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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1937-10-20, Page 6MEOW Do Not F The New Story 1n hal' Boon trader water, She was too tired to fight, 011e only lsnaly ............. Scenes' ax the set floated Ohs was drowning. p d 'before 1 her eyes, Happy, carefree, chilli' i hood days. Theatre days and stags l�pliug in . (1011 1.0 see had to be --•t1Ze Yates ;ifnRea Starting in This Week's "Issue of the Pest" A ¶,, m rt With I 4c++'L df:• omantic Novel my of :a ,actio n Commencinghrills nighty!-•atrdterephe on au,i (screen -bar 31an10 ri electric lights for all Len -her fan mail whichi1Tile other woman smiled, "Thank dealt with by 0 secretary Cod 1 was in time. 1 noticed you on of young men imnele0sly hr laud the pier when 1 came along fur my Wednesday, October 20th E?T1 "ihe 10 T L D f Lite" By Rosemary Beryl wit, her ---contracts to be signed- , Orly 'morphia 'bathe, Nobody .1'00 Lansdale Intimating than he could holo noticing you, You are was going to double her salary if so beautiful," Silo bit her lIp, :hon hhe would dray with h 1 goloe lore went on hurriedly, "1 swam Welt of Hollywood -the 10 d --the fun of ging over to shore, and oxneoted to see you to Paris w buy frocks -the jays of fllowing nee. I was quite alarmed a quiet seaside holiday. Summer when I saw you strike oat for the morning -the power of young limbs open sea, because I know what the end a body arlow.straight cleaving Ude is like around heer. So i stay the air --life! 1 ed around to see what you would Vainly she ,strove to fight her way do. When you 1011)0<1 to tepee hack to life, but youth was power- back you Burt. into turned at onto. less against the monster that {{t•' There were boatmen the other dragging her down -still down, side of the pier, but 3 dare 1101 WL. -le • • e tinge retelling [.hent. I Just went 10 Gloria Burke opened her eyes to -41nd brouglll 700 1111o1c," find a blue sky above her instead of Gloria smiled faintly. swirling water, For a moment "Vas it -:girl 1 fittagglc.?" she lay blinking in amazement, then "Ft w•asn" easy." The woman tried to raise herself on one i . looked gr+m. "1 lion'•; think " 1 could m.11age, but 1 nip a 000Y b Job hriugi'a you louud whop 1 bat and she fell back again with !es- Y'+n ru she. e, b1.: 1 under laud et eyes closed, Only one thing sir,' little shout a.-iltcial re ;tirlt:inu. knew, She was alive! She had been brought hack to t:, 11n''a' Parc fa'ling pretty cheap," he added abrul iY, "Yore mustn't life she loved. Never had a n1, meat seemed quite so th.111'(1 talk, hest awh e, and 1'11 go up els as this, ! to the toad and look out for a car. When next size looked up a Wo ; �l'hr•rr ere you tying?„ man was kneeling by her side t ' "G1. Ind Hotel," murmured Gloria. woman Gloria had seen en the 1„u must come with me, please l wan; to talk to you,” this meriting. An unspotcn q'1. She uoo ,l ; r 1y:s avaln ! tion was in Gloria's eyes. gave a (lr ep sig ]t was all so The woman nodded. .'au'li he alright now. I had a tough job rtrange, sa kneel", so wonderful. with you, Thought I was never go. For the semi(' ire she had re• ing to make you breathe again, a Id eeived the swee ie of. life -re r -iv - I daren't leave you to go for belp. ed it front the t isble hands of this It's a very deserted piece of coast stranger this { c•man at whom she CHAPTER L in the theatre. Gloria had slipped look me up and down 10 see it I into her place, carrying on with am as pretty off the screen as 1 In Summer Sunshine: the song and dance as though neat- am on, or if I look better by daylight inghad happened. than by limelight. And -anti I The pier at Besohmouth was de- don't disappoint