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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1954-01-13, Page 3t • . . VEDNESDAY,. JAN. IMhf 1954 -• -I ---f'---’1' ■•""^--"T“* Local & General Noble Pierce is’ ill again with neumonia and is confined |o bed his home,:, • ■ 3 ' ■ Mrs/ Neil‘4/ MacKenzie has re- irned fronRa three weeks’ vjsit , Hamilton-Ottawa,, - »-■■■ •<■■■• i.. ■ iMrs. Wm. McNall has gone to lvth to spend the winter at “the ?fne of Mrs. W. Mason. Mr. and Mrs, Wallace Hoge- join visited through 4he holir ________■____________________ » r OBITUARY SAM CHADWICK i The death- of ( Sam ChUdwick, Concession 6, Kinloss, brought J. » . « * , —A -1 visited through the holir iys with Mr. and Mrs. Albert lton and the rest of the family; hey returned to Napanee Mon-? the regular meeting of the Kknow Women’s Institute will > held in: the Town Hall, on Fri iy January 15th at 2.30. Host- ses, Mrs. A. ’ Wilson, Mrs. Wm. sGi.ll, Mrs;’ S. Reid, Miss Mac- regor. . . OBITUARY MRS. WILLIAM FORSTER • The' funeral of ,the late Mrs. illia.m Forster was largely at- nded last Friday afternoon by >ung and old as a tribute to a iloved lady, and as an expres- m of sympathy to her husband >d family so suddenly bereft of kind and loving mother. ' - . Mrs. Forster" was in her ■ 55th ( lar and died suddenly early ednesday morning from a heart tack. She had not been enjoy- g-the best of health, but had ■en in Lucknow late Tuesday ternoori, prior to her death..She id accompanied her daughter to wn to take a music lesson. The funeral service, held at the Kennan - MacKenzie Memorial lapel, was conducted by her istor, Rev. R. D. A. Currie of hitechurch Presbyterian church iio spoke words of comfort to e bereaved; Interment was in >uth Kinloss Cemetery with ck Aitchison,- ArChie . Aitehison, klrew. Gaunt, Harvey Webb, allace Miller and Gordon Mac- lerson acting as pallbearers. Mrs. Forster was formerly Mary nily. Aitchison, daughter of the i Mr. and Mrs; Thomas Aitchi- n. She was born in Wingham September 7th, 1899, but since ildhood had lived in Lucknow, d since her marriage, in West awa.nosh. Mrs. Forster had „a winning lile, a charming personality and is possessed of a lovely solo ice, and gave frequently of her Iqnts . at church and social ents. '' Surviving besides her husband rs. Walter Elliott (Kathleen), an, Irma, Norma, Jack and •rrie;/and two brothers, Horace Wingham and Cliff of Hespel - Two brothers, predeceased'he rimer in England in 1918, and nie of Harriston. - . * •i J PAGE THREE r JANUARY Clearances 1 I WHITECHURCH I see why it should not work the farmer. . : Ross Dick Har- Des- CHURCH CHANNELS ■ V , •* ‘’ • ' For Men ... HATS^MOQ Stock clearance. Broken sizes and colors. While they last...... ..$'4.oo -z o. ‘ THE LUCKNOW SENTINEL, LUCKNOW, C^TTARIO V[F. OF A. ASKS PRICE SPREAD PROBE ♦ . • - •! . \ ...... Oliver MpCharles represented, - - 11, sorrow not only to •: his family a ui- .1 ™ '-n?Ves represented 'but to a wide circle of friends Ashf?eld Township at the annual ■Who he had made since comtas F^t*on to . Kinloss less than seven yearl held week in Sanderson’s LADIES’ AND MEN’S WEAR ago. . ■ ././.... Mr. Chadwick passed away early Thursday morning. He was only fifty-two years of age, but had been ill for several months wjth a blood condition for which there was no cure. He was in Wingham Hospital at Christmas time receiving blood transfusions, and retprhed. home looking. ro­ bust, but -knowing that his time here was very short. He- faced the inevitable bravely and cheerful­ ly, and did all in his power’1 to prepare , his family for the be­ reavement that * he knew that was soon to be theirs. 