Mrs. Eunice Burrell; of.+Port appreciative of this consideration, Credit. ,*rs.. Burrell was form- but. .informed •Mr. 'Pa' " as• that erly, Eunice. Graham, .a daughter -.their machinery .'had not. 'been of the late Mr; and • Mrs, Robert • .damaged., and that their ' 'piar}s Graham. . • would not •}ye definite until a But primarily the new discov- meeting 'of. the directors wa. ery: is believed to halve licked" held:'. a ..xn;ore •irnprrediate problem • . what..t tis .s r P should vv " r""in: T Form . ea_. Can.... Doritmuaton, schoolArea 1.11,11UST ORDER FOREST' TREES , Application forums to: be rued B '. MID -AUGUST . "•I. "• in uraerirvg trees .can 'be secured _ from the agricultural ; Z?resen- The �D,epartment of 'bands ' and tatives 'ine Clinton, Stratreford and " Forests •kannounces it is necessary Woodstock, or Brom ' the 'Depart,. fox those planning to plant forest ' Ment of'. Lands and Forests office trees in the spring of 1950, • to in. Stratford. Order their trees. before August , All corrl.,leted application forms 15th, 1949.from the Counties of Hurons, This date is: much earlier than ° Perth and Oxford mut be sent' other years, but in gb rder 'to e' to the Departrnent � of .Lands •and' able . to give better . service'"lto. Forests, Stratford, not later than a "those orderink, trees, it has beef' August 15; 1949, Orders received found necessary to -advance the after this. date cannot. be ;accept - order date i ed. mail E■EEEEEEEEsi-EmalEE!■EE■■EEaa!ti•■nE.afsaaufEa■n, ■ t SJij'jct_ , aria's sub -zero .Arctic,' With. the Department of, Edu- n ,.- ■m' e It :is . as. it n�q!W..Stands h ' 6 a i'refusing.. - • -�. ... , a coded c t•on to rant'.reco r-.. :�r. -•: :. �. �.g - g??, irno t ... snow s ; n. .... yp suit made of ,tion, • as , a 13it �h School � Drst � � '• �' .: •. .. �' •nylon..•e! ■ . Y,_ ...ft4r,.. . a-mate,r;al, evIll..w,. , u.. d, el.,,, the. Village,of Teeswater_and' the :a x' . ,A Y b : Canadian' dean ,: T , y.0 a . defense scientists:. T�rvt nshr of. Cul os ■ p r s. have settled , ,:.. • <� : The SWltched. T They think their.. synthetic fur, for the formation' mof a "Culross ■ r • • ,. � , • svelte and smooth, can be 'wov:::and 'Teeswater Public and Cori en, '.:processed .and dyed to ,,re-' tinuation " School Area",''.''. which au serble •any. kind of fur so, closely will . beeorrie operative on Jannt.t r� • -that only experts could -tell the'•ary-lst; 1950Aifter that'`date difference.. I School Board will adininister the • Further, it is. "mothproof;.. fire affairs of Teeswater Continuation resistant, washable: with soap and . School'. as •' well •• as: .the ' Puiblic water, hard to 'tear and trempn-:'Schools; in Culp*. and, Tees- dously ., lasting; and its cost is Water. ' far •.ibelow' th'e retail price. of the:I in K . •ar. ■ .. fu'r coats that :nnw.Tha:u t'f ;thous--.,._ Cond;tioni_a'IiiOri..IMProved T ■ ands "of housewives.. '1' -:Mr. A. E. 'Cook, well known' . »' Music `'t a n •'r.. Forthe rnament,`the •sdi�entists rruu a •c er•`in this district,:is - II: l' prodding .:has led:. the government much- irrrnroved in'"health; ofter- 10 file', a' patent application for his recent illness, and .wias able ■ the'rnylon pile.fabric... to. return to his home in ,Blyth ■ Froin •:the ''straight ''services'"' a couple' of ,week ago.,, • •E standpoint,- the fur is said to be: . ' ■' • even 'better than .the 'caribou • skin 'POLICE an• the Walkerton district :' t'he "Eskimos` have' -used for .:gen- have been' clamping:,'.down `on: V ■, ■ 'from some other : brand. ■ Nation wide survey shows .3 out �' '• Of 5 B F. Goodrich.' tire ::owners as switched from some other. brand. EXTRA Blowout PROTECTION II' LONGER MILEAGE ` ■ Plus t : TREEf OM IFR? AI -PUNCTURES, ,■T Join, the ,swin to• '13. F. Goodrich. ■ R . get , all •the advantage of. trouble free"•motoring. Only B.' F. ■ • Goodrich gives ' freedom from`: i•; punctures erations: ; traffic, violators and• :particularly ■ y . : : A 'lot' of the facts• about .it still" 'in respect to faulty :brakes% ` A are on the -secret: lust, but it was''•long list of offenders; including . ■ .,, ' developed•. in a ..little:'rrvore'than. to few motorrsts',,from a year at a',cost'of a few thousand • its, : Paid fines recently . in , the n" ' ■ dollars by; ,a sniall •te.am •• headed. •Coiunty Town by .W. E'; Cowie, 38,• of the •De fense Research ' Board,• who has (been ; at:industrial :•,andresearch for :12 years His aides were Arthur`'Blouin, a DRB -chemical engineer,- and Flt Lt. Scott 'Alexander,, 36,' 'former Mountie who : is one of , v some of the worlds. children ettin �- yg getting the RCAF'S tOP a rts..01"1 e pair , of shoes,. perhaps 'not even new or.. • : North: •• : i . well -fitting, s;the;experience ofa young life- time. And if;: on the same day, these • children.. manage ;to get a good; meal into their stow-, `achs, ' they feel, themselves as lucky ' as the finders of buried. treasures.'