The Brussels Post, 1938-11-2, Page 5THE BRUSSELS PAST
NEWS OF THE DISTRICT
Written for the Post By Our Own Correspondents
ETHEL
Due to a severe heart attack Mrs,
Quest Dobson has been in a weak-
ened condition for several weeks.
Progress toward full recuperation 1s
favourable but slow,
11, L, Jardine is in Seelaith hoc-
tt:tl, under special observaece and
t atnlent for an ailment which he
has borne nnecxn plainingly for
months, but has now developed �.
seriously,
Cuthbert Hutebinson or Con, 6,
Grey, owing to a continued unfav-
ourable condition of the 'heart, al-
though still table to be up and
around, is wider doctor's orders to
nut undertake anything of a strenu-
ous nature.
One of the fine days of last weep,
Charlie Cleaver, feeling a little
stronger than usual indulged him-
self In a ,pleasing break in the
monotony of being unable, through
for a long period of time,
to attempt any kind of work, when
he tired and cleaned up the years
atcuntulaliou of o•ehard brush and
other useless material. in days of
yore he was always interested in
keeping the entire property orderly.
Hydro lights were off in Elbe'
after midulgitt Monday. Was it a
H.tllowe'en happeeiltg?
A laage percentage of the persons
attenuing Ethel United church
Halolwe'en social Monday night
were in masquerade, the varied en-
tertainment was pleasingly conduct-
ed
onducted and it was 'unanimously agreed
that it had been successful and
satisfactory.
Seaforth Hallowe'en frolic Mon-
day night had attraction for quite a
number of Ethel young people .
A car of screenings, arrived at
Ethel C.N.R. station last week for
C. It. Dunbar and is available at the
chopping trill, for feed, as long as it
lasts.
J. 11, Fear has a supply of coal iu
storage in the bins at Ethel C.N.R.
yards, in quantities to suit ads -
towers.
In changing the layout of the
barn on the property at the south
end of Queen street, Arthur HanrY
now has comfortable aecommoda-
tious for poultry, es well as a handy
garage and lots of room for other
purposes. •
Euchre and dance entertainment
under the auspices of Ethel Court of
Canadian Order of Foresters in
Grey Twp, Hal, Thursday, Nov. 10+
Don't miss this opportunity for
harmonious pleasure. Welcome
greetings to all who •can .come.
'Minimum fee for gents. Ladies
bring lunch.
The Women* Institute will meet
on Thursday afternoon, November
10th at the roue of Mrs, Wan. ;Spelt, -
an. The motto, The Peace Garden,
Mrs, Dobson; The roll call, answer9
•ed by a verse of Scripture contain-;
ing the word Peace, Topic 'Flow.
we may help to promote Peace.' by,
Mrs. W. A. Williaans; music, Muriel'
Hsckweil and Pearl Baker, All
ladles are invited .to attend.
FUNERAL .WALKERNOME .
William Street,
'S
Brusseli,Ontario
PERSONAL ATTENDANCE
'Phone 85
Day or Night Calls
MOTOR HEARSE
B G. WALKER
6 mbalmer end Funeral
Director.
laseaseasneensolocrtessissimemai
Money is Tight
But there tire people who
are constantly looking ter
opportunities
money
n Iles lend mo
toY
on koa security. If you want
to bo{{ row n new dollars, or a
feW theusend, our Want Ads.
will put you In touch With
those who have Inn" y�to
loan ,., ... *
BLUUEVALI
Mrs, John Brown is spending a
week with Mr, and ;Mrs, Harvey
Robertson, Mrs, Robertson isn't
enjoying very good health, we are
sorry to hear,
Mr, Win. Mee:li :ey was sick for
a couple of days last week,
ALrs, Silas Johnston and sons
visited on Sunday with, Mr, and
Mrs. Richard Johnston and Emma.
Mrs. Hugh Johnston arrived here
on Saturday to be with her husband
who is sick at Mr, Richard Johu-
ston's,
Mr, Russel Barnard arrived home
on Wednesday night from the West.
Mr, Frank and Tont Garniss arriv-
ed tante front the West on Wednes-
day eveniug.
Mr. and. Mrs, Jack Isbister, Ona -
way, Mich., Mr. and Mrs. W. It. la -
bleier, Toronto, with Mrs. le, B.
