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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1973-10-17, Page 9LOVE'S LAST GIFT REMEMBRANNCE Whether it's a' • • MONUMENT • MARKER • INSCRIPTION — You are remembering a loved one — LET T. PRYDE & SON LTD. Help You Decide on Your Memorial Requirements PHONE: EXETER 2.35-0620 YI day. Les Allen of for the week. Mrs. Robert a. Hewitt Ickwood with 3ertson. [van Ball of Sunday with all. Stan Siebert ?nd at Guelph w was honor- a- on Thurs. :elebrate his ow who is a vas 99 years He is the fa. Ld visitedfor Iridges with " ). Rowland. ential 221 F010 45 tr TH k. Rys 164 liniafes impliCit ashers& dryers at OLDFIELD'S PRO- HARDWARE S87-6851 — BRUSSELS he Ilan. Gerald Regan, pre- r of Nova Scotia, will visit nto Oct. 27 to speak to gates attending the Liberal y in Ontario leadership don- on. e convention, which will be act. 26-28 , will, elect a r for the Ontario Liberal Y. nnouncement of Mr.Regan's doled appearance as guest ker at the Saturday luncheon made by Joe Cruden, presi- e the new line of dent of the Liberal Party in Ontario, who said the invitation to address the meeting had been extended to the Nova Scotia pre- mier by the convention's organ- izing committee. Mr. Regan, Nova Scotia. Liberal leader since 1965, first won election to the provincial legislature for the riding of Halifax-Needham in 1967. Three years later, he led his party to victory in a general election and was sworn in as premier in Oc- tober, 1970. A native of Windsor, N.S.> Mr. Regan served as the member of Parliament for Halifax from 1963. until 1965. He was a member of several Parliamen- tary committees, including Ex- ternal Affairs, Industrial Relations and pubic Accounts. In 1964, Mr. Regan served as the Canadia.n representative at the proeedural course of the Commonwealth Parliamentary Association in London and the. following year as a member of the Canadian delegation to the United Nations. • He was appointed a Queen's Counsel in January, 1970. A, graduate of Dalhousie Law School,' Mr. Regan practised as a .lawyer specializing in labour-I manageMent relations before en- tering the House of Commons. 'Six candidates have declared their intention, to offer fo r dntario Liberal leadership at the con- vention. They are: Norman Cafik, Member of Parliament for the Ontario Riding and Parlia- mentary Secretary to 'the Minister of National Health -Seventy-two members inclu- ding sisters from Palmerston, Atwood and Clinton lodges visited with the Morning Star Rebekahs of Brussels, on Tuesday evening October 9, for the installation ceremony. District Deputy President Sister Grigg, and her staff from Clinton, wore similarly styled short-sleeved A-line gowns of printed crepe polyester in shades of blue, yellow, mauve, green, pink and peach. The Deputy Mar- shall was Sister Mary Trick. The soloist, Sister Mary Sutter sang two numbers "Just a.Closer Walk with Thee" and "They'll Know We are Christians." The team very capably installed the • following 'officers: Noble Grand-Sister Joan Ber- nard, ,Vice-Grand-SiSter Leona Connelly, Recording Secretary- Sister Mary Lowe, Financial Se- cretary-Sister Mary Davidson, Treasurer-Sister Ethel Long. and the subordinate offiders: Warden-Sister Jane Hall, Conductor-Sister Dolores whee- ler, Chaplain-Sister ' Sarah Ste - phenson, Musician-Sister Verna Thomas, Color-Bearer-Sister Janet McCutcheon, R.S. Noble Grand-Sister Lois McCall, L.S. Noble Grand-Sister Helen Ad- ams, H.S. Vice Grand-Sister jean Bridge, L.S. «V.G.-Sister Barb watts, Inside Guardian-Sister Dorothy Ritchie, Outside Guard- ian-Sister Marie Turnbull. During the business, it was noted that the Variety Fair would be held Saturday afternoon Oct- ober 27, and that the President's visit to Clinton would be on No- vember 5. The D.D.P. Sister Grigg gave a short talk on Friendship. A social hour with penny auc- tion and lunch followed the meet- ing. • TODAY'S CHILD BY HELEN ALLEN HE IS. ACTIVE AND CHEERFUL French Canadian in descent, -Tony is five years old. He was born prematurely and though he has not had any of the health problems sometimes associated with prematurity, his physical and mental development are behind the' average. . Tony is small for his age but active and sturdy. He is attending a.speciai school for children who are below average and is showing much progress. His chief lag is in speech which is not clear - it seems he is always in too much of a hurry to form the words properly. However, •he understands every- thing other people say. Tony really wants to learn and has a good memory, as well as great determination. He will continue to need special education, Lively, mischievous, lovable- Tony welcomes attention but doesn't demand. it.' He can entertain himself for long periods ' and he, also enjoys having company. He loves to be cuddled. Tony needs loving parents who will enjoy his sunny per- sonality and offer him encouragement and stimulation without making unrealistic academic demands on him. The Child- ren's Aid Society seeking his adoption says: "We feel he.will definitely be a rewarding child for the appropriate family." To inquire about adopting Tony, please write to Today's Child, Box 888, Station K, Toronto M4P 2H2. For general adoption information,- please contact your local Children's Aid Society. , Lungs that last "Our lUngs were not built for and cannot withstand the things that are being sucked' into them every day," says Dr. Gareth Green, of the American Thoracic ;Society, the 'medical section Of , the 'American Lung, Association ..According to Dr. Green, a ealthy lung, one not assaulted by cigarette smoke and ' air pollution, can--within two hours--kill. 90 percent of the • germs and bacteria that attack the -lungs. But cigarette smoke and pollution weaken the de ,. • fences of. the lungs. The wogs of a heavy smoker, DtO, Green. . says, require 24 times longer to dettroy the.. invadert in the air. There is no evidence that the hang itself is adapting to' the assaults . ',upon it. Genetic studies on generations of faint- liet in highly polluted countries indicate that man is not building Stronger liingStO cope With Shift- ing and pollutiOne Instead, the hitinanlung is being eroded. "we: Will have CO build a new type of immunology--perhaps a shot for the hing-So that it can hold up under what 'is happening to it," Or, 'Green says. • - StUdieS now show that lotion in TOkyO and YOkOhtinla by itself, 'produning a forth of, crippling asthma, ' And cigarette smoking is the chief cause of lOng-teriii lung disease, one putt of Striae, there, are .500 different kindi Of solid particles and 250 different 01)0' of gases.. "Vat can even identify formaldehyde and .cyanide in the, retidnalS we iind in smoker's itiug,'0 says bra Green. Your itifig association it working hard to help your iota last longer--trying to cOnvinte. people to stop Shifting: and to Make the, air cleaner Inside and -604 Contact them out .hOW you can help. It's a Matter' -Of life and bteithi 'THE BRUSSELS :POSt OCTOBER 1973-4 j1-1ES tERTON It r • gan to speak tc* Liberals Toronto school teacher -Ted Culp; Donald Deacon ' York Centre; Michael Houlton, a Clarkson business man; Robert Nixon, present leader of the Liberal Party 'in Ontario, and Eddie Sargent, M.P.P., Grey- Bruce. Balloting for the leadership is scheduled to start at noon Sun'da.y, Oct. 28, Rebekahs hold installation The human lung has not changed for thousands of years. But the air it must breathe has changed. Drastically. The result • is a crisis of human survival. 4'