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THE BRU, SSEI.$ POST
st
ENTITLED
For
By Amy Miller
"I only •heard It to -day," said
Sally hastily,
"You would be the last to hear, I
daresay," said Slesenger, "We know,
.
of course, that you're not Anita, but
you're manlike her than any of the
girls we've seen --azul we've seen a
few, You've got something of her
Personality, and if you can help us
'out of this mess well make it worth
your while."
"Haw can, I help you." askel Sally
They were watching her •express
save face, anOl Slesenger turned to
Stein with, "She's the goods!" Ile
spoke to a low tone; but elle heard.
He went on, to her—
"We can't proantse anything de -
Write till we've, put you through the
tes't's, but we want you to give us
a few hours' of your time, and the
sooner the better. We've got all
the interiors, but 'we've come over
te, Europe. for the forest scenery,
and. now Anita's gone 'off In one of
her tempera. That won't wreck us
If we can :geh a good double, and we
think you'll do, • When, 'can you
come along?"
"As soon aa you like," said Sally
i
A. Reid, R.0
Sigh! Specialist
f or Over 20 Years
21 buil St., 5trotraird
COMPLETE
EYE"r1 FIN SE iIII[
EYES EXAMINED
GLASSES FITTED
MODERATE PRICES
Brussels O fice-
MiseHingston's Store
Every Wednesday: •
Afternoon .
2:00 to 5:00 p.m.
PHONE 51 - BRUSSELS
mess e
WILLIAM SPENCE
Estate Agent Conveyancer
and Commissioner
GENERAL INURANCE OFFICE
MAIN STREET, —
— ETHEL, ONT.
k;:.#.�ra:.,.G{S+PYtiMJI;E.n'.rla d3.T"
..>,`. vi..a,,s31, i..:E7:.k�•.•ne l:W,tY.`iti�Xk:
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. A. RANN
FURNITURE
FUNERAL AND AMBULANCE SERVICE
Licensed Funeral Director and Embalmer
PHONE 36
o BRUSSELS, ONT.
ELMER D. BELL, B.A•
BARRISTER, SOLICITOR, ETC.
PHONE 29X — — — BRUSSELS, ONT
0. :Ar.07=,,,,e„„... a±A0,.. ,,,,,, ,"',1,"r'rs•r�, .,: . ...00,0*.100,V4V000., .�i::rx�:•o se �r.-, c na. .
WALKER FUNERAL HOME
William Street, — Brussels, Ont.
Day or Night Calls 65
B. O. WALKER
Embalmer & Funeral Director
We also take orders for Flowers of Dale's Estate, Brampton.
A Walker Funeral costs as little
as $55,00 to $200.00
JAArtigtp.1
JAMES 'McFADZEAN
Howick Mutual Fire Insurance
—also—
I-lartford Windstorm, Tornado Insurance
Automobile Insurance
PHONE 42 P. O. 80X 1
TURNBERRY ST, ---sc BRUSSELS, ONT.
11
recklessly; "lint 1've never dame
any acting, and hone coald 1 take
h'LLss Pearl's place?" ,. said
,'!You couldn't do that, baby,"
Slegen'ger Bluntly, "But we' donit
want you dlo not—nve• eot11th(I t meet
We're only asking ' You to
double 1110 resne of the forest scenes.
And we d;on'tt avant •to lose afl'
more money. 7f You'll. eome to
Beaudeetst with us this evening,
you can stop at the Leverton Arms
with the others, and well see if
you come out all night for the
oasoera, and gest to work. • If we
find you're iuo use, you won't be the
loser, and you can come.:liaak to-
morrow. What do you say?"
"1,11 get ready," said Selly..
The unexpected had llaPPened
with a -vengeance, and if ever a way
out of a situation, fraught 'with ptrtl,
was shown to a girl it was to her.
In flight .was her only salvation
an'd•the means, was offered her.
:u
* s, ,
For the nest half hour all was ex-
citement at Bracken ;:or Hall, and
"Airs. Wendish, Who mighit have re-
greetedthe sadden departure of a
guest under other circumstances,
was delighted, for she s'aw the op-
portunity for advertisement.
