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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-03-05, Page 5• THURSDAY, MARCH ,5th, 1942 THE LUCKNOW, SENTINEL, LUCH 'i W, ONTARIO Lyceum . healtre W I NGHAM Two Shows Saturday Night Thursday, • Friday, Saturday March 5, 6y, DOUBLE BILL WILLIAM BOYD' & . ANDY CLYDE In Secret 01 the Wastelands W and * ANNE 'SHIRLEY & ,RICHARD CARLSON in ,West Point .Widow Matinee Sat. Afternoon 2.30 Monday, Tuesday; Wednesday Ma"rih ,9, _'14, 11- ..ROSALIND RUSSELL ,DON A•MECHF- ..in a The Feminine Touch' Also "March .of, Tiitne" Thursday, , ,Friday, Saturday eh- 12,•13, .14 Special Nelson Eddy Rise Stevens iu =-THE ClOLOILATE=SSOLDIElb. .' Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday March 16, 17, 18 Robert Preston Ellen Drew in yy "N!G!T OF. JAN, 16th" .- I DENTAL SERVICE IN-LUCKNOW • The following article written by • Dr: W. V. .Johnston appeared in the February issue of the Can- adian School Journal. W. V. Johnson, B.A., M.D:, M.O.H. The number of public .school chil- dren in the village of Lucknow flue tu'ates° between 140 and ,150. in 1940 these children were given a fairly complete physicalexamination :by two doctors and the two local dent- ists. One of the interesting findinga. was that only 19 . per cent of the children had healthy mouths. In the remaining 81 per cent there was .an average of 2,9 diseased teeth. This investigation had been 'done by the Local', Board of, Health and this Board then recommended to the School Board that a complete den-, tal service ,be attempted. ,By, com-. ptete we mean that it, include all types of dental work , except surg- ery, and also, that ail the children ?erne under the scheme regardless, of, whether or not their parents were .able to .pay for it.; ' . The dentists estimated , ` that it would take about 180 hours work. At the.. usual- rate of: pay of $8:00 - Der three hours work they conclud- ed' that it. would . cost about $480.00. The school'.Board accepted'this fig- ure. - In order to start the ;scheme a parent or guardian of eachchild was sent a card showi}tg what dental, work would: be done, and: •asking if. they wished this service for their "F; fl 'ti E if Se, Ali state theirs -pre= fr'rence of •dentist. Only one fam- ilypreferred to` pay fortheir own rervice. • '.. In the second year of operation, that is 1941, the dentists found that the number of healthy 'mouths, had. increased to $4.3: per• cent` and that 'n the remaining 65..7 per cent there •was an average of only '1.05 diseased teeth' per mouth. Moreover, in 1940 it -required -1-88 hours- to --do the work: required, and • in. 1941 only 801/2 ' hours were necessary. . Of the new rnupils, entering, in September 1941 it was found that 80.8 per cent' re - mired dentalattention and • ,that. these :children had an average of 3.1 diseased' teeth. These figures are almost exactly the same' for' all, the childr• ert at the start of • the v'h.eme in 1940:. ' Let • us consider .the cost to the •atepayers. In 1940 the dentists were easel $480.00. The Provincial Dental grant received was $144,00: Thus the cost per pupil was , about $3.20. In DUNGANNON • Mrs. J. Campbell is visiting for a while with her friend, Mrs. A. Culbert, south of the village. Visitors with Mrs. C. C. Brown on Sunday were, Mr. Arthur Brown, Dund.,as, Mr. and Mrs. Robt: Bean and family, Crarlow. A splendid patriotic concert was sponsored by the Dungannon •school and Yield Wednesdays. night of last' week in the United church auditor- ium,'under the direction of the tea-. chess, withq/fr..Kinkead, the Inspec- tor as chairman end.Mr. J. D. Thom-. .as, , Goderich, speaker. The receipts of the evening totalled 6. Mr. and Mrs. ' George Haldenby and. 'Ethel, spent the. week -end: in Toronto with their son; -Mr. Harold Haldenby who has been,. under the 'oetor's care. ` Miss•.'Evelyn 'McLean of`.London was a week -end visitor at tery•home -here. , •• • :Mr. Joe Hodgkinson. and Mr. and Mrs: Wilbert ' Hodgkinson and Ken- • meth were: , Sunday, visitors .with • Mr. and Mrs. • Gerald McIver. • • Mr: and Mrs: Levi •Ecken-swiller n 1941' the dentists --:were paid $214.50 nes .;.. xdx= nca. era .s�. , �a�'-�•.r a-m.l.0 the second year• of operatiern• the, cost per pupil had dropped to about $1.50.. We consider. that it.. costs u5. about per new.pupil and about '31,•50 for .the others per year -.for a • cornplete dental •service. We , do not anticipate that these figures• will••change. very much -.in. the....fut-_ ure.