Jeniln, Bluevele Road, Mrs. Roy
Cratlke and Jean, Fordwich, with
relatives ;Mr, and Mrs. Wm, Wett-
taufer, Mr, and Mrs, HtilbfleIsch,
Waterloo, with Mr, and Mrs, J. W.
Wettlaufer; Mr. and Mrs. S, Rolphe,
Detroit with Mr, and Mrs, W. W.
Mann; Miss Edtm. Jenkins, St.
Thomas Hospital staff with her
parents Mr. and Mrs, E, 13, Jenkins;
the pulpit of Knox 'Presbyterian
church was occupied Sunday by the
pastor Rev. J. R. Greig who spoke
on "Him that cometh unto me, I
will lu no wise cast out,"
GREY -
Mr. and Mrs. W. Carter, Toronto
were week•eud visitors at the home
of Mr• and Mrs, W. Turnbull.
BLYTH
Mr. and Airs. C. N. Yeo, Sarnia,
with Mr. and Mrs, Albert Nesbitt;
Mr, and Mrs, Geo. Potter intend
making their home in Sarnia; Mr.
and Mrs. Potter were honored by
their neighbors and friends in tbe
community, each being presented
with a suitable gift,
At the meeting of the Lathes'
Guild, of Trinity Anglican Church
at the home of Mrs. Geo, 'Baillie,
Mrs. Potter was presented with a
hymn and prayer book combined,
Airs. Jas Cumming read the ad-
dres sand Mrs. Metcalf made the
presentation,
AUCTION SALE
FARM AND FARM STOCK
AND IMPLEMENTS
SOUTH %Z LOT 13,
CONCESSION 6, MORRIS
WEDNESDAY, NOGEM'BER 9th
The folloyingwill be ojered
for Sale at 1.30 p.m.
HORSES—;
Heavy 'Team of Work Horses
Driver Horse
,IMPLEMENTS—
Riding Plow, Quebec Rider
Set of Harrows
Harrow Cart
Wagon and Hay Rack
Set of Bob Sleighs
Binder 7.ft. cut Massey Harris
a good binder
Mower, Frost and Wood, in good
order
Set Double Harness
Set Single Harness
• Half Set of Double Harness
GRAINS -
300 Bushels mixed Barley
and Oats
15 Ton of Hay
A Quantity of Cedar for Wood
Other Articles too numerous to
TERM'S CASH
—Also the Farm being South half
of Lot 13, Con , in Township of
Morris, 100 acres, There is a
good Brick House on It and a bank
earn 48 x 50 will be sold subject
to a reserve bid.
Terms made known on day of sale..
WM. COOK, Proprietor
JAS. TAYLOR, Auct;oneer.
MORRIS
Mr, and Mrs, Lloyd Luras of St.
Marys spent Sunday with the
feeiner's aunt and uncle Mr. and
Mrs, McCauley,
Miss Altieee Cardiff, Grey, Is
visiting 110r grandparents, N, and
Mre.1 McCauley.
Mrs, Alex Dark of IA Ingham
spent a few. days with her mother,
Mrs. Wilkinson.
Mrs. W. R. Lundy and 5011 Robert
of Hamilton spent the week -end at
the home of Mrs, A. Crooks,
Mr, and Mrs. Lorne Bradley and
sen spent Sunday with Mr. and
Mrs, Russell Currie,
Jcltn Hopper is visiting at the
home of his' daughter, Mrs, James,
Bryans,
Mrs, Garry Wilson of Cayuga,
called at the home of Mrs A,
Crooks. *se
Miss Alma Payne is visiting at
the home of Russel Currie, •
Joe Smith., Wilmer and Mac of
Bluevale were Sunday visitors with
the fonner's sinter Mrs.. F. Duncan.
Misses Velma Duncan and Dor-
othy Bone were in Wingham last
week attending a meeting in con-
nection with the Institute.
On Friday evening, October List,
the Ebenezer congregation gathered
together at Browntown school
in honor of Rev. A. Y. and Mrs.
Robb, A social evening was en-
joyed. with a program consisting of
readings, recitations, songs and
music, after which tbe following
address was read by Elmer Sellers.
