The Brussels Post, 1942-2-4, Page 6THE BRUSSELS POST
Wedn!edday, lrelbruary 4111, 184.2
might not )aka 1>la��oe� �
Notice To
Sweet Cream Users
In accordance with an order of the Milk Control Board of'
Ontario, only one grade of sweet cream is to be sold on and
after February 1st, 1942.
Following is the text of the order:—
IN THE MATTER of the sale of sweet cream in !Brussels, it is hereby
ordered that there be a deletion therefrom of all reference
to "Table Cream," from. the .effective date of this order, February
1..'2, only one grade of cream be sold in Brussels
namely "Whipping Cream."
Order �Ne. 41-128 The Milk Control Board of Ontario.
A grade of Milk with approximately 12% butterfat contents'
will be offered for sale, This will be known as "Breakfast Treat."
PRICES
Whipping Crearn. - - .. 20c per half pint
Breakfast Treat ... •. • • • ' 8c per half pint
Brussels Creamery
The Love
of Two Men
By Joan Croy don
��
Synopsis Of Preceeding Instalment
Diana Bandon has travelled to
Bundresluolre to merry Major Basil
Ohalmers; to whom, she had become
engaged three, years before, only to
Rod that she no longer• loves, him.
;At the; Janice at the iOfders Mess,
which she attends with her hostess
Mus. Judson, she is sickened by
Basil's lovemaking. Looking for-
ward with dread of her marriage,
which is to take place the next day,
she wishes she had not met Captain
Harry Lintot,
s" s s
Her heard sank, she felt a shiver
pass over her in spite of all the
-sultiiimess of the atmosphere, Eager-
ly She pressed forward to where a
little group awaited therm.
Seine wag amongst the junior sub-
alterns struck up the -opening bars
of the Wedding Manch upon,. a Mouth-
organ
outh
organ and instantly the whole gay
crowd hod burst into the tune.
"Here comes the bride,
A!i dressed in white=,
"Only it',s yellow—and very jolly,
too! ,Only really lovely ladies can
wear yellow successfully. Mins Bar -
don, to you who are about to re-
linquish that nanie•for ever, we your
devoted subjects, drink - this toast.
Berets to• the bride!"
Cheer after cheer in their gay
Young voices rase to the roof and
floated' out through the windows, to
CUT COARSE FOR THE PIPE
CHT FOIE FOR CIGARETTES
]startle many e• prowling animal In
the not very distant jungle.
The native attendants] showed
their white teeth in obsequious
similes, the atrocity of a mouth -
organ squeaked soullessly and shril-
ly, and.amongst it all ` Diana, pale
but swilling gallantly, her golden
head held high, stood like the white
rose which •Basil so often called her.
What dear boys they were! Whet
would they think could they but see
into her tortured heart? What a
sensation she could ,cause if she
liked, if she broke the silence which
had bound her since she ha.d met
Basil again, and told the truth!
"Thank you, kind people," she
said gently, when there was a
moment in which ,she could be
heard.. "1 cannot make a speech, I
bade, can thank you with my love.'
She parsed her'own glass of brim-
ming amber liquid and drained it
feveriishly, and ,,then ..:with a queer,
twisted snide she flung the •enmpty
crystal over her shoulder, It fell to
the ground and broke into. a hundred
glittering pieces,
At this moment a man pushed his
way through the laughing, applaud-
ing 'group and approached Chalmers.
'The C.O. has come." he said, "and
if Miss Bardon will excuse you for
just a minute, would like' to speak
to you," , .
Basil bowed with military pre,
eisdoni and hurried off, while the
other men crowded closer round
Diana and begged for the honor of
a dance,
`Torgive me, boys," she said
pleadingly, "my head Aches a little,
I think if I went out into the air for
a minute or two it •might do me
good. ,I—I don't seem to brave been
alone ail dray," she added, a trifle
wildly. '"One has quite a lot to. think
of, you knave, qn one's] cast night of
bingie blessedness:''
They grave in to her whim im-
mediately, moving aside to let her
puss 'their eyesi filled with admiration
us her lovely slander figure with its
golden' crown of silky' 'hair passed
between their ranks,
Diana had been popular with the
.regiment from the first glance they
had had of her. Her sweet and un-
affected manner, her freshness and
utter freedom from that conceit
which se often mars beauty, had
completed, the conquest; TheY
loved her one and all, and thought
that Chalmers had, won a prize
indeed.
The girl drew a deep, .gasping
threat!). as she stepped into• the soli-
tude of the brilliant Indian' night.
The sky was an Intense blue, like
indigo velvet, studded with the large
glittering stars which 'seemed so
much larger and more brilliant than
the familiar ones she had looked at
all her life, They .swung like great
lanterns' in the vault above, she felt
that she had only to stand ou tiptoe
anti, reach out her 'hands to touch
them.
Here and there fireflies glittered
and danced like sparks from a bon"
fire, great moths hit her farce with
velvety wings, and, far off in the
distant jungle there sounded every
now an dithers weird', unearthly cries,
like the voices of ,evil •sgtrits, while
,permeating every other sound was
that eternal, ceaselesls music of the
East—the monotonous throbbing of
tom-toms.
Diana had never got used to that
eerie, monotonous, tuneless sound.