• Frorn the figures given it 'can be teen that the results have been,very ?ratifying. There has, been a rather. •tartling improverrient• in. the con- dition of the .mouths ef'• the • child-. ren. The dentists tell me that the .aermanen't teeth•begin coming at the sixth year and that during the,pub-' 'tic • school life of •• the , child: many •if these become diseased and ire - maturely lost if not 'given regular attention:. The saving of 'these is )ne •of the •greatest. advantages re=` :Lilting, from a regular yearly den- tal service. • A. weird should. be said as to'. the 'ielp given the Board'of Health. The `ientists; Drs. R. L. Treleaven .and :Tames Little have been keenly in- terested and,,have been. very co. -op- erative. The School Board showed nn . hesitation whatever when the scheme was outlined to them:: One • member stated that , if we did not have healthy children we did not have 'very much to be proud of. • ST. .HELENS • The Badminton Club had a social everting_ Monday ,night with Mrs. George • Hamilton,'Mrs.. Allan. Reed, J. C: Alton and Doreen Rutledge as` social'; committee.. Some games were. • played ,of the teurnam,ent. -Two. weeks this, Friday night:a 'tourna=- ment will , be .played: Dining the business period, it whs. decided ,to have .a dance in.. March.. and Alma Anderson and Frank Eedy were the committee in charge' of a bowling -party next week.. The .'hall . was en- • gaged to 'continue ;'the• activities of the crib till April. : . ZglAfitTifikattatMa „-week-end ek nd with friends here, Mr:, . bud Vika Milton Guest and ' Sylvia_of. St. Thomas attendedthe funeral of the late Mrs, Noble Guest. A number from.here attended the Victory • Loan program which was held in Holyrood Hall on Friday evening. Sympathy is extended, to the favi- ily' of the late Mrs. Noble Guest who passed away on Saturday'morn- ing. The funeral was held on Tues, day afternoon, from het late, resi- dence with interriient in Greenhill cemetery. .. . . The next regular meeting .of the H.W:I. will beheld at the home of Mrs. Ernest Ackert on Thursday. March 5th. Convener -Miss May Boyle; assistant, Mrs. Frank Thohnp son, Mrs. Harvey Houston;- , topic; . Canadian industries—What happens • between the farmer's field and the . consumer's table; curreij t events; motto—What. are worthwhile things in life? Roll Call—Why I should not • be president; 1oyle,MMrsERrs A Ck- Miss May El- , ert, :. liott. Mrs. E. . Parry has 'returned to Detroit after visiting a. few days With her aunt, Mrs. Jbhn Hodgins. On Sunday evening next the Kin- Odine Kinsman Club, will attend " • service in the Anglican church at • 7.0 pan. Everyone is cordially m - vied to attend. tt.' 'Paul's 'Anglican church, with Rev.. Donaldson the rector; shows weekly on Tuesday nights at. the Parish Hall, lantern slides,• -during Lent. Last Tuesday night the slides were of • a Northern mission at Post, A 'ia vik: at`th'b rnotrth-of-•-the--Mae---- Kenzie river and showing the work done among the Indians ' and Esk- imos, , which were .taken . recently and shown now for the first time: Next Tuesday night the pictures will. be of .China.. Mr. and Mrs. Will Jackson; Ripley visited their aunts, Mrs. Elizabeth Robb and Mrs: D. Glenn: Mrs. Robb is recovering nicely from herr recent illness. . A' unique coincidence occurred in Dungannon this week, 'when .among the occ pants of one home could be found the, oldest resident of West. Wawanosh, Mr. John Moss and .the infant daughter, Sandra, of Mr. and Mrs.. Kitchener Finnigan, whom we believe was the yougest resident in the township. We extend sympathy to Mrs. Gor- don Smith and Mrs: Ross Taylor, residents m this vicinity, who have been. bei`eaved • of their sister,.. Mrs.. THE LUCKNOW SENTI NEL Published every ' Thursday morning at Lucknow, Ontario. L. CAMPBELL THOMPSON Publisher . and Proprietor • •THURSDAY`, MARCH 5th; 1942 THE LOSS , OF SINGAPORE Si a p ore .has fallen. The British ng p flag, which has 'flown over this the first free port. of the Malayan sea, for 'one hundred and twenty-three years, was lowered on February the .fifteenth at three -thirty .p.m.,: Brit- ish daylight saving time, when Gen- eral Percival's" forces 'surrendered unteonditionally.. ' • • ' • -We can 'blame this heavy and far- reaching military defeat on many things; 'for. we. -Canadians are- the world's: worst critics. 