Though .Sally might den', it people
wcwald Badly believe Anita Pearl
had been "discovered"" at the guest
house and persuaded to return to
conOlote her picture, Even if the
real star was elsewhere, something
of .her light had been shed on Brack-
en Tor Hall to attract people there.
In the mellow evening Sally drove
away front the Place where she had
known, the most poignant bliss, the
keenest pain of her life.,
She had lett most of her Luggage
belt'ol, bot ebe would never go
beak. Whether su:Gce55 or failure
awaited her in this new venture,
the e !'sole of Garth Chevenix was
a closed chapter. And her hear_
ached as she looked back where the
river ..acne.
Grath won'.3 t+ a to -morrow, but
she would meet him no more. Ile
would call her over the telephone,
but she would not be there to
answer.
' All was over!
CHAPTER V.
The Broken Spell.
Sally prat on a bank beside e
rippling stream in the neart of
forest glade, She wore a sun-
bonnet, which
unbonnet,which: (hung donut her back
to leave her head bare, and she had
pulled off her shoes and stockings
and was dipping her feet in. the
waster.
Behind her, framed' by the branch•
es and trunks of trees, .and thrown
Intorelict by a screens appeared' a.
face and' figure familiar to film fans
the wot+ld' over. 'Girls who gazed
fascinated, at Ian Rotor making
love inr pictures would' have thought
It must be thrilling to be in .Sally's
plaSbcei.
e had not a word to speak. She
had only to look shy and sweet, as
Ian Rosslitor came up behind her
and leaned over her, The liners
allotted to Bus. inthis scene had
been cut—her lover •spoke only a
few words.
Sally found her new experiencea
interesting, though when she had
done one of her bits about seventeen
times before the camera man is
told to shoot it ceased to be thrill-
ing, if It ever was,
But she !mass doing sasiataotory
work, having come through her pre-
liminary ordeal successfully. What'
the producers wanted wase a lac,
and figure that looked like Anita's,
against the forest scenery, Sally
doubled for the star, coming • out
to 'the gate of a typically English
thatched 'cottage, gathering will
flowers, feeding chickens, sitting by
the stream,
'The
photographers' al", and the
el '11 c,'f
the producer, overcome the
difference in height between the
tate girls. When ,the iLture Was
presented, the audiemen ks•c•i11 er'
Sally goin at tune ,collage doom and
'Atria carie tiro" the r,is.;,i ' 1:rlde
and never detect the difference.
TIne double tlfd the little that was
it .tired of brr graccifu1Jy and sl.
tc' ?genii,, and but for her -• secret
gn 1st, Sally would have been very
]appy on location with Swpreme
rrrar,,a,
Rveryone was friendly to her, mid
WEDNESDAY, MATZOH 20t4t, 1940
AN IM D U STI1Y_�
TO THE FURTHERANCE
OF AGRICULTURE
e, Founded and developed on the basis of helpfulness
to the farmer, the implement industry is entirely
dependent on the prosperity of agriculture fqr its own
success.
Through the years the Implement maker has, with
quality of product and genuinely helpful service, won
the high regard and goodwill of the users of his product.
There are few farmers who do not value sincerely the
service of the implement company.
Lack of understanding of some of the problems of
the industry may y,.%e rise on occasion to criticisms that
seek to detract from or disparage the part that the
implement maker plays.
In the Tight of the facts, however, misunderstandings
vanish and a better appreciation results.
Farmers' Equipment Investment
'. ; . Greatly Reduced
Most of the discussions on prices of implements, compar-
ing them with those of years ago, for instance, fail to
take cognizance of the improvement in methods that
have taken place, resulting in the use of different
machines from those of a quarter -of -a -century ago.
The One -Way Disc Seeder has displaced, to a serious
extent, so far as the manufacturer is concerned, several
other machines, and it does so because it cuts the cost of
tillage and seeding by, from 40% to 50%.