them. Of course 1 am pretty. It would be a he to say I was not. "Heigbo!" She stretched her- self lazily, then slowly got to her feet, What shall I do? Sign that contract with Lansdale, or set sail for Hollywood Five years of revue, or five years of films I want—" She looked down to the dancing sea beneath her. "I want to do a the afternoon, and the show at most perfect swallow dive off oris night, pier," It :vas strenuous, but she loved it. And she slid, Youth and happt- "I wonder what I'll do next?" She nes�s gave power to her limbs. put her head on one side and (1011- Cleaving the air, cleaving the lord. pursing up her lips and water, her young body like an arrow she launched herself out into the sea and began to swim with strong movements, She VMS swimming out to open sett glorying in her strength, he' vitality, her power, rate of 1.1(8 golden morning, sparkling, restless te young. serted on this bright summer morn • ing. Gloria Burke padded down to it on white bare feet. her slim form enclosed in a scarlet bathing wrap, She was rather glad of the quietness of the early morning, for during the last few months she had between two big parts. Her day had enough of publicity. was filled up with hard work. Re. Gloria Burke: She laughed at hearsals - dress -fittings -and pho- tlte imago that name evoked. A tographers' appointments in lh„ morning -matinee In the papers the next morning Gloria was acclaimed the heroine of the evening. Her talent {vas recognised, and she had wonderful offers. Now, twelve months later, site was having a fortnight's rest in or film work in year ago nobody had heard of Glaris Burke. Today everybody knew of her. Her name was hint, oned on boarding advertising the latest screen successes. Her name and photographs were in every film magazine. Alt the world seemed to 14rinkiing her brows in the effort, be in fore with Gloria Burke :t1. "1 have that wonderful offer free, Present, and she gloried iu the fact. Hollywood. 11 world 1(,e gLlrtu,i' It's good to be alive!" to go over there. butShe At the end of the pier she the' -w. off :1(r bathing wrap and serre ;1°'.d -Lrlaer»ed hes dimpled a.tnlbl..r- and sigh •1, her white arms up in a contentedsigh before breakfast bathe, sigh. She was beautifully formed, pude;fitly along the Pi r 1.p where and even the ,:;h! scarlet dt r h"lmrt could 1) t prevent 't i`' t ?r a t. fh,. ar watt h 1 .u•1.' 1 "I'll never be happier than I Mi. sun old cu. ,s al,dng from a ,,. t 1 -u • rn . Her bathing r,:o sur and .t this minutes' she thought I'v•• wl31 4: 1"'t ma 1 fi .n t < i everything u girl {{'ants in 1h,.: pn5'rn Her rocs matched1 11111; d..pt' s of he -ea her 11ps t1. i. t a t iron I 'd ' 1.)h iii". You have been 1 r,1 ..-'d lv 11 scarletere a, her call and 0 Fy a't' shadowing of brown lay n{' -' t 1 1.t', . ,1 a i •s t.. _ r,• , , tarried back to ah,rc In •1.c•+iu, nk-e d•wL`r ri'-;tr , r:r s -;r a at to had wasted t;'r1 ;r of her cheeks "Our Id".r,:.'F, 11., ! :,c•c w"ag au- n 1;« e•::d of the pier, .ra was the tit:': she was known !•; It . .'i• - A ._ •. ., '.t, .r . :rr r , nn? t.iat she was ltnn the films, 1.1r ky 1 ant c t. .. - (1.l that bl•-.1101 rt would 1(e wet - "Oh, I'm so happy:- Sheatld u r r fir. 11 t n •ri r c -. 1 ' 1 T _.. n r r fit le began, At -down at the edge of the board and looked down :We d = t'1 1 i : , 0'1,'; fiz-.' !. did not realize that she warrll.I rat . was making no 11,-adway, It heti "Darkling blue depths beneath • mint 1. a . a.! . s .