The Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-02-26, Page 8'THE LUCKNOW SENTII E14, Li C1KNOW, ONTARIO
PEN
'ALTY. PARADE
TEMPLETON' .
Anniversary ae
OP FRIDAY & SATURDAY FOR SAVINGS. THESEITEMS
TELL THE STORY. •
ds
,MERCURE PANTEES in novelty rib; These: goo rd to
__ . are ._h_a
' get. Pair ........................................... '•490
colored borders.
Prone Irish . Linen TEA TOWELLING -Assorted
Reg. 59c. Sale, yard - , 50c„
HOUSE. PRESSES -You will find these dresses lust a little more
attractive. For Tasting quality of . material and 8olor you cannot
'afford to miss this offer. Reg. $1.39. Sale $1:19
OW Best Quality ,.PRINTS --=Smartt patterns, `something Afferent.
• Friday and Saturday, Yard ° .. , , 28c
• HOI.EPROOF' HOSIERY -For Spring.' Full' fashioned,' Chiffon &
Seriee weight. r • $1.00
SHEER BLOUSES suit in whiter This is going
BLOUSES for y 'sprin�
to be •a blouse season: .; . $2.98
eton
nIANC:IAL CHI EF ".
OF 'PLOWING MOCK
' ` HughHi Hill, , a dairy
far
mer from
m
the Goderich district, is the man
who holds the purse -strings for the
International Plowing Match to be
held October • 13, 14, 15 and 16 in
Hullett township: .
Hugh is. a, roan who is first and
foreinost a farmer. Tall and mus-
cular from contact with .plenty of
hard .work,. he wastes few words.
, When he has an opinion to express
he does so With a 'minimum of frills.
His language is plain and forceful.
Hugh Hill is . a• man• possessed 'of
a .good deal .of ability in' holding
a'n. _audience, He has that knack ofe
delivering a message in a way that
people like to hear: Put him in e
,smoky. convention' hall or at a formal
banquet and: he does equally, well:
Ie strips all ..the . unnecessary fix-
tures..,
ixtuires`' from • his address and . gets
down to'"brass tacks'.
'
` in Which he iS
That is the wag ,
attacking the problem of putting
•-on. the International Piowing,Match•
— durin'g.: wartime. Satisfied that the
Ontario government believes that
-• the .International serves a veru use-
ful purpose , in wartime he plunged
into the. work •'of putting. the whole
n a strict' budget. •
(L:.CAL andiGE�NERAL)
Miss Dorothy 'Cook 'visited in Tor.;
lastweek,.
onto
Mr Walter Treleaven is confined
to bed at present with • phlebitis.
a'- '.R-airin-.
. _H�od�erna:zin. and • e
Radio . 8 . P Q
'Any Radio, ,Of' any type or make.returned to original efficiency
'by "Factory Method arta by use of Factory type test equipment.
Older type radios modernised to equal, 1942 Radios in tone,
1, selectivity and sensitivity: • ,
A Few 1942 Crosle. Radio till vailable
airs to � lectri'c Motors of all descriptions
Prompt efficient ,rep Z';
Used in refrigerators, washers, pumps, etc.
RADIO TECHNICIAN'
Phone 34. ':Office at Stewart Planing. Mills:
i
Miss Mary S:tr xthers .of . Toronto
visited on Saturday.with Mrs Annie
Struthers and Mary. .
Mr. Bert Roach of. t'he +local plant
of Silverwood Dairies,' is . relieving
at present at Cargill.
Mrs. W. G. Andrew is visiting with
her- son . and daughter-in-law and
family in Ashfield at 'present.
Mr. J. • W. Henderson of.town has of speed and excitement.
gut.' La • ert fired all four of the,
•confined to his home 'since s>?;Lambert .been
fering a; weak. spell last week. Lucknow goals, with Fisher in on
HenryCarter who is relievirr at each of, them. They. were all well
e y a g executed . goats, and if the Sepoys
the, C.N.R. denot, Fergus; Ontario, had been•.playing'any kind of: a cov-
ering ,garne behind their own blue
line, they'd have `shut the visitors•
off with, not more than a pair of
'counters at • the most. .