'We can; say, as some have said, that the Vichy' government has betrayed us, giving the ,Japanese air and naval bases _in French Indo-Cliina from which they could attack Malaysia, we pre,;at that, - United States was 'aslee:'• at. Pearl Harbor and still. drowsy in the Philippines.. • We lecture . that 'the ABCD powers wasted time '. being•• polite'in-the choice of their .leaders. in the Far East. We.accuse.our own government has .,been very back- ward, w. ••acting precious time in a crisis debating over plebescites and -conseei•ptsohti-Same--ar'e sever vti.11ing , to admit that our country is not yet equipped for war after two and' a 'half years of defensive struggle. ' PACIFIC COAST • AND THE/PRAIRIE • By -Hugh MacMillan Duck on the Rock In ' thinking ' Q. the Pacific Coast these days it is hard to forget that "the Coast" is that part of Canada nearest to Pearl Harbor. Pearl //ar- bor has become like a new name for the.' Hawaiian Islands. 'The Islands are like a rock in the centre. of the Pacific pond. where Occident and Orient have recently begun' to play an old, rough and ready game re- senibling.i "Duck on the Rock". The States • set . up . the "duck" in ' the form of her • "invincible'° navy and. dared • the 'Japanese to come. and knock it off. The dare was accepted. They 'came 'early one -Sunday Morn ing ,last December, threw . their . mis- sies and off went ,.the duck. Now .a. lot :,of 'da hiig around has begun, with much less talk of invincibility than before,' trying to get ' the, duck put back -on again: . • Thinking in Terms of Centuries Pacific Coast people in Canada do not yet seem • to realize .the rough- ness, nor the seriousness of • this game. There is still a tendency just to stand and watch as :if we couldn't getdrawnin to such roughness. The world -changing nature of what has happened in thelast couple of months, and the long, ages of years ahead when things will never' be H� the_ same for us again, ar,e not yet. realized by people. We actas if we didn't know. what Pearl Harbor, Manila, Hong Kong and. Shanghai Mean. Of course these events are only a few weeks old and it takes a long time for 'interpretatiena to be ✓v, sr of Auburn,. ,They ;. tended-1W' eral at Lambeth on Tuesday.; THE PICTURE. GALLERY Gnrs Wray Pinnell and Frank Currie, spent the week -end at their • homes here:. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Cassidy of Walk- erton spent 'Sunday with .friends here. - .• Mr. and Mrs. . Herman Carefoot and Beverley rlioved on Friday to near Tiverton where they, will take up residence. Mr. Carefoot has been employed for the past few 'years with Mr: Robert Malcolm. : The best wishes of the community go With theta. Mr, Win. Boyle who has 'spent,the . winter with relatives .herehas .re.. turned to his home at Moosejaw. Sask. • .;RAPID CITY 'A • successful , pro party and dance sptitis& • `' be Women's Institute- was '1it�at community hall on Friday. `L High honors in cards went to Mrs: Roberts fir the ladies while Mr. Ringler and Hugh David MacDon- ald . •were ' tied. Consolation prizes were won by Miss Tiffin for 'the ladies and Harold Ritchie for gents. Music for the' dance was provided by Mr: and Mrs. »George Stuart,. Mr.. and Mrs, Chester Taylor and .,Har- old Taylor. Proceeds amounting to_ around $16 will be used for war purposes. Little Donald Taylor made the draw •for the autograph quilt with • Marie- Aitchison 'as winner. Over $60 has been realized from this .quilt. qut Miss Vivian Tiffin Was a ,week- end guest of Mr. and Mrs,. Stanley Todd. ,It is' .requested that all completed Red Cross work be• handed in .before, ,euturday.. ' The weekly'meeting of the.P�U. was, held at Mr. David Todd's on. Tne day • evening • with a large at- tendan•et', Stanley •Tod41, assistant Citizrn'ship Convenor; presided: Mrs. Beecroft road the scripture lesson:' The tops Orr "Collective Bargain- nig" was taken by' Earl Durniri and f"o'liowod by an interesting. discus- i1'e y '.!