The small combine has spread the use of this method
of harvesting until the solo of them now almost equals
that of binders. And this because it costs only 26c per
acre for out-of-pocket expense to harvest withthe
small combine as against $1.90 per acre by the Binder -
Thresher method—a saving of $1.64 per acre.
The wheat farmer can equip today with the latest
tractor and tillage and harvesting equipment at 28%
less than he could for comparable machines ten years
ago—equipment, too, that enables him to cut the costs
of his operations by over 50%.
This is the contribution of the implement industry to the
furtherance of agriculture and Massey -Harris takes pride
in having played an important part in it.
WHATEVER HELPS AGRICULTURE -HELPS CANADA
MODERN FARM MACHINERY HELPS AGRICULTURE
MASSY -HARRIS
LEADERS IN THE IMPLEMENT INDUSTRY SINCE 1847
the u(I^el etic-rienice, the beautiful
surroundings, and the cheerful com-
pany at the Leverton Arms, dis-
dracted her thoughts from her
trouble. Only at night she would
think of the promise than had fail-
ed—the dreamt that had faded.
There 'were hours, tiro, when she
was net wanted, for the various
scenes selected for claming had to
be prepared before they could be
photographed.
When the meeting of Bests and
1 cum peas
;Salt and pepper
Melt banter. Add mushrooms and
cook 5 miantes. Blend in Sour. Add
milk or tomato juice, Stirring until
sauce thlokents• Add • eggs—cut In
large pieces and Peas. Serve in
path, shells on hob biscuits or on
toast. !Serves six,
Easter Bunny Cake
Make a large a4iohge cake (using 4
to 6 eggs) in a regular sponge cake
(,tube) pan. Wheth cold cover top
and: sides a cake with, "Boiled" or
"Seovets'M,lnuter frosatnlg, woke
about 2 bunnies of fresh marshmal-
lows, Pinched to represent head of
bumpy, Merit nose and mouth
With a Mile coloured icing and use
blanched almonds' for ears and
place bunnies on stop or cake. If- a
little green, vegetable colouring is
added' to the icing ib gives the effect
of the bunnies lying to grass.
bar lover by the stream had been I. a♦++i
shot sadielfaictorily she was free to i ' •
do as she liked for an, hour or two,
so she removed they paint from her
face, slipped' on her own cotbeil
frock and a Pair of sandals, and
went 'down a mossy path shaded by
giant beeches.
TO BE O'ONTINU't1D.
FOR EASTER LUNCH ,
or
HIGH TEA
Eggs In •Tomato Aspic
11 tablespoons gelatin
cup •colds water
2 caps 'tomato juice
1 teaspoon onion juice
1 teaspoon sugar
1/2 leas/poen salt
6 deviled eggs
Soak gelatin' in cold water. Combine
tomato juice, onion juice, sugar and
salt Heat to boiling point, Dissolve
ga±latfin. ,In juice. Halt fill individual
moulds• with jelly mixture. 'When
partially sett place half a devilled
f 1. yoke down, in jelly. When
jelly .sells, add remaining tomato
gelatin mixture, Allow to set, Un-'
mould on Oriel) lettuce. Garnish
with watercress or asparagus tips,
To devil egg, rr:»nave shells Jtom
haa•.d-cooked, eggs, cut eggs it half,
motive yollw, Mash yollts, seiaeon
and "nix with a little salad dressing,
Petit yolk mixture into whites,
E20 and Mushroom. Patty
1/s cup butter
i/z 11.), musluooanes sliced
4'tableispoonts flour
2 cure milk or tonnaito juice.
6 hard -cooked eggs
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0
Store up energy
DRINK MORE
AL1re Mik
AP" \;-,,; is healthful
Try ur Hot Chocolate
Try our Buttermilk a_ ash at all times
Try or Chocolate Milk
Excellent for lunch at school
E' c. i Horne Style Soup
Try n e To -day
9 E CRf4 SlMi! fS - r II ES
AT_
THE
BRUSSELS DAIRY
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