The first frame ended 2 to 1 for
Chesiey, ,;with three•. penalties ser-
ved. The tables were turned in the
second period; ending 3-3, with -five
penalties.
Each team'- scored' once in=the 3rd
period when no less than 11 penalt-
ies were served; one' . of which was
a delayed' penalty when Chesley
drew 3 in a row.
ENDS 1 W
C`heSley and Lucknow' battled to -
a 1p minute overtime draw here.on
Monday night in the first round of
the Bruce League playdowns. The
score ,was 4-4 in: a thumbing, bump-
ing hockey'iti tch that saw• a parade
of. over. twenty, players to the pen-
alty box. Chesley drew the majority
as their fa`vbrite diversion seemed
to be using all `the appendages on
their respective anatomies to bounce
the Sepoys into, the hoards..
It was abything but a good ex-
hibition of'hockey, but it had lots
. affair p . .
-. Eaeti iter i of expense._Was neatly
catalogued and each. source of:. re-
venue • was stacked up beside it: .He
• travelled to St.' Thomas and 'inter
• viewed the various ,committee mem,
hers, of the Elgin .county Internat-
.
' `ulna\ --ma tell: Then he--*went--to- Pet.
erhorough and compared notes there.
After that, he talked. with secretary
;`manager . J: A. Carroll of. the Ont-.
ario Plowmen's A's§ociation, Com-
piling -his 'information and, drafting
a budget • he presented it to, •the
:executive..; of the ''Huron County.
Plowing Match • committee: They
went into session and. (attacked the •
budget from . all angles and when
they fmaU.y ; retired- from- khat ser-
sion , the :budget' was ,considered • as
nearly perfect as possible and ' in
cidentally it still maintained general'
structure', set, up by the practical
farmer' from Colborne township..
Hugh Hill is ',a;.breeder of• pure
bred-Guerrise3 cattile-,�Pemple,-are._
KINLOSS: COtUNCIL'
Kinloss. Council,. met on February
OVERSEAS MAIL • .
'e here in England,
Somew � g ,
- 9th 1942 all members:. present.
December 3, •1941.
The minutes `of the. January 5th Dear Campbell:
We. have covered a great deal of often guilty of calling him an'Ayr
shire breeder, but he just laughs
country' in the last ' month but if . .
you can put up . wrth� it' I will try it Doff. He�appreciates Guernseys best
of . all and feels certain that the day
and tell you •a little about this ,coup- is not far off when `people in Huron
tryand the trip across. In the first county will swing over to Guernseys
place '1 lost my pen the first day from some of the other breeds.•
here so you willhaveto excuse the • '
pencil. '
spent the week -end-. at his home
here.. -•
Miss ' Flq;i a Webster' .,and Mrs. N:
S..Calvert visited `with Mr:. 'and Mrs.
in Liam
on Sat-
Horace Aitchison; W g ,
urday.
Mrs: Margaret "Dudley :who-` is
spending the winter ii London, has
.been, ill with the 'flu, but: is re-
covering• nicely. :
Mrs: Angus •Graham :of .4th Con
cession, Kinloss and her sister Mrs.
Allan McCauley: of Ripley spent the
week -end in Toronto.•
Mr. S. B. Stothers of Arthur, and
a native :of Ashfield, spoke ,over
CK,NX'. on Tuesday evening On be-
half of the, Second Victory • Loan.
iss ISorothy Martens. of Detroit,.
Michigan, who has been a guest; at.
the home of the. -Misses . Henderson,
Havelock Street, returned to. Detroit
Saturday noon. ' -
Merle Johinston and Jim Hender-,
son of Lucknow and Norman Ross
of • Kinloss, who are all stationed at
• meeting as,read. were approved and'
• signed. By=law 'No. 1, 1942 wasa-
mended by..': appointing; George Col-
- well fence viewer in-place. of James
Geddes, and increasing the audi-
tors' salary from $10.00 to '.$14.00
each: John Carter was' refunded his
dog tax for_ 1941.
no;
oineliint filed- the clerk was
He has 25 haed of .Guernsey cows
we text' our camp N. D. and tri -
milking'' at the present time: Trans -
instructed to write' ',the ' medical yelled for short time before' going
health officer regarding;'the Luck- 'aboard ship.. It 'was. no small ship
•nowt:dumipin.Kinloss. ` and it was not too long before we
The Clerk was ` instructed to write • .were on our way. The convoy, form -
the rreeve of Turnberry for an item- ''ed up outside the harbor; anis ' we
ized'___accotUnt' of the tests . of the
Lott drain 'repair in the fall 0f
..1941.
