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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1968-02-01, Page 4winter can be fun this year PH s unLigiBMIAS PO WD, ill, USSIAL14, ovilmixo 1Nbrktary 1066 • ••,• •,^" • , • 0 1G FEB. 5th TO 2 4th SALE AT SHOE, & HARNESS REPAIR I (I; o OF ALL INSULATED AND OUT-OF-STOCK SHOES W HILE THEY LAST --- iwidasis -toommemampoommega PECiLLOW SALES HELB WANTED MALL Increase your income. You can earn up to .1.3 per hour selling klawleigh Products full or part time. Write RawLeigh. llept. 4005 Richelieu St., St. .Henry, Montreal. W E TODAY Learn how you can earn with AVON. Ter- ritories available NOW iu MORRIS or EiAST WAvvANOSH. Mrs. ;fir. 17 Rawkeshury Ave., London, Ont. AUTOMOBILE PARTS — SIN and eight Cylinder Motors, automatic and standard trans- . 1.11iO$1.0116, batteries, tires, fend- em, doors etc. For all makes, anything you may need. See us or phone 291-4849 "Listowel. • Auto Wreckers, beside Listowel Drive - in Theatre., IN NiErZitiZ ,L RONNE,NBERO memory of a dear Don Reginald, who away two years ago, 1st, 1965. 11 o little k ne.N% when We a wp,40. that morn, 'Ile sorrow til t' day would bring, 'the will was sudden, the shook severe. To part with one eve loved dear. You fell asleep without a goO, bye, Put our memory of you will never die. Fiver remembered by OlareL cc and Glenn Ronuenberg. Classified Ads pay oil. Ali .iileeUilSe price at situmped stationery., raincting lewowlug deiN elopmen niamitact- tiring and zialuinistratiVo costs, was auoouneed January 25th by the Canada Post Office. Con- currently, a new typo Of slaolpe4 envtilope is being made available to the public fol. the 'first Limo, Now envelopes of the 4c and 5c denomination have been en- hanced by the inside - addition oL a printed design in grey. The new interior increases the opacity ot the env elope and, thus, assists in the concealment of contents. The design consists of the re- peated wording "Postes Canada sEAFORTH UPHOLSTERY Centre Street For all kinds of upholstering BrUssels Repreeentativ0: SELWYN BAKER Phone 4 ar 79 artieeelt Post." The price of 4c and 5c stamped envelopes goes up by 40c and 44c per hundred, nut including postage, in the Np, 8 (domestic) and No. 10 (business) sizes; re- spectively. iNO.RE,ASaS FOR hi loving POSTAL STATIONERY brother, passed February SMOKE IT....OR THROW IT AWAY TENDERS WANTED Tenders will be received at the Municipal Office until February 5th, 196S for the wiring of the new warehouse. Plans and specifications may be had at the Clerk's Office. W. H. icing, Mgr. Brussels PALO APPLICATIONS WANTED Applications for Meter Reader for the Brussels Public Utilities will be received at the Munici- pal Office until February 5th, 1968. Please state age and quali- fications. Win, H. King, Mgr. BruSsela Jump aboard the rugged S/40-HAWK and see what fun really means, Designed with many new features for your comfort, Your choice of power plants, See them today and enjoy them tomorrow. ContaCtt. ROSS....McCALL. Ho' DoWii .Payineint 346.06•.a.•Month ••• Phone 194 • Br ussefi; Ofti The lighted cigarette between the lips of six million Canadians represents, in the opinion, of many doctors, the great- est health problem in the country today. The effects of cigarette smoking can be deadly. The mixture of particles and gases in the smoke reduces the func- tion of the lungs and, as the years pro- gress, the continued inhalation of the noxious mixture is contributing to a higher and higher toll of disability and death. Inhaling smoke from even ONE cigarette increases resistance in the lung's airways. The tiny particles of tar in the smoke act as an irritant, causing the bronchial tubes to swell, and as a result the smoker has to work harder for the air he breathes. The gases in cigarette smoke interfere with the cleansing mechanism of the respir- atory system. Normally, the lining of the respiratory tract has a coating of fluid from the nose down through the smallest air passages. Inhaled dirt and bacteria settle on this fluid, and, tiny hair-like cells called "cilia" sweep the fluid containing its load of harmful substances up to the nose and throat where they can be eliminated. But cig- arette smoke slows down or eventually stops the cilia's action, permitting dirt and bacteria to remain in the respira- tory tract. If they remain long, irrita- tion, infection and illness can result. Chronic bronchitis is frequently linked with heavy cigarette smoking. The lin- ing of the bronchial tubes becomes in- flamed, air flow to and from the lungs is hampered and mucous is coughed up. The victim hacks and spits and very of- ten calls it a cigarette cough, but it is actually bronchitis and as the disease progresses, debility progresses with marked obstruction to air flow, heavy cough and sputum and shortness of breath. Chronic bronchitis sometimes causes death, but more often it leads to other serious disabling diseases. Emphysema is believed to be a late de- velopment of chronic bronchitis. In this disease, air becomes trapped in the lungs when the airways are obstructed. The lungs become distended and the sponae-like tissue that obsorbs oxygen from the air is damaged irreversibly. Emphysema interferes with a man's earning ability and closes the door to an active social life. At its worst, em- physema reduces life to a fight for every breath. When the lungs become thus damaged, blood cannot flow normally through the narrowed small blood vessels, and the heart must work harder to push the blood through. THE GREATEST RISK OF CIGARETTE SMOKING WE ARE TOLD, IS DEATH FROM DISEASE OF THE HEART AND CIRCULA- TORY SYSTEM. Lung cancer is second as a risk of cig- arette smoking. In 1930, shortly after smoking became a national habit, lung cancer was comparatively rare. In the United States deaths from lung can- cer increased from 2,500 in 1930 to 50,- 000 today. And the estimate is that lung cancer kills 10 times as many cigarette smokers as non-smokers. Heart disease, lung cancer, emphysema, bronchitis, shortness of breath, chron- ic coughs . . . and some risks we have- n't mentioned, such as premature ba- bies and neonatal deaths . . . are often the results of cigarette smoking. Even when the lungs are badly damag- ed, say doctors, stopping smoking will slow down the disease or, at least, re- duce cough and sputum. And, of course, if you're lucky enough not to have developed diseases associa- ted with cigarette smoking, you vastly improve your chances of escaping them completely ... if you quit now! YOU!' Christmas Seal contributions fight TB and Respiratory Diseases and the conditions that aggravate them HURON COUNTY TB ASSOCIATION CIttlArAfied Add