4 Sam, as he preferred .to be called, was born -in Lancashire, England, on October 13th, i90L He was one of a family of six children'of. the late Samuel , and Betsy Chadwick. ’ • ; . . Mr. and# Mrs,. Chadwick were married in Lancashire .and came to Canada some twenty-five years ago, to take up residence at Wind­ sor where Sam had since been employed in the -Ford factory. Some seven , years J .ago they bought a farm in Kinloss, which became thev'family residence. Hi^ son John ran the farm, and Mr. Chadwick commuted at the.week­ ends between Windsor and his hornel He had looked for ward, to taking up permanent residence here next year. Sam took ill the past summer and was unable to return 4o his Windsor job after the summer vacation. . 'The funeral service was held at -the* McLennan - Mackenzie Memorial Chapel: on Saturday afternoon conducted by Rev. Wil­ liam Fitch of -Windsor, a pastor of the1 Church of God of. which he was a devout member. Inter­ ment .was in South Kin loss Cem.- e.tery. „The_ pallbearerslweTe MacMillan^ Allister Hughes, McQuillin, Harvey' Houton, vey Hodgins and Melvin jardine. Surviving“besides Mrs. Chad-, wick are a son Jqhn: at home and a daughter, Mrs; J. Bridal (Phyllis) Of Tottenham, Ontario. Three sisters and a brother also survive, Mrs. Pollie Counsell of i Windsor;' Miss ; Sarah Chadwick, Mrs. Florence Garvey and James Chad^wick /of Lancashire? A sis­ ter, Mary, died in 1913. . MRS. REUBEN SPINDLER The death of Mrs: . Reuben Spindler occurred in Toronto on Thursday evening ', in her 86th year. : ^—She was- formerly; Margaret Jane Pagan, daughter of the late Mr, and Mrs. Wm. Pagan-of Ash- field Township. Her father, was a pioneer of the Township and cleared., the farm’ now owrred. by Gordon Johnston of Lanes. Mag­ gie, as she .was khown to old friends, was bom and. .raised in Ashfiejd where she married Reu­ ben Spindler who predeceased her almost fifty years age, leav­ ing Mrs. -Shindler with^a voung family of four girls. ... The Spindler family had moved’ to' Lucknow, some yeai’s before; where- Mi< Spindler built the. resi­ dence^ now owned .bv W. G> And­ rew.. He was associated with his nephew,' the late Win. J. Spind- * 'in the -sale and erection .. of wove.n, wire fences. ■ - : /The Spindler family moved to- Toronto some’. thirty-five years ago where. " Mrs, Spindler - .Ims• made .her h’ome with hei; daugh­ ter Adelia.‘ The funeral service, was,.held 4n> Toronto ‘on Saturday and ,the' remains brought th the Johnstone •.Funeral Home in' Lucknow, from where the funeral was held on Sundav 'afternoon with burial in.- Grechhiir CerneNTy. . h .■ • Five' grandsons and,.a grand- son-in -laWt .acted/.as pallbearers. ; h is.,..’. sur.-v k’ed.... bYL. four daughters, Adelia.- bpinhlm of ■ ■ Toronto;. Mrs.h:. Wallace (Gladys) id’,Islington; Mrs. T. J. Marks'. (Evelyn) of Pert Stanley ’.and' Mrs. R. ?D;, Bell' (Joan); of Toronto.’ . ' Duncan MdConnell of the Sec- .if'?C‘ . is no less. Toronto. ■ Some half a hundred resolu­ tions^ oame before the convention and the Ontario group called on. the Canadian Federation to press for a federal investigation into the price spread between pro­ ducer and consumer. The view was (expressed that, while farm income has been declining, .re­ tail food prices have not. ‘ ; /^Ishter control by farmers oyer marketing of farm products .is being sought. and efforts- are being made to introduce. a mark keting scheme for beef. It was felt that improvements could be made in the hog marketing scheme by setting up open live­ stock markets fpr swine in sev­ eral locations in the province. A dual price plan was also favored 'whereby, there would be one price for farm- products be­ ing offered for domestic'sales, and a lower price to compete on the export market. « . .. This? Obviously works in the implement and the* automobile' industry,, and the iheeting could not for i I I LUCKNOW J UNITED CHURCH | i i i i i j.l leY L ■ Congregational Meeting, I January 28th at 8.00 p.m. | , ' Minister: Rev, G. A. Mejklejohn, B.A., B.D. January 17th, 1951 1 a,m.: Christian Liberty. 2,15 Church School. 7 p.m/. The Church in Syria [ and Asia Minor. ago where, " Mrs, Spindler ; .lias 1 J-Lucknow i Presbyterian Church | I ,i iTth-l- i i l Rev. C. A. Witiii, B.A., . Minister. . & i *\! A -V JITXy 1 Ji m.;. Morning Worship. 24m p.m-;:, Sunday School. 