Grants , were given to. the Salva-:
ton : Army, London , and the .Sick
Children's. Hospital, Toronto. By-law
No. 2, 1942 was prepared and passed
making . provision for the estimated
expenditure on the Township roads
for 1942. The tune for the ireturn
of the collector's roll was extended
to March 16th, 1942. Councillor ;Tif-
,fin .was appointed Council delegate.
to the Good Roads Convention at
Toronto.' -.' •
Council ;then adjourned . to meet
again on -Monday the 16th day of
March 1942 at the usual time and
place: ' ;
Cheques issued -Wm. J. Davison.
furniture, etc., at hall, $345.75; J. H.
' Hall, relief supplies, 13.05; John Car-
ter, refund dog tax,_' 2.00; Geo. E.
Colwell, , supplies, .2.03; Municipal
World, supplies, 24.60; P. ,A. Mur-
ray, auditor's fees, 14.00; Johnston
Conn, auditor's fees; 14.'10: R: Elliot
. clothes to Wm. Gregan, 10.10; Sick
Children's hospital. grant, 10.00;
Salvation Army, grant, 10.00; 3. R.
Lane, reg. B.M.D. $7.50; O.A.P. $2.00;
postage, 3.00-12.50.
Highway cheques --Spence McF'ar-
Ian; $7.65; Orville Tiffin; 2.70; Faris
Moffat, 12.92; Alex MacLeod,9.20
Frank Thompson, 6.30; Luckno I
Sentinel, 3.50; Wm. McDonald, 1.50
J. R. LANE, Clerk.
PARAMOUNT
The March meeting of the Para
mount W. L will be held on Tues-
day, March 3rd at Mrs. Dick 'Rich-
ards. Roll call ---My. favorite Irish
ng; topic --Good neighbors, by Mrs.
Were on -our way. The first part of
the trip was lovely" and it was as
calm as a mill pond but some of
the bows were still hanging on the
rail and a few never, came out on
deck.
After a littlethe trip got rough
but it was, nice for the last _part of
it and when we were • sailing in
there were a lot of the boy's who
were sure glad to see4;land, but for
,.myself, /. did not care -if- I was out
for a long`- tim'e as I liked it fine.
After laying around harbor . we
*ere at last taken to a station near
our port when we had the first sight
of an English train. As we were
standing there on the platform who
should I see' but "Cod" Matheson
from Ripley. .. .
The train had little rooms with
two . seats in them . and in our coin-
partment there wars six of us.' These'
trains are small but 'do- a very good
job. Thai, have. very narrow road
beds • and they can travel a very
high speed. The first part' of our
trip was made 'in .daylight and we
had a chance to see what the coun-
try looked like. As we went along
you would see where Jerry ' had
dropped a- few here and there but
it was all cleaned up and work went
in just the same. Then darkness
lame and down went the blinds and
the first' blackout was on -the first
we had seen. At midnight we were
taken off, .given bags of lunch and
then back on the train again. The
same , happened towards morning..
The people were friendly but you
have 'some difficulty to make some
of them out.
•
laced• into terms ' of work- such as
milking and ' caring for the cows
and th'e' raising of sufficient feed
for them it represents . a staggerina
total: The shortage of. labor has af-
fected him just as much as any
other • farmer in the county:. Yet he
is looking ahead to the Ipternationa1
Plowing :Match • in Huron county
as being thegreatest in the history
of the Ontario Plowmen's Associa-
tion.
"Naturally the raising of themon-
`ey for the match is a real 'job",
says Mr. Hill; "but I: have mighty'
good assistants on . the directorate.