Dear Mr, and Mrs, Robb:—
We, the members of your Ebenez-
er congregation telt we would not
let this opportunity pass without
offering you our most siucere con-
gratulations and heartiest good
wishes,
You, Mr. Robb, are no stranger to
us, during the past five and a half
years you have endeared yourself
to us through your Jovial manner
and kind disposition.
Friends are the most durable pos•
sessions a man can possess and no
place is there a better representa-
tion of your friends than in the
young men's class.
Out here at Browntown a house
DE friendship, so to speak has been
erected be your husband and to you,
Mrs, Robb we invite yott, to come in-
to this house with us.
And now to you both we ask your
acceptance of this table lamp and
mirror as a slight token of our re-
gard and, may, God bless you both
and be with you in your work In
this church and the community in
general.
Signed on behalf
of Ebenezer Friends,
Mr. Robb thanked the friends In a
few short words for their kindness
after which all sang, "Wg are jolly
good fellows.''
Lunch was then settved and all
departed wishing Mr, and Mrs.
Robb many happy and '' Prosperous
years of ,married 1110,1
They had come to the meet Ian-
pultan't and spectacular scone in
the filar, and the director was ex-
claiming what Wa go luapllen•
"Nol understand,' he said to
the hero, "in this unite the lion
,
S t. The
1 uo for 600ee
will penile ,
htn'o looked at "the lion, thele' at the
director. ".Five hundred feet," he
echoed, dismally, "Yes, that and 00
more, Y011 understattld," 001 hero
nodded, '51 do, but does tine Hoe?"
BELGRAVE
The young People's Society of
Knox 'United Church, .. held their
Hallowe'en social in the basement
Of the church Wednesday night.
The basement was nicely decorated
for the evening, with the , orange
and birch Hallowe'en colors in
prominence, As the company
gathered the question of who's
w110 Wee quite common, When all
had arrived the ones in costumes
were asked to parade for the enter-
tainment or the audience and s0
dint the judges, Mrs. C. R. Coultas,
G. Wheeler and C. Yiull might anuk0
their derision. The winners were
announced as fancy dressed couple,
Miss W, Lane and Lloyd Anderson;
comic, 'Cecil Armstrong; animal,
Mabel Colltaes and Elsie Conk who
represented n hot se; best 1-lollowe-
'en costume, Airs, Al, A. Wheeler.
Unmasking followed with a, few Sue-
prises.
ulprises. A short ptegr41111 followed,
A vcral trio by Freda Jordan,' Nora
Vali fume, ;lames McCrea, aceomp-
allied by Elaine 'Walsh. Mrs, Earle
Anderson gave a reading which was
cite ui obi .
s t a to the ncc i i• ..l
n e aeon ant
t
much enjoyed. A pinna lnstiiuueu-
tal by Elaine Wrtlsi1 and a eeoita-
tion by Hilda Pletih were Altto ap-
preciated by all. Several games tot -
lowed and north was served.
1.
SPEP ON
WEDMB1S. NOYl'JMl3
TO ONE OF OUR
NEW FALL. SUITS or
OVE RCOATS
AND
STEP OUT
1
STYLE
This Store especially' stresses styles
as new as to -morrow.
Over -thirty years of satisfactory catering
to the clothing needs of hundreds of
f<zrnilies in Huron and Perth Counties is
r.- your guarantee as to
VARIETY, QUALITY & PRICE
It will pay you in Personal Satisfaction.
It will pay you in Dollars and Cents to
Select Your Next Suit or Overcoat
from' our Big, Up -to -the -Minute
Reliable Stock
Men's Suits 15.18.5U 20. 22.50
OVERCOATS
13.95 15.05 19.50 24.5n
Stewart ° .r -®S,® ®• - Seaforth
Your Manners
Supply Index
To Character
Other People Can Judge
What You're Like By The
Way you Behave In Public
Some bad manners that are ex-
hibited in public are Clue entire-
ly to selfishness --and those are the
worst manners of all.