>: e•'nterl so "0'7 stl•irnitling "1'.m so happy 1111 almost h 1 r 1- ' bad to fight,n w ✓, I i t heeause the title was carrying her ed:' rl shadow crossed her a:l w.,rtnced 1.t 1.1 beauty as 1, r. w'h it. Now shey face fora moment. She was airrol1 lest all this should be a to 1F u.nst the rate of waters, and h,ur.. (r.. dream from which she lite-, 1 :mode sinmehodv ought. ,. ! her young body was no match for ow. 8111,0g xw111141c:r. 1 had all awful But the •effort made her gi*l,ty. W3DNosD. X, our., 20th, 1937. this girl, rather; for rtmae woe lot' so t first. WA as Gloria burl I4 'was 1.110 look: of cllsap,p0llltment that Rave her an ap10Q1'ance of 050. With a little hnppdne0s those oyes o0111n sparkle, those bard lips could reins; Iota a entire 'ISile ellen have happiness 1f It le in my :power t0 give it to her," thought Gloria, 'beecltuse--Ule05' 1101'1 -she has given happiness 'backend me. Bat whatever 1 do for he' never be real repayment, 1 owe lire to Iles'." (To Be Continued.) just here. You see, you bad drlfr- ed so far from Beachmouth. The tide carried you down here," "you -saved -ole?" Gloria tarred the words through pale lips. t11" greedy Inc.a, k he el 11 ha ve ent wave . wa en, u.1tr have a permanent {.s1.•,j IIr11 rr'-ngth was nearly spear Last year everything had been -r, and 11° tet, her lla!r hatcg atnlln 1 in i She br'•arho,1 in fitful gasps, Her different. There had 1(1.4,11 no tin::• day for the reason -he (.nn d net afford one. It had been mnth111.) but t'- 0�11ei1111 to and fin from (greet to agent, tvhiie the fih'llh1Bs dwhuli• ed in the little .purse, and Adele. shadows came beneath eyes '1111 mon 3, wl 1110" th•st. And If 01.11/ l arms ached until she almost scream - she 'creel.] smile she wouldn't he "r1 with the Rain in them, her body had -looking. Perhaps life holds f„it like lead, nothing for her to collie at any I I ((11151 keep afloat,' she thought, mare. Perhaps it has helrl nal/ gritting 1ser leech, ';Nothing sadness and sorrow and disatrpniut.l mrttir•rs as long as I keep afiaat-! ml. n.t. Not like mine. life is 8r, with my head eimbe water.” wonderful I want. -to go on living for , went weeping too much, The grim ihnt wile ws not used to such a spectre of poverty had followed f 001- l lung Immersion. The water wl1.a her. and there W15 uohotly t, wham Brave wooers from 1111104' lips. Life cold, aper 1ha son h?1r1 not Bafuerl its: ihe could turn for a helloing hand. still held the promise of a summer trill h of ser She, w°as Ina r sl+• Then had cum 11or cha-cc•, morning to Gloria Burke,. --•a snr11 0f rx,lhlpae, and only c1 miracle (-mid mer awning with an nnclnad,;1l save her. Nothing Mitch at first, Jura a walk- ing -on part in a revue, with an 1 sky opportunity for better work if she idly she watched (he othia• {ar.matt marls good, Gloria was not as the ;live off the piny and strike out for other girls who gossiped and ;hat- shore. She was a good 4Wlfl(mc'T terecl and giggled their spare time .even 1f she did not. look Its mitre in at away. She hid herself in the wing,' bathing costume as Gloria Burke, where oho cooler watch the prim!! • f "Wonder if she rreeognised Stell she went on ii1ht 11K. Nov t' Karl life 11'111(•11 are :11"4'1 11= in rhos few trientente when it was vie bine from her. ."rl it• can't hi, the end," she (1lnught, beethlg against the green waives that, sought to 'engnlr her, 11010' on the singe, and 140011 0111 l mused ,the flim star, her (710101.a { ,.(lit, if can't rte- the end yeti I knew the leading lady's part as well { chin resting in her dimpled 1(nee(I 0111 too young to ;lie yet: es her own, Then tame that. night i!! that were enclasped by bmai tifuiy when the leaning lady fell and burr, I moulded arras. "Most pr:opls get herself so badly e11e wee unable to goggle-eyed when they meet me, go an. and the understudy was not BSDoalally the women. And they Down, down, down into the green depths, It seemed aa though 501111' measles, were pulling at her, fore• had been tempt.