The Brussels Post, 1940-10-16, Page 2arrearrer
We wish to announce
the installation of •
Large Battery Charger
and are now in a position to
Charge Your Battery
vansinronnonmerr,
AND HAVE FOR SALE--. ,
A NEARLY NEW BATTERY CHARGER
(small size)
ALSO -Associate Dealer for .. .
Canadian Tire Corporation Products
Let Us Help You NOW, with your cold weather
MOTORING NEEDS
Harry McCutcheon,
Riverside Garage
phone 56
Brussels
BELGRAVE
Annual Harvest Thanksgiving
Services, Trinity Anglican
Church, Belgrave, Sunday
next, October 20th, 1940
Annual Harvest Thanksgiving Ser-
vices will be held in Trinity Angli•
can Church, Belgrave, next Sunday.
October 20th, at 11.30 a.m. and 7.30
p.m. The Rector, the Rev. R. M.
Weekes, will conduct the morning
service and will preach the sermon.
Miss Isabel Gaming, of Blyth, will
be the soloist, The guest preacher
at the evening service will be the
Rev. A. H. O'Neil, B.A., B,D., Rector
of St. Paul's Anglican Church, Clin-
ton. The soloist at this service
will be Mr, J. E. Reavis, of Wing -
ham. The choir of the church will
be assisted at the evening service by
members Of the choir of Trinity
Church, Blyth, The church will be
appropriately decorated with the
fruits of farm and garden and
special hymns will be sung and
special prayers offered at both
services. .Miss Nora Van Camp,
organist, will preside at the organ.
.A cordial invitation to attend these
services is extended to all.—
"Come ye thankful people, come
Braise the song of harvest—home."
Farm Notes
BRUSSELS POST
BACON FOR BRITAIN
GhuWN AT A .PROFIT
Only healthy, vigoroas litters,
grow into prime bacon, the kind
that Britain expects of Canada and
proves most profitable to the Pro-
ducer. The "runt" seldom repays
the cost of raising it and never be-
comes a "select." Symptoms of
diseases common to young pigs are
hairlessness, rickets and anaemia.
Prevention starts with the brood
saw whose ration throughout the
year should contain a well balanced
mineral supplement providing cal-
cium and phosphorous against rick-
ets and nutritional disorders, iron
against anaemia and iodine against
hairlessness. To withhold the min-
eral supplement until the sow far-
rows is folly. These miaerals are
not transmitted in the milk to any
extent but are to thi embryonic
young,
A suitable mineral supplement
in the ration of the growing bacon
hog will enable the animal to make
better use of cheap home-grown
feeds consisting largely of cereals
with a source of protein added. A
feeder who mixes his rations with
brains. said, he could maks a profit
with hogs at five cents a pound,
Are You Still Pioneering?
LIKE log houses, iron pumps and outside sanitary
accommodation are relics of pioneering days.
They are out-of-date, inconvenient, unhealthy — and
your family should not have to put up with them.
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replace such antiquated
arrangements with a
Modern EMCO Bath-
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kitchen and laundry fa-
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DURO Water
Supply
System
will furnish all the water necessary for these home
improvements and it will also supply running water
to barns and other buildings where required.
The Duro Special System, capacity 250
gals. per hour, complete with 25 gal. Galvan-
izedTank and 25 or 60 cycle Motor costs only $86.00
For a lovely bathroom, as illustrated, the
EMCO Built-in Bath, Shower, Toilet and
Lavatory with trimmings costs only 136.00
(Soil and iron pipe and fittings extra)
Other Complete Bathroom equipment as
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DURO SPECIAL
Can also be supplied for
Gasoline Engine operation
83.90
Can be purchased under our
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Home Improvement Loan Act.
For Sale By —
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HARDWARE MERCHANTS
PHONE 68 •- — BRUSSELS
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240
The ouse
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By Mander Ross
onssgEnnspos
"Mr. Moreton's here," Mabel hav
ing run to meet Hazel, stood at the l
bungalow gate looking tragic.
"I know. I recognised hie plane,"
was the quiet answer.
"What are you going to do? Don't
let hint take you back."
"Why not?" There was a look
of surety in Hazel's eyes that caught
Mabel's attention.
"Tell me, has Bill told you?"
Hazel nodded hap.Pily,
"And so nothing matters," she
added.
Mabel looked across at the dis
appearing figure of Bill Gladdon at
the door of the hotel opposite, then
turned to Hazel again,
"I'm so glad—glad." She kissed
her. "Come on then. Mr. Moreton's
inside. He says he has been
searching for you up and down the
coast for days. What are you,go-
ing to tell him? Oh, and your
mother's back at Deauville."
Hazel laughed. She was prepared
to meet a dozen mothers and half a
score of discarded suitors,
IShe was Bill's, the world was all
right,
They went through the hall and
out on to the terrace. Moreton rais-
ed himself out of a lounge chair,
"So I've run you to earth," ha
smiled at sight of Hazel, "Can't de.
feat me. Inquiries here and there.
what Heard yesterday that Iwo
girls had taken a bungalow along
here so along here I blew. And
how's the jolly old world? Kiss your
sweetheart, what?"
How awful it sounded, though
Hazel realised it wasn't Reggie who
had changed, but herself.
In order to evade any demonstra-
tion she asked about her mother.
"Well, of course, she is wonder-
ing what's happened to you. Why
did you clear off, Hazel?"
"If you want to know, I was fed
up. Needed a little holiday from
your hectic ways."
"That's all right, but nnw
you'll come back What?"
Hazel pondered. Yes, she haat
better go back and, finish it all,
As Mr. Strange had said, it was
cowardly to run away and leave
notes. She would go back and
tell everyone concerned about her
intention to start out in a new life.
She didn't feel this was the time to
go into details. She would go
back with him, wipe the slate clean
of her old life and then join Bill
and meet the fresh conditions no-
shadonved by the past,
"Yes," she said. 'I'll come back."
They set off half an hour later.
Hazel told Mabel, who was left be-
hind, to tell Bill she had gone, and
she would return soon. She would
have liked to see him and say an
revoir, but that would have entailed
an expintion and she thought she
might escape that. She would breast
with her old life and so be free tc
accept Bill and, whatever lay in t;r
future with him.
She went down to the plane that
stood on the -stretch of hard sand.
They got into it and rose circling
over the bungalow.
"Good-bye for a little time," whis-
ered Hazel, her thoughs warm with
the boy she had grown to lou so
madly since she had come here.
rtf When they landed at the 'drome
t Reggie was unconscious that Hazel
(was a thousand miles away from the
( girl he had asked to marry him a
week before.
They drove to the hotel, where
Hazel dismissed Reggie and went
ciuP to her mother's room, IShefrank• de-
dsnake her confession
ly.ed to
The moment she was inside—her
mother was dressing for dinner—she
Sopped down on the side of the bed
and said—
"Mother, I'm going to break will'
Reggie." -
Hazel half expected an argument
she was ready for it. But she Was
not prepared for the look of anger
mixed with frustration that clouded
her mother's carefully made-up
face.
"What do you mean " was the
sharp retort.
"I mean, mother, that I shall not
marry Reggie. I've met a man 1
love."
"Where,"
"+At the place .Mabel and I went
for our holiday."
"Who is he? What is he?
questions were snapped out,
'11318 name is Bill Gladden, and he
is an architect.
"What, a worker?"
Hazel nodded.
"I love him," she explained.
Her mother swung round. She
might have been a young girl from
her dress. . Over daffodil camt
knickers and brassiere she had
slipped a silk frock of pale gold.
While she adjusted its folds Hazel
saw the lines of anger or worry that
marked her brow. And when she
turned towards her Mrs. Viney's
voice had the metallic note of des.
peration,
"You'll do nothing of the sort;'
she declared, flately,
"Oh, but I shall, nothing can
possibly stop me."
It had never been the practice of
either to mince words.
Mrs. Viney threw her hands in
the air. Her face was lined be.
neath rouge and powder, her eyes
glowered.
"Iy you had to pick up a man,"
she said crudely, "why couldn't you
have chosen a rich one."
"Mother."
There was something so revealing
abont her mother's attitude; so
mean and selfish, that came with a
blow to Hael after the dearness of
the dream Bi1I bed brought to her.
This was vulgar desecration,
"Don't talk like that," she added.
3lrs. Viney went to her daughter
anal took her shoulders and shook
them,
'You're an ungrateful girl. it's
time you realised what I have done
for you,"
"What have you done?" Hazel
countered, with the arrogance of
youth. "I didn't ask to be your
daughter, did I? And if I had been
consulted on the life I had to live it
would not, have been what I have
elsperienced—so far, But why
should we quarrel, mother? Why
shouldn't I marry whom I please?
Don't you want me to be happy?"
Mrs, Viney had released her
daughter's shoulders.
While Hazel had been speaking,
the elder woman had been looking
down an her with calculating eyes
as though she weighed a problem
the answer to which meant much,
She gave a shrug of her shapely
shoulder, turned her back and paced
the length of the sumptcoue rooni—
the best any hots: courel provide was
The
W i`I7 9Po4.P, OCTOBER loth, 1944
Try The
BRUSSELS DAIRY
BAR
for Soft Drinks, of all kinds.
Ice Cream Sundaes' & Banana Splits
Vanilla, Pineapple, Strawberry, Chocolate, Coffee
and Orange Milk Shakes
Try a bottle of our Chocolate Milk for School Lunch.
Butter, Buttermilk, Cottage Cheese, Milk and Creast
Try Our. Saturday Special
BREAM Producers
Bring your Cream to the
BRUSSELS CREAMERY
OPEN WEDNESDAY ATPD SATURDAY EVE?(INOS
BRUSSELS CREAMERY
PHONE 22
always necessary to Mrs. Viney'$
comport,
At the dressin fable she paused,
pondering, instinctively dusting her
'face with a puff.sHazel couldn't see
her eyes or she would have grown
alarmed at what was written in
them. They were afraid—they
were desperate—and not a little
cruel. A tiger at bay.
Hazel, indeed, heaved a sigh of
relief thinking that the unpleasant
part of the interview was over and
her mind had already jumped to the
next that was in store for her—the
telling of Reggie, taut nothing
mattered save that she get back to
Le Bungalow Rouge as early as
possible. There Bill waited;
they were complacent and there
were horizontal lines in her brow
that said she supposed it was her
lot to suffer. She sat beaide Hazel.
"Darling," she said, 'ISorry 1
flared up, but there was a reason, a
reason you have not known. I think
the time Bas conte to tell you."
The girl was strangely stirred by
this rare note of confidence in her
mother's tones. She glanced a con-
cerned query.
TO BE CONTIINTJED
®fes
WRONG NAME
A wife at Salem (Mass.) Is seek.
ing a divorce on the ground that her
Mrs. Viney turned and the cruel• husband.- has become addicted to
ty had vanished from her eyes, alcohol. The name Is Drinkwater.
1
1
2 Business .'ands
ONINSIMENENEmionsmoirelaillail
W. S. Donaldson Licensed Auctioneer
for the Counties of Huron and Perth
phone 35-r-13 — — Atwood, Ont.
All Sales Promptly Attended to
--CHARGES MODERATE ----
For Engagements phone 31 'The Brussels Post' and they
will be Looked after immediately.
110.
WILLIAM SPENCE
Estate Agent Conveyancer
and Commissioner
GENERAL INURANCE OFFICE
MAIN STREET, — — ETHEL, ONT.
Dr. C. A, MYERS
PHONE 4
Office Hours— 10. a.m. to 12 a.m.
1 p.m. to 3 p.m.
7 p.m. to 8 p.m.
WILLIAM STREET, BRUSSELS, ONT.
D. C. WARWICK
Perth Mutual Fire Insurance
—also -
Bonds
Automobile Insurance
PHONE 72 or 92X
TURNBERRY STREET — — BRUSSELS. ONT.
men
Plate Glass
D. A. RANN
FURNITURE
FUNERAL AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
Licensed Funeral Director and Embalmer
PHONE 36
0— BRUSSELS, ONT.
Asismaimmomminwm
ELMER D. BELL, B.A•
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.
PHONE 29X — .- BRUSSELS, ONT
WALKER FUNERAL HOME
William Street, — Brussels, Ont,
Day or Night Calls 65
B. C. WALKER
Embalmer & Funeral Director
We also take orders for Flowers of Dale's Estate, Brampton.
A Walker Funeral costs as little
as $55,o,. to $200.00
JAMES McFADZEAN
Howick Mutual Fire Insuraoos
_-also-
Hartford Wsuktorm, Tornado Init:ranoa
Automobile Insurance
PHONE 42 P. U. BOX 1
TUItNBERRY ST. - BRUSSELS, ONT.
If