It is seflshness that causes, a
passenger on a bus to cling to, the
seat next to the aisle—and mance
the passenger who has to sit on the
other seat crawl over him. .-,
e It Is selfishness that makes peo-
ple shave and push in crowds.,
It is selflehness that makes:, m
woman decided to keep, on a .big
hat in a theatre (because itto too
much trouble to hold, or very:, be-
coming on). And selfishness that
lets a mean smoke a strong cigar
ill a Cro3Yded elevator, .. .,
Don't Fight For
Attention
Good manners in public are ,just
about like good +manners , any-.
where. It a person goes about his
business without trying to impress
anyone with his importance -but
remembers the rights and feelings
of other people—he'll have good
manners,
And by bis manners he'll stand
out pleaasan1ly in the aninds 01
those be meets even briefly,
out fighting fighting for attention or ser-
vice, he'll get it.
Gentlemen --.and ladies --always
do.
Home's The Ideal
Place For Women
Says Adviser to Greeds
et U. of Western Ontario
lecture on orientation, 'given the
coeds during their first _week at
Western.
A womanmay be technically a
housewife in her own home, , but
actually she is occupied, with all
of the so-called vocations, said
Dr. Turville, after she had out-
lined the ways o.pen to- a career
following graduation.
''No universitp course is wasted,
and all courses have an outlet in
practical work," she declare]. Any
course will be valuable as a prep-
aration for home life whether it is
of a pradtical nature or whether it
gives a cultural background for the
enjoyment of leisure time."
The Outstanding
Modern Woman
Career girls may be increasing
in number, but the ideal place for
h h Tar,
luau isstill in the ace
a Ivo it
Dora
th utvillo adviser to
wont.
y T
en at into Univers 1,ity of Western
Ontario, told nearly one hundred,
starry-eyed frosltottes during a
Red Cross Leader Refers To
Madame Kae-Shek, wife of
The Chinese Army Head—
Her Knowledge Uncanny
present should suilrply the eatab
and drinkablea. A list of t
necessaries having been drawn
it -was passed around and eacb. Per
son, picked' out the article of f.
or drink that he or she was w
to ,furnish, and the name o
article was nicked off the tis
entertainment tdiva became
as a "pick -and -nick." The c
i ssaid to date from 1802.
1
The energy and high ideaisnt
of 'lYhme Chiang Kae•Shek, wife of
the •Chinese army leader, made
her the "outstanding woman in tre
world today," said Dr. Robert B. •
McClure Red Cross leader in
northern bins, in an address at
Vancouver last week.
"Reports of the split-second es-
capes fro ,massasslnation of Mme.
Chiang Kae-Sirek are not exag-
gerated," Mr. M'crClure said, "Site
hos eyes like a hawk and a mem-
ory like bite Doomsday Booy, It's
uncanny what she knows.
"Everyone who comes in contact
with bot gains inspiration and
learns to pass it of to others."
The Origin
Of Picnic
Everybody knows whait a picnic
is, but most people would find it
hard to tell how it goL s
peculiar
name. Yet the derivation of the
word is simple enough and sensible,
too. When a Menlo was, being ar-
ranged for, the custom originally
was that those who Intended to be
Breakfast Rush
Impairs Health
British Committee Against M
trition Issues Interesting But
on Habits of Girl Workers.
When you eat, sit down and tate
your • meal slowly'—partioalarl
breakfast; seamed breakfasts ar
the root of a lot of evil,
So says the Bridal'. Comsnitt'
Against Malnutrition in its eurren
bulletin,
'Citing an experiment nmol
school children, the committ
says 60 from poor homes put o
44 lbs, in progress, when give
given breakfast at school,
,Civil ISdrvice medical dep
cents are, It is stated, deal
with a 1aig'e mummer at debt:
cases, among working girls.
Snatching Bites
Here are the signs:—
"The girls are thin and an*ir.
in appearance . •, hands are cb
and clammmy. Although reasons
mentally alert, they cannot w
fast enough to do overtime w
out collapsing,"
And here 1s the cause;
"These girls rise curly and
down early morning tee, 11 t
do breakfast it is in an alt
+phere or rush andmuddle, an
Mg bites between 11ousehpld
'They take, sandwiches -a
indigestible form of food fel'
--in ardor to econoanize,+'
g
Theer is a digerenee
Hubby—"Don't brit)
more bilis, dear, I east'
Wife—"You needn'
only warn you, to and