For her it held something sinister•
and, menacing.
It alike of alien •things, secret
People, mys!teldes and threats. For
her all the riddle of India lay in that
regular, almost insect-like thrum-
ming, which never varied, which
" went on and on.
/The moon, large and majestic,
swept into view, that same peaceful,
familiar moon which she had seem
silvering an English landscape so
many hunidrede of times.
Cb, that she were at honkie again,
looking at that same calm moon out
of her bedroom window in her
brother's' house, seeing it turn the
stretching pasltures to silver; the
green, fresh, beaubiiul pastures' of
Engand wlhere the quiet, kindly
Cattle stood knee deep in luscious
gratis!
England, so far away ,so hrcred-
ibly remote, that she felt she should
never win its shares again!
And as she thought sof home a
great and burning longing for her
own country swept over Diana and
mingled with her growing dread of
what the dawn was bringing.
Panic seized her in an .'icy grip
_,She told herself that she had been
a wicked fool to let things reach this
stage wisare there was no turning
back, nn retreat.
She was wronging Basil for more
to be marrying him with this secret
shrinking and revolt than it she had
told frim the whole- ]hitter trutlh at
Brat.
But it was boo lata now!
'This] time tomorrow Slee
shuddered so violently that she had
•to• stand still, while a stifled groan
Chrysler Announces Executive Changes
C. W. CHURCHILL
Appointed President
JNO. D. MANSFIELD
Appointed Chairman of the Board
CHRYSLER Corporation of Canada Limited
announces the followingchanges in'its.
R.dxecutive Personnel Mr, ,no. D. Mansfield
retires at President and becomes Chairman of
the Board. Mr. C. W. Churchill for 8 years
Vice -President in Charge of Merchandising is
now President. Mr. R, S. Bridge, Works
R. S. BRIDGE
.Appointed Vice -President
Manager, is now a Vice -President. The re-
mainder of the Dictorate remains as formerly:
K. Crittenden, Vice -President and Operating
Manager, E. W. Knevals, Secretary -Treasurer.
The above officers with Jno. C. McGuire and
A. J. Shaw,, Directors, make up the Board of
Directors of the Corporation.
•
bust from her lips,
Miss Ilard'an"—a vodoe spoke close
belhincl her—"mild, you call? Are you
in trouble? Forgive me, I did. not
mean to intrude,'
For a second Diana stood stock
still, wills a quiver convulsed her
whole' body, Her heart iseemd tp
step beating, and ]hen resumed its
function with a throbbing intensity
that all but choked her,
Then, with an Immense effoid, she
colliected. all . her resources and turn-
ed quietly, to the newcomer.
"No, I did not speak," elle said
quietly. "Perhaps I sighed a little
deeply. I was looking at,•the moony
and thiniking of 'home, l and that
your India makes me a little home
sick in smite of all her glamour and
her beautcy."
The moonlight revealed quite
elearly the tall form and flair hair of
the, men approaching her. A lean,
sinewy form it was, for all its boyish
grace anti. beauty; for beautiful, in
the mesloulline sense, Harry Lintot
certainly was!
'It was date beauty of a perfectly
propontbioned man Instinct with
health and virile masculinity • yet
possessing all the oharun of youth.
He was as fair as Diana, but the
tropics had bronzed his skin and
bleached his hair almost flaxen. His
eyes •sihowed blue as an, English sky,
and his features -were clear -cot
Saxon !n every line.
'It is natural that you Should stilt
regret England." he said gravely.
"We all do, in varying degrees, at
first, but .it will net ,hurt so much
after a little. India will lay her
magic touch upon, you, ,and yo -1 will
learn to love her. I-1' saw yon
come out here end, as I have had no
apportunity to see you -earlier, I
thought you would forgive me if T
tolloweal you to give you my best
wishes.'"
'She bowed her .head silently, No
hint of the emotions filling her
showed in her quiet poise.
She was wishing, in dumb misery,
that she did not love this mean go
wildly, So insanely, so wickedly --she,
wh'o to m-orrow pionld be Basil
Chalmers' wife?
"Hew stbramge to think that this is
the same moon- which shines on
England:" she nmurintlred'., looking uP
at the cloudless siky with lbs. myriad
glittering points of light, "And—I
shall never see it shining there
Ylsadni„ wedding
"Mists' Baadout What a strange But she lurid gone too far' GO CO ! ..
Mug to say!" her'companion ex -1 bads on. her troth now. Slee could
claimed, "Of comae you will see I, not place that last unforgivable in. t
the moon• chine 'upon your own � suit Woo. Basil, whose only fault,
country again! -Why should you sitter all, lay in; loving her too much.
net?„4t ].7lhere was no.
" Zt iui4 net
be 'the siam'o me_ retit"atyes. Alttoo ,Ghastett rentalned waas to
never the identicalDiana, Barden play"the game;
any more," she said a little wildly. "1 15ust be married in. the m:oru-
"Girts are never 'the 'same when leg, mast' 1 not, Harry?" she nitnr
they have been anarrled, Captain mut'e'd: •
Lintot. The original Diane Bardon There was at ourIous compoumddn g
will thou .ito-nlgl t. To -morrow a new of childish dependence and, mature
entity will take her place" decision