~here are few homes where the 'flu • lies missed , these last few weeks At present Mr. and Mrs.. Robert Mc - Nall • are laid up, whtle !lac and , M' t are just recovering, argare Mrs. VV. G. Reed is gaining naw After three weeks'' illness,. Last WHO IS •I'T? week's picture • was that of W. J. WRAITH who was formerly associated • with the Lucknow Sentinel. Following' the purchase of The Sentinel by the late A. D. Mackenzie in 1910, Mr. Wraith for,.a .short time was in charge of .the paper, until Mr. Mackenzie dis- posed of The Teeswater, News and came to Lucknow. , If we look squarely at all. ' the facts, we., too, ;must shoulder, con- siderable blame: We are, the people, who elected, • by a large majority, the present government. We are the people who opppeed all •suggestions of armament, because wefelt when a few guns and bombs were piled up some of them would be sure' to go off. We. musts admit We were in- terested • in but' not at allalarmed by the sniah • but highly -efficient fighting forces of the Dutch East. Indies, when they appeared on the. silver screen in the pleasure -blind thirties. Chiang Kai-shek's valiant ambushes and: heroic retreats won our pity .' and our• .admiration, but for five . years we: remained passive while Japan continued to thrust her thorny fingers nt ' Ohina's.wounded. ' eo_ OS, are _ar �e: P .asudl��t��.,83 li7 n her idalrk hour;41ance,.. whose4gov- ernment fifth cd•liim'hist• termites had. weakened so'that.,,it crumbled, readily under the lrs°t blow of the' Nazi fist. We haveetolerated Vichy for one and a half long years of war and she's 'willi.ng to: continue to sit astride the fence when we don't attempt le take off her shoe, much• less tickle her toes. • ' Considering these' things we: must • face existing factsl The safety of our sister dominion . Australia now lies in the hands of those courageous up; .new • grandeur and beauty. In Dutch .East Indies. So far; they have January .and February J saw them given us reason to think that they will be : stronger `than Singapore. Though that, town was, like the lion in its name in our fot•rner conception .of it, and even Was called the Gib-• reltar of the East, we might truly say it had the lion's roar ,• but it seems , questionable if • a l'ion's strength lay behind•that fond boast: Singapore was the : entrepot for the trade of the Malayan Archipel- ago, the Eastern. Peninsula ,and China. It is much. to our discredit, to realize that such an iniportant centre should be so' easily lost to "the swarming hordes of little yel- low men"..; With three-quarters of the world's people fighting in . the same cause 'we cannot . be content to sit back and accept these reverses one by one. We know our strength; let us prove it. It.. was fitting, in the Battle of Singapore,that forces from many. parts of the Empire. - English, Scotch, Indian's and Australians stood side by side in the line of defence. Canada may well hang her head with shaine that: she 'too was not represented. Would we not teth- er fight our battles in someone else's field?. We must make up our minds 'about that inirnediately„ or someone elle—Nazi on the East or Jap on •th9 West—willbe making the decision for us. FL �"k PAGE FIVE Want Chkki•? Here They Are---- Usua! High Bray QUIitY HERE it is, chick time again.. And again we offer you the' usual. high-quality Bray ' Chicks—with an added year' of breeding, an added year of skilled selection ..for that combination of vigor, liyability, fast growth, 'early' and , steady egg•production and exti»a- good meat qualities 'that made the Bray' Chick famous. . This . is •.a year of gniusual op-•' portunity in the poultry business: .Don't risk a slipup: Start the old reliable Bray :Chicks, ' • • and get started right! • . ' DAY-OLD CHICHS Sexed and Non -Sexed STARTED CHICKS Sexed and Non -Sexed STARTED :CAPONS '.TURKEY POULTS •..._..V• , :ASK` US: , .•a'* • That's ,what hundreds of pout- thought .I'veould'take an extra • try raisers do every year. 150 this year .Mss: Wesley "Never : had cockerel§. bring in Nichol,. Lennoxville, P.Q. s. so much"—Mrs. L. \ Bryan„ "Pullets 'are grand, eggs just Beeton, Ont: .."Wish .'.1 had rolling ` along".- 1Qrs. 'C. R. • ordered more. Never had bet= Bradley, Little Current, Ont: . ter chickens in my.,life".—I.. "Best in years: Bray's for me F Hansen, ' Pugwash Jct., N:S. from now on":—Mrs. Camp- _. -:"Wonderful layers, good bell, Nestleton, Ont.. hardy birds". --'Nelson 'Whit- I ever' .raised".