We'll get the money to. put this
match over in a real 'bang-up way.
What we ask for is the . loyal co-
operation . of everybody .in Huro>a
county".
Well at last we 'reached our camp
and we went for eats and straight
to bed for most of the day; then up.
Jack Harrrilton , 'cookie contest-- sib had a shower, washed some
everybring 'cookies. There will clothes and back `to bed. That night
be^a-ox filled for overseas. Anyone
were out for 'a little to'watch
wanting to donate anything for this we ht sand -see how black' it
• box may bring it. There will also: the searctill g
be a demonstration. put on by Mrs. ; really, can. get. It took a few days
Dick Richards on how to put feet to ge used to it . but it is not too
in stockings. I bad right now. Some of the fellows
The. overtime was • scoreless' but
packed with plenty of close calls
and only two .penalties.
LUCKNOW-Goal, `Patton; Defg,
Shane_ Cook-, Sproule; 1st line, Fish-
er,. Lambert, Jones; alt, Johnstota,
Diemart, ,Harris, Craig, Westbrooke.
BANTAMS WON
pROUP' TITLE
Lucknow and •Clinton "Kids" .split
a doubleheader
e last Thursday
1
night in. the final game of the group
championship -series. ••
Lucknow Bantams staged a third
period comeback to score a 3-3 draw.
with the visitors, and win the round
7 to 6. The LucknoW' boys won in
Clinton the previous Tuesday by a
4 to 3 score.
The local juvenileswent down
to defeat 5 ' to 0 and. dropped . the
round 14,0 to 4. '
' Bantam.' Game
CHESLEY-Goal, McGillivray;
def., Phillips, Davis,. R. Gallanger,
McCory; first line, Thompson, Smith,
Gregg; alt, Murphy, McLeod, Schu-
macker, R. Galranger.°
Referee -Harold Greer.
Manning'Depot, in -Toronto, spent the Summary
week -end at their respective'homes. •First. Period •
-1---Ch sley; Smith
2 -Lu know,. Lambert, (Fish-
er) • 10.00
3-Chesley, Greeg 19:00
Penalties-Lucknow. 2, Chesley 1.
Second :Period
4=Lucknow, • Lambert (Fish-; .
et/ ,. • L35_
5=Lucknow, Lambert .(Fish= •
• .er, Jones) • 3.15•.
S7- Chesley, Murphy '.' • • 6:00,
Penalties--Chesley 4',' Lucknow .1.
Third 'Period • ' •
7-Chesley,. Schurnacker . . 6.50
9- Lucknow, Lambert (Shane,'
` 'Fisher) ' ' 8.40
Penalties-Chesley '6, Lucknow 5,
r •.e
trt?`ertrin
No Score; - • penalties-Chesley 2.
The Bantams were without • Gor-
don Mullin, Allan Stewart and Jack
Fetish, and 'it looked as, if they were
going to need, all their reserves, ,s
the visitors scored a goal :a perpp'od
to ruri the eount to•.3-0.before the
local ,lads replier"(:
But spotting •the • , three goals
'didn't '',dishearten the local kids,
°whose.. efforts up to thispoint. had.
I.
gone for naught chiefly due :to
'•the
display :of net minding by •
Miller
of Clinton:
Ab .Chin finally broke the ice on
a pass. from Herbie Culbert. Then
brother George made it 3 to 2,. (and
tied the round). on the neatest goal
seen here. in 'many,a moon,
The local kids were short handed
'at the time. George ragged the puck
hack of his own net until he drew
two Clinton, forwards 'in -and he
left them there, stick handled past
the other player, circled the defence,.
Skated , hi. on the goalie, faked a
move; and beit-hire-cold-With-.a..-w.ell.,.
placed shot inthe open side of• the
net. The crowd went wild!
• Ab Chin scored again a few min-
utes later to tie the score and give
the locals a one goal^ edge on the
round. They held it' and thereby
won the group title in 'the first year
Lucknow has even been represented
in Bantam League competition. • .