3 p m.:. Erskine, Dungannon, j 7. P hi.: Evening Worship. / j Annual f■ Congregational Meeting ■' I h iirs.r-4aRuaty^l7?^00~i>;ihi;L ond Conccssion, Kinlbss, is hn- At this time of year many churches and their organizations are busy with annual meetings. We hear figures, facts, new plans, we thank the officers of the past year, and elect new ones, if others^ are willing. ;to accept. We trust that the material advance, and increase numerically is an indi­ cation of spiritual advance. Some­ times it alKseems to be dr' life­ less, endless round of habitual activity. There is- a danger of the /human and spiritual element be­ ing. Overlooked/-in the statistics under discussion,.TheJPresbyter.: ial Record, under the-heading Roman Collar, quotes from a book by.Stephen F. Bayne, Jr., called “The Optional G;od”. Ite says, “Is there anything worse than the ! adreadfuL/treadm ill_6£_a-sectar-ian-. congregation? The endless fight to raise inore money, so we can go on another year and raise more money so we can go on. This is a paper church which goes' nowhere, which has ' no dream except to keep its doors open, which has no idea of a new/world except a safer one for itself, so that it can go on and raise more money so’ that it can go on. That treadmill, what a curse it lays on the minister and 'the .people, condemned to end­ less intellectual drudgery of der. fensiveness, concerned only to keep the treadmill going and to •find enough Victims to replace the exhausted, whose, sermons are simply justifications of the treadmill, forever defensive, for­ ever apqiogetic, ’.forever ’ wh-eedl-j ,ing the world, to come in/so that | more, money so that it can go on. I 'don’t kpow why we have" to spend . so much time housekeep­ ing. in-the church.. It is hot -the .vocation of .the church to Worry about herself' It " is her job to keep her eyes «.dutward, where people are/ working and 'living and dying.-That is the spirit of thOWrch.' ,. ? The church seek’s not to. be ah .empire, buf a-.•.‘light, wot a judge Sirt'-leaven"'the"' ;-tin- redeenied society. Her mission is to, out-think, o.ttt-live, ...and out- .die ,the • pagan world. . And the editor of theRecord adds, The, ,church is •not ’a cbmpetitor With;, football, .hockey, the theatre, Jor crowds and. cash. I£ is God’s tagency for, soul, and society, sal- I • . ' poisoning. * . . »T For Women . . , | BLOUSES—$2.98 Selected f r io m - regular stock, sizes 12 to 20. These, include nylon, wool jersey and rayon. Reg. .to $6*95, ’ for ... ......................$2 i i HOSIERY—$1.25 Wool rayon hosiery, sizes 9 to ll. Reg. $1.75 ...... $1.25 Sweaters—$3.95, $4.95 . Work Sweaters, cosy and warm ........v». $3.95 &' $4.'95 r,~. . : FOR WARMTH ' Vests and Snuggles Overhose and Underhose ° Headsquares Angora Hats Sweaters ' Skirts Work Socks, 69c up Wbrk Gloves, 50c to $1.50 Plaid Wool Shirts 20 percent off j f We tak^ pleasure in announcing that Gerald | Rathwell of Lucknow is the winner of the I pressure Cooker, in the prize draw held in I connection with the opening of our | Meat Market last week-end. j Welsh Meat Market j j ’Phone 41, Lucknow | I j Our sympathy goes out to the Forster’s -in -their -sad and recent bereavement. ' Mrs. E. Scholtz visited a couple jQf_days_Jas.Cw.e.ek._wi.thber^si&ter, Mrs. Cdm Simmons in London.. We are sorry to hear that Mrs. J. J. Tiffin has been under the doctor’s care at the home of Mrs. IV. Emerson. —-MT“ahd”>rrsr~Chas7”Tiffm"~ancl’ Mr. and Mrs. Wes Young motor;, ed to'Londoh on.Sunday. P.dbby. Young, who has been a patient in Victoria Hospital following a rare major operation on his kid.- nby, returned home with them. Bobby is as well as can be ex­ pected. r-’ Miss. Shirley Chapman of God­ erich spent -the week-end at her home here.’ 2 The. Presbyterian Church, are showing films in the - Memorial Hall next Tuesday night at 8.30 p,m. •' ; ; We . are sorry to hear that Mrs. Kennedy, is under the doctor’s care....■.:----------------- Pretty nurse:“Every : time • I take the patient’s pulse it gets faster. What shall T do?” Doctor: “Blindfold him”.