—Mrs; Spriggs, lo. ck,. Gaytown, P.E:y. , . ° Duck Lake, Sack.,. Isn't that the ;; "Bought 100 from you last year, and .. made money, so ' kind of bird' YOU want? 'Br a Chick Hatchery made and ideas to sink. in. Even acts `T a. FINL YSON LUCKNOW: ~--A►A�`ents of self-preservation take time. And way' from "Back East".' imported. Coast people' do not seem in -a hurry ideas • to take air raid -and . other precaut- °1liarnessin` Wind and Lightning' ions. Outwardly,. the—house wasn't" ilii • For me it was quite a thrill to posing. The hedge around . almost, pass through' the mountains and hid it . anyway, A' pin-wheel=like, sniff the Pacific Ocean air'again. windmill on a; straight twenty -foot Crossing over to' Victoria was a de -pole stood up . like 'a direction stake light. The sea was perfect. Green- saying, "Here is ' the place, right Clad islands) shut :out the roll of here. The imposing things are in.: the white -capped blue ocean. Sheik- side". That pinwheel mill certainly capped . Mount Rainier across in does a lot.. It brings' to the farm Washington State reminded me' of the best that modern city life has Japan's Fuji. » • to offer. We rolled up :to the door In Victoria I called to see'a min- and'went in'.to find electric lights with city -like fixture's, electric' ev inter friend who de ' .attending Pres-' e _ e -city -has, and e big grad �ytery. They bade me sit aafor a . in • ing u the corner io standing Mr. Jim . -•- •.l was home from •• WON SICHOLARSHIP IN MAN. ----- In our issue of February 12th, we hh . .t rdei'etl • 5 . on• from Bruce 'Coland Y Iii the. house were all .the comforts- on` VancouVer 'Island- there is' no of .a modern 'home. special stigma attached:to •this label•"So a rything is electric: Where for' people became "quite friendly' at vie this point arid. seemed willing to give do you get the., pewer?" a Bruce person a pass through` the' ' "From that thing you call the "pin- p main _door to their ever green land. wheel".:Prairie wind power is turn- The';Gardens of the Desert:ed by that pinwheel into electric turn. - Byron of course saw the prairies power." • • • • in summer time, but even had he Drink from the. Sky seen them in., winter he might still Water has been a problem on the have called them gardens. To me prairie around' Moosejaw. , Drilling they are gardens whether in sum- is expensive and water from deep mer or winter. They always open down is • rarely good.- But simpler methods are•. coming in. : A deep had ,the picture of Eldon Siddall, taken at the time he won the Rhodes Scholarship for the Province of Man= itoba. The Toronto `Saturday Night in. the issue of February 18th, 1911, carried the .following article. "Eldon R Siddall, a fourth year student of Manitoba University; has been chosen as a• Rhodes scholar to represent the province of Manitoba and will proceed • under . •the tents of the scholarship to Oxford next fall. Ho was one of four scholars voted on by the commissioners at Winnipeg. His full name, is Eldon ftooklidge Siddall, and he is'the only son of Mr. George Siddall, banker, of Lucknow, Orit< He was'born at the latter place in 18$8 and received hit early educatioil at Clinton Coll- egiate Institute, afterwards ni'atric- ulating at Manitoba University. He has won many scholarships but is also, eminent in the athletic field. He is regarded by his instructor, as a thorough all round roan, a type of again in the Populous parts of the three provinces• . where universities and colleges have their'homes. _This• time it was in. Moosejaw that new beauty came:into. view, A ;day�spent. at the Moosejaw Junior College gave a bit of time for visiting old friends, Sam. and Mrs. Nicholson (formerly ,Ahnie Hughes) and George Smith, all of the sixth concession Kinloss met the . train and'took me out to the farm. It was interesting to see the;. three , of them ii the prairie scent•. I had known them in:con- nection With the nnountauious hills and beaver meadow .valleys east' of the Kinloss gravel road. Now they are as much a' part of the .pancake flat. prairies as love of sky and land can' make them... . • ` • 0 "Do you see that p� away over there?" asked .Annie as we 'rolled along over snowy roads in a soft purring motor car, Many sugesgtions have been' of- fered as