F. Elwood„speedy defense lad for
-Glin%en; was always,:dangerous._ an&
accounted for all three goals.
.LUCKNOW-Goal, Bill 'Johnston;
Def., Jim Ferguson;. B. A.. Johnston;
centre, George Chin; wings, Ab Chin.
and H. Culbert; alt.,' Bill Allin? H..
Ross, Joe Agnew, K. McLennan.
'CLINTON Goal, Miller, _Def..,, El-
wood, Fingland: cen., Elliott; wings,
Giron, McDonald; alt.; C. ;Hanley;
B. Manly, Gibson, Denornme, McAl-
lister, .Falconer. .
Referee -B•: Steep, Clinton.
Juveniles Lose , '
Outclassed and 'far outweighed,'
Lucknow Juveniles' put up a , game
fight against the Clinton Juveniles
last year's Ontario charnpions; who
had to extend themselves to chalk
up a 5 to m• victory and take the
round 10 to 4. At' that -two of their
-goals were "gifts” as the localsclear-
ed the disc into their own net on
a couple , of occasions.
The first- period opened fast :and.
furious, and along with some, crude
work 4 by the referee, trouble. ap-
•oeared to be brewing; Two • goals in
this period pretty much .indicated
the final outcome, and the game
"tamed down" in. the second period
with the locals trying hard all the
way.
Goal getters for • Clinton were
Schoenals, Miller, Duckworth, Mc
Lean and Butler.
LUCKNOW-Goal, Bud Orr;. Def..
Jack Mowbray, Lloyd Hall, centre.
Mel Stewart; wings, Bill Treleaven; The faithful cat, . Mr. McLeod's
Reg. Ferguson; alt., , George John- hsole companion,' had crawled under
ston, G. Lloyd, Jim Purves, Ronald neath the table and was burned to
McInnes. .-
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 28th, 1942
Roses in St. Peterrs - Anglican
church on Sunday morning were 4n
loving memory of Sgt: -Pilot Harry
Prest, soh of. Mr. and Mrs. V. N.
Prest; who : was • kills a year ago
this week in a R.C.A.F. flying acci-
dent at Rivers, Man. - •
BITCH HIKERS THUMB EDITORS
"For immediate release" is :us-
ually the way they say it, and a
good' many sayit with an insistence
that ahnost amounts. to a demand'
that we publish, as written, the
vast mass ,of mimeographs eye -wash •
that : daily . floods our desk from
scores, of sources all over Canada,
with a. few` of :.foreign origin. And
they have : the.:t-ef£ontery, 'the un --
mitigated gall, to ask free space,
in, other words a free, ride at the
expense of the publisher. That is
why we call them hitch -hikers. By
actual- account, within one week, 57
separate. pieces (57 varieties) of this
literature (?) have crossed bur'•desk,
ranging from one page leaflets to
28 -page. booklets.
A breakdown shows that the gov-
ernment releases head the list, fol-
lowed by C1ulis, Societies, .Associa-
tions, Industries, Churches, Leagues.
Banks; Universities, Cohimnists, &
just plain cranks. `The only material
we feel 'obliged to utilize is that .of
institutions' and firms which occas- think of more than we can.
� ionally or regularly advertise. l3u't When Lucknow' objected to O'-
that. were in this camp in• the last the vast majority simply want some- Brien, even though Kincardine had
KINCARDINE '(UT AND ' IN
AGAIN IN BRUCE LEAGUE
Little • more than a week ago Kin-.
cardine and Lucknow seemed- a bit
'ncertainas_. to.. whether -_or_not'the
Bruce League really existed. Now
they know it does!
Kincardine was "so much in
doubt" that they failed to send in
their entry fee, they failed to send
in their player list, or the reports
of the games, 'and capped it all by
using Blondy O'Brien, • classy goal
=tender who guarded the .'twine for
Hanover O.H.A. team this year.
We'll let The News point out Luck
now's shortcomings, they'll maybe
war do not know' their way around
because there is such a. change in
roads and the country. • The road
5igr.; are down and you have quite
a time to find your way around.
This is . where 'map reading ` sure:
comes in handy.. '
Well here it is Deceniber 20th
and . have just came back off land-
ing leave. Have been into London
and up to Glasgow and Edinbourgh
thing for nothing. • ' another goalie along with them, the
• A conservative estimate of the Lakesiders in effect said, "We use
space needed to publish this one O'Brien or tfve'1l go over to Wing -
week's plethora of MS, would •be •all '.bam and occupy spectator pews at
the :columns of three weeks' . issue the Walkerton-Wingham game."
of this newspaper. ° But that is not I The net result was that Lucknow
the point. As we place this in the ; dropped the fixture 7 to 3. That was
wastebasket, the thought .is: "Why ! on Monday "of last week, but the
shotild not the; government stop all game was ordered replayed by 'the
this waste?" They ban slicing bread Bruce League- secretary. Lucknow
and "restrict paper wrappers. They kept up the merry-go-round - by
and also Ayr. Just out of Ayr ata ballyhoo "salvage" and yet here are journeying back to Kincardine last
place called Ocbeitree f spent. most tons of paper ,and :printed matter Wednesday night and were nosed
of my leave and they sure use you • being prepared by hundreds of of- i out 5 to 3.
swell. You would think it was their fice squatters, .to be consigned; un- I In place of replaying the ousted
long lost son come home. Well I read to wastebaskets. There . it is game in Lucknow Kincardine want -
have two candles and a lantern h t i which was agreed but later,
sitting beside me to finish this. Sor-
ry I can't write a lot more but we
have been busy ever since we 'came
to this camp.
I' was watching them skate up in
Scotland. I sure Would like to try
it again: Will say cherrio for now, 3 Special Picture Pages with text
LISgt. K, ' Cameron,. A33R012L in. Pictorial Review with this Sun-
97th'B,ty., 7th Army Fd.g day's (March .1) .issue of The De-'
Canadian Army Overseas. trait Sunday Times. Included among
illustrations Will be a full color pic-
ture of the •U.S.S. Arizona in flames
When Pr'efnier Hepburn surveyed after.the Pearl Harbor attack; fu
T�h
the by-election result's and e9tclaim- I color portraits of Rear, Admiral Kim=
., • rs a we.haveMajor General Short plus
simply, told. The wonder it that a ed a sudden death game• in Ripley
Controller has not been' appointedwhich to, not
govern this Utterly 'serreles�s drain to be done out of a legitimalte gate
to
on Canada's national resources and for the local arena, the League sec -
editors' patience. - Bowmanville retary was appealed to, and th
Statesman:. outcome was that Kincardine was
ousted for their misdemeanors and
"MYSTERY OF PEARL HARBOR": Lucknow ordered to -play Chesley.
Kincardine in the meantime went
to work on the Brucd League mo-
guls, got the ,.sentence lifted. and
are back in again, slated to take
on Harriston. •
And with blood in their eyes aim
to get another crack at Lucknow
if the Sepoys can knock' off Ches-
ley, and after a brief ,change of
ed: All I can say that mel and alor e ,
stupid", the Fergus ,'other illustrations. Be sure tb get scenery what 'a -kick the Kincardine
been damnedp
News -Record added: "Speak 'for' The Detroit Sunday Times this week and prospective renewal of this feud.
f
yourself, Mitch". and every week.
Canned Foods
...for...
LENT
STOCK UP - NOW
AT THESE PRICES
AYLMER PEAS-
Choice Quality 4's
• 8 oz. tin,' 2 for • 150
16 oz. ting 2 for • ?3c
SOUP'S -Tomato & VegetabIe
each -
brit:
19 oz. till, 3: for 25c
TOMATO JUICE
19, oz. tin, 3 for ' 1. ' 21c
20 . oz.• tin, 2 for 19e
„BEANS
PORK &
K ..
14 oz tin, 2 for 15e
PEAS 46 CARROTS -Mixed
16 oz. tin, .2 for - 25c
°' TOMATOES •
28 oz. tin, 2 for 25c
Today and all . through Lent
serve VELVEETA, the delic-
ious ,cheese food. We offer it
at special low prices:
„41 - •
•
SHOP .WITH CONFIDENCE
'HOMPSO'WS
'Phoaie'8 We:Balker •
DETA'1tS OF FIRE IN WHICH
HURON MAN .LOST H)IS LIFE
• Further details , of the mishap :in
which Donald'•MeLeod, Huron.town-
ship native and brother• 'of. Mrs.
Thomas Mason, Ripley and Mrs.
:Robert Durward; Kincardine, was
fatally burned have been received.
According to. the Fort . Frances
-"Times" •police were unable to'make,
•iositive identification of the victim
who:was burned beyond recognition.
Mr. McLeod was employed by the.
Artie . • Peat .Moss .Corporation and ' --
had moved to Crozier 'district from •
the Dance •, area. In, heavy. forest_ _
• fires\ which swept Dance district and • '
. took a heavy , toll of lives in 1938 -
'le., was badly burned while . trying
`.o savethe .lives. of others and -spent
two months in Rainey • River Red
';rose Hospital, recuperating. •
Cause , of • the ..fire in `which he
.'s presumed to have lost his life is
,anknown. . . ,.
• .A neighbor, Mrs. 'Farragher, 'told •
police she heard him yell about
10.30 in the evening and saw flames
rive'rninutes later. The fire was re -
lotted to Fort Frances'. provincial "
•aolice. at 11.3,Q p.m..On their arrival
`hey foundthe shack on fire and .
'bey could see the flames slowly
,-.onshming the body 'of a man sit-
ting at the kitchen table..With the'
aid .of- neighbors the fire was put
out at 4. a:m. and the body removed.
CLINTON-Goal, Messenger; Def.,
Schoenals, Hanly; centre, Miller;
wings, Duckworth, Carter; alt., Mc-
Lean, Scott, Lawson, Cameron, Cook,
Butler. '
Referee -G. Elliott, Clanton.
Jack 'Fisher got a pair and Lam-
bert the odd one in that 5-3 defeat
in Kincardine last Wednesday. ,
Shii•1 , Bowers ha'hd'led •the game
and if opinions aren't biased, 'tis
°reported his work 'was anything
but popular with Lucknow.
But Shirl didn't fare nearly so
badly as Cecil Mooney did a coudle
night's later in Goderich, when
...was the storm. .centre of the
eaforth-Goderich game in Goder'
ich. .
Cec was jostled by the -crowd but
was convoyed safely out Of the rink
Eby the Seaforth team Incidentally
Mooney, who became pretty pro-
ficient at the srr,rt. learned his
hockey in 'Ripley under 'Shirt Bow-
ers, and for several seasons played
with Woodstock,
• * .4 • • ••
That 4.4 draw between Chesle3•
and Lucknow is no contest we un -
derstand. The Sepoys' go to Colt -
death.
Funeral services were held Fri --
day, February 6 from the Green
Funeral Home to Port Frances' cern-
etery. Archdeacon H. V. Maltby of-
ficiated.
vflle tonight (Thursday) -and the
Colts are expected back here`'about
next .Monday. O.H.A. has nothing
'on this folks, and Manager "Chuck"
Webster's advice is. "get there early
if you want a seat"
• e •. •' • •
The- Bantams share the, spotlight
this week, and they are favorites
with the fans. The Kids are stacked
up 'against Victoria School of Kit-
chener, 'in a .two .game series,
to const.
• • • • r • •
The first. game was billed for •
here .last, night, with the locals re-
turning to Kitchener next Saturday
afternoon, where they will perforin
on an open air rink, as the Kitch-
ener arena .is not in operation this
season.
• • • e • •
' The ' Sepoys have lost their ace
goalie, 'Patton, who `ha been un-
expectedly posted •fronn Fort Alit
Patton• has pluckily played the last
two games with a fractured wrist,
which it in a can ,arid he turned
in a pair of very fine performances.
NEW TABLE fill: CLOTHS by the yard, in squares.Table mats
and Shelf Oil Cloth, New ToweIs, Bath Towels,
Dish Towels, Glass Cloths. Etc�
ARKET STORE, Lucknow
4
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