„ During the war''these.children who had no responsibility for the. fighting, 'were the. first as e ara 'P'hone :1' Lucknow'; ` sision imis .0:■■■■, omusna;■`ir.i■/■■si■It■7fi■■n- ■k ■.■■■u■ . F MI Cow e rs •got interested two, years ago; while, he was studying ',Another: problem at, • tile ;Church ill, .. Man experi mental base: 1- ie liked., the: loose, fflexible. Eskimos ggarb, ;but 'he 'thought 'its , mater, �. iai could he. betred; . He ` also.; to . suffer. After the 'war, they continued .- .. . . .. ..... bettered, y y muco 'to . ;. liked ' the frost=shedding •: qualit- ies of the. :ri w ve e fir the Es - kid os used to trim parka ,hoods: By :April,. 1948;.after,: man months .'of study,. he and •.Blonir had,a textile mill turning ,out the: (First synthetic :nylon fur `with; the frost -ridding_ qualities 'of the wolverine. Alexander;` joined them.' 'and' got excited:''a�bouit its `poss. ' ibijities ';as a ,flying suit He and,:I3louin went. into. the Far.' North and ,tested m the ; first' 'suats,::wearing `nothing • else" ex-. ,,cert; these clothes with fur_: fac ding ,both their bodies andthe outer . ,world.' -They , weighed' about..101 .pounds; about' •the same ;as an Eskimo suit, but far lighter than the clothes ::men wear 'in :civilized parts. Excess i e 'tidiness is; said . to in- dicate a', mild foran• ` of insanity,`: from which most, newspaperinen:'•: em " (own ie M � orial. .Alfred St., WING;HAM' 'Phone ' 450 „ I or NEIL MaeLENNAN, Ripley, .• Ontario. ..RECEIVED GOOD RESPONSE Our request last ''week for a. few' copies: of. a recent issue' of The. Sentinel ''brpught an : im-: ;mediate and 'ample ` response,, which was Bch arppreciated. 4I`he: need was for 4,6 -pies. Altogether' we ''received nine from tho fol 1ovwing: , James Webster 'Mrs. .Ed' Tnoarr, Adam BowI:1%21'4 Les. • Keath,y Alex Culbert, , 'George Burgess, R'erb° 11 cQtilliri` Stan Todd acid • a tai iz g froarilint issue brotit.k •by Audrey Stan- • '{ suffer'; as the world: tried to rebuild from war ,But . } ese children are part of thea new gen- , en ,' eration. No matter how ainful : their youth P and how slight their ' preparation, they will soon 'have to;. gover. n nations. ; They are part of the living future of the:world. -' • To help save this generation, the world— hrou h the United , t g r4 d .•has be- ,, .. un to shoulder the:responsibility g for lits chil- dren ..; ? internationalL'' " both those' who expe- rienced war and those who, though the ' were sage from bombs, still -need help :urgently '• U N.'s efforts to help the-. world's children •: began ;with UNRRA and ,have constantly ex- panded x panded: since then, so fiat: millions of expectant• chil- dren and nurs` gand mothers in } �, the world's worst -hit areas now , look to..0 ,agencies for the ,supplementary meals and. the clothing which: keep them .alive. • Butthis:,, type of help can only be :temporary: U.N. is also trymg to solve the problem of the world's next generation ona long-range basis.; U;N:.child welfare ex•P erts visit and advise countries requesting them, while,; through its fellowship, program, U.N ° is also helping to train new experts from' the countries them-' selves..;;.Educational ' facilities are ''being.. re-;. • built 'ew ,..,,a and "new . homes are being found' far war : orphans. , Atthe same tune, U.11T. Agen- cies, with Scandinavian Red : Cross Societies, r a°e conducting'a world-wide anti-tuberculoLis, '': drive,'. to involve, some 300,000,000 'childretr while other "U.N. " arms ' continueto combat child labor and ,immoral traffic t o ffi c in children.; .�. Education will enable these. African youngstersto take, a leading place, in :the rising generation, U.N. and its Educational, Scientific and Cultural,; Organization. (UNESCO). ;foster such schools to : help, • to develop ,non -self-governing' territdrieer Working in a shrimp packing' plant' at the . age ' • of six is too much for this girl. To protect young-: sters' like her from • exploitation, U.N.sw, interna•- bona, Labor Organization (ILO) has set' mini mum . employment ages • for dozens • of mall nif :`' • 8 ;' , ,r a • • ,t 4 r u' • • 4