to the significance of the loss of 'Singapore. One lost battle 'does 'not mean a loot cause, but this. one means that Rangoon ,and Java ,are threatened;. that �a, new .naval base must be:prepared somewhere in Australia; that a 'large. area ; of land will be laid waste as the de- fenders fenders retreat;,that Burma and the' Burma Road are threatened; arid that even the Allies` suprentacy, in the Indian .Oceaia hangs in the bal- "That's our place". It looked like a bee -hive in a dis- tant flower bed, • just a spot on'the horizon. • Wheh , we . Bruce people think of a. beautiful home we pic-1 tare a two-storey brick house.. with Verandas and tall trees., For trees we want ,big • ones and ever -greens if possible. It is hard for us to see beauty in a 'squatty one -storey frame building 'with a hedge. around it. But that's just because we aren't ad- justed to the beauty -of the plains: There • is no need out there for High ed things for people who have•learn. to look up to the mountainous cloud - piles by day and the spangled heav- ens by night. Anyway, the Western, winds no not like high houses, and modern Westerners are breaking a - "pond" is scooped out which fills with snow and'rain water: This is. purified in . the pond by • nature's sun and air. A deep-laid.pipe and an electric motor puts 'fresh . water "on» tap" in the . house. It was a great joy toehave a brief visit' with old. Bruce neighbors' in their home* on the plains. A neigh bor of the Nicholsons, also from the sixth concession lives, not far across.' 'the fields. This is Dave Sutherland. But Dave, would make. a ,story all by "himself Maybe ill tell about him some. other. time. ASHFIELD NOTES Mr.: and Mrs. Wm. Humphrey or'� Wawanosh-spent_Simelay_ with_.:M and Mrs. Jake 1Hunter. ' , • Mrs. Les Ritchie . spent Saturday and Sunday . at the home of , her mother, Mrs. Sherwood. Mr. and *Its. Peter Cook and ily visited with Mr.--and--Mrs-.--Ree . on Sunday. ; '.t' • Mr.' and Mrs. Will .'Hunter, Lois ti and Lorna spent.'Saturday with Mr and Mrs. Adam Johnf n of Courries Corners: ' Mr. and Mrs. Gorldii Ritchie and Mervin !spent a: day m Dungannon last.'w_ .1 t�� - Ve'Rit ski. � V� 4uhih97rv' ��1F 1'. ,IIa» a �,7 �^..:. "vs" iYli� pl'� Misr � g .,k �.. her' daughter, Mrs. 'A.;Norris of Markdale at present: ' . • • Mr. and. Mrs. D. Campbell and son spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. A. , Culbert and, family. Hotel Clerk to • guest, ,from. the country: Of course, you'll want run- ning water' in ,your room? Guest: Why? Do .I look like a trout? ro • Fractured Ankle . Mrs, Emerson of Wawanosh• re- ceived word on Saturday that A.C., Bert Cullimore ' had fractured his ankle while skiing. He is in the hos- Camp Borden. pltal . at fence with dignity and grim. deter- mination. "Let us not despair but let us redouble our efforts to make ance. ` • victory certain and avenge the heroes ` suppositions,. tho' who fought so bravely to save our These are only pp ones. To Canadian, peo-. great Eastern fortress Let. us all very likely -1e, the fall of Singapore can mean realize that a total War effort from, p us will mean a libersubscription to Canada's' second victory loan:. . • .vel' the weeleond•, slot d b Stanley Todd The ne Kintail o i will be at Lorne Weeds On student exceptional' at the present one thing, however; we must accept . iietie•►. p . our 1iasitions in the front line of de- int le D liecd was honk from Mondag B000! lies' &IMO, Monday. ; ASHF1ELD Mrs: Grace Long's friends will be pleased to know she is well on the way to recovery.after her seri its illness.. v Mrs: Roy MacKay spent the Week- end in Ripley with her sister, Mrs. Hackett. The Kintail Woman's Institute will. meet for their March 'meeting•, at, Mrs. R.,, Bissett's home on, Thurs- • day: , . Laurier . quilting group held a soc- • jai evening in the school house on Wednesday evening of last week. Amberley- quilting group held a bingo party in the Orange Hall on Friday Both. these' groups have met each week to quilt for more Than a year. The A'welfth concession group meet in Hemlock City school. .The Civilian's Opportunity To Help Win the War - - Buy All The VICTORY BONDS You Can This space donated to the SECOND VICTORY` LOAN by • • Y _E C�OMPAH • �ir�•roN TExTu. • LIMITED . MOyg� TORONTO. WINNtPIG » VANCOUVER