+d to ;'.neer an hour earlier. Gloria felt bitterly ashamed, She owed everything to this womau- c,eSNAPS410T cUII_ BRING IN THE CLOUDS London Fashion Houses Booming Paris Worried as eat Designers sners Continue to Open In English Capital.. Paris; is said to be looking to her laurels since another of her great designers, Maggs Rouff lees Joined 1V101y11e0x and Sch1aparelli 1n opening a large London establish 111011. Fashion shows in London this season have been more traitor• ate than ever before, Main highlights of collection% shown recently tine the ]Sigh \1'aisl- 1111011, the tight skirts that compelled the 111111111eg11•ins to walk one foot be' and other furs dyed bronze brown, dancing. the predominance of rod and rue:i tones -Atte town 1 Suing retia galore ---the tinting of ermine wraps to 01111111 beige -a soft pink tone -and the p0p11121Uy of 11 atria and other furs dyed bronze 1)0ow11. and 01 natur.l seal. -' ••!here, For Cueen Though London society is ,1u - •s: to fashion shows, royalty is chane. ing new fashions w11110111 visiting WWII. Tinted water -color draw- ings are matte of new models that her dressmakers believe might ba 1.'t the Queen's' taste and are sent to her with samples of fabrics. When she decides on a gown, the design ie immed:a'tely withdrawn from fur there showing and is made exclus- ively for Her Majesty. Fitted at Home Designing gowns for Queen Eliza beth. Queen Mary and the Duchess es of Gloucester and Kent has tie own ,particular little difficulties. Cate must be taken that there Is a firm foundation ou which to wear decorations of various orders' and also that the colors will not clash with the uniforms with which they are surrounded on formal occasions Queen Elizabeth and Queen Mary are fitted at home. The Duchess - COUGHS* DISTEirIIPER., BROKEN WiND' have ,net their matter in ZEV-• l0#0e by the rank' era of Buckley a Mixture. Stoekreetlr poultry breed, e a, e(0, w rem', toed vet ,�- t oeltt r ;tlUtf fay It l P maitre Arg' ;sire[ far ull oho p, tory doealit' In hence, cattle sheep pita. Poultry and doge. It le Mining how olckly It lode re"ntto In the moat Auk - horn octet. In fact, we eaarantee 1EV to do 01 n day or two what it took oto• fafhioned remedlea n month to do, Pet else 504, stock 059 $1.00. Pet $EV el 11. B. ALI EN es' on the other band aro sometimes to be seen at their dressmakers, 'Marjorie Bunten, a Canadian de- signer whose name ranks with the great houses, has tuade a sPeelaltY of the use of leopard fur for muffs and handbags to match, C.ZI LLIAX &SON. ELMER 1). 1361.L, S.A. Barrister, 3ofTcitor, Etc. Phone 20x. -x- Brussels, Ont. ....wore wanows DANCEY & SOLSSY BARRISTERS, StN:ICIT,'OR'S, ETC. L. E. Dances, K.C, & P. J. Bolsby Brussels, Ont. 'Phone 64X James NicFadzean Howick Mutual Fire Insurance -Also- -Hartford Windstorm -Tornado Insurance --Automobile Insurance Briaeseis, Ontario 'Phone 42. Box 1, Turnberry fit. JAMES TAYLOR 1,111.0118 Au etlnnr.'r rb!• (" 1 CALM CI ,. Buren. Sates , L,.ouuest ss w a.01 parts or tau country, Setters:sae, Guaranteed or no pay, Ordera 1ef1 at The Post promptly attended to, ttelgl•ave Poss Office. PHONES: Brussels 14-9. WILLIAM SPENCE Estate Agent, Conveyancer and Commissioner General Insurance Office Main freet, -- Ethel, Ontario important Notice Accounts, Notes, Judgements Collected Our collecting deps.svment is a result of years of successful expert, ecce in collecting local or out -of. town accounts. No collection.' no charge. Mall Burkes Collecting Agency (License 176) Head Office, Seaforth Ont Box 498 } fvTeoge etVW 0000a ,Wito+otia AW4114. "- A- RANN FURNITURE AND FUNERAL SERVICE D. A. RANN .Licensed Funeral Director and Embalmer AMBULANCE SERVICE Without the clouds this would have been a dull picture. A K-2 filter over the lens brought them In. Exposure 1/26 second at 1.8. outlines of clouds at the best. The beauty of a great tumbling cloud, or the attractive canopy which a mack- erel sky spreads above a landscape is absent in the print although present when the picture was taken. Why should not amateur photog- raphers be cloud artists, too, when they have the means to do so? The trick the filter does is to hold back the violet, ultraviolet and blue light to which photographic film responds more sensitively than to the other colors, and in which clouds and sky are both rich. This allows the green. and red light (also reflected from clouds) to register, and if the film is of the type especially sensitive to green and red, i as the sensitive pauolhro natic, the elo rids come in still more distinctly. Natu- rally since the filter holds back all the light to some exteet, somewhat longer exposures aro needed than when no filter is used. Correct ex- posure can gra determined by using the "filter factor" data furnished by the manufacturer, Filters for recoding clouds and for general use aro yellow in differ- ent degrees of density, varicuslY suited to different subjects. A good average filter coats only from $1 to 31.06, depending upon the camera on which the 111ter is to he used. This is an investment which pays high dividends in the satisfaction you get from the enhanced beauty of your outdoor photographs, 138 John van Guilder GO to any art gallery and exam• ine the landscape pictures, Find one in which the artist has failed to put clouds in the sky. If you succeed you will have encoun- tered a rarity in the world of art. The fact is that even though a painter may succeed in capturing the true empyrean blue he seldom omits to put in a cloud or two, white, dark or tinted, despite the fact that a cloudless, blue sky is not an unusual phenomenon and hence true to na- ture. The painter appreciates that clouds in their many beautiful forms, "pavilions of the sun," as a poet once called them, aro artistic contributions to any outdoor scene. Too, the artist who works in black and white rarely fails to put Monde 1n his sky because an expanse of plain white space is uninteresting. 'Why do we not more often see clouds in amateur photographs? years ago the qualities of photo- graphic materials were such that it was very difficult to photograph clouds because there was no nine so sensitized that it would register clouds distinctly. Today films aro available which to a greater or less degree will do so, but if the little gadget known as a filter is used over the lens, clouds may be brought into the picture in their full form and beauty. Novertholese, many ametettr5 con- tinue taking cloudless landscapes, their skies being represented only by a void of white or gray, or faint 1.v ;r,:�,,,• . �, Returns to Est NOW IS THE TIME TO HAVE YOUR HARNESS REPAIRED N 'CHAPMAN Brussels, Ont. '1 ' _plat!ce0101 L. P. 1.. $turdee, general pas- senger agent, Canadian Pacific hallway, Vancouver, will be pro- mfe, Companyted to October 10 rs oas assistant Passenger traffic man- ager, according to announcement by It, G. McNelliie, passenger traffic manager. Since joining the Canadian Pacific at Saint John, N.B., In 3893, he has served the ctunlpany at Toronto, Mont- real, Boston, Seattle, Wash., Bong Kong, and Vancouver, IMAMS Ace people 13,1,5 to malts thamnelven hoard by ,boe.tleu from the house (opt,. If yen tried that to -day lou would probably fiaoeto appear before a commlasloa In inssultt7, 1P NOW -A -DAYS the business man [bee. Car Waat.Aof•. l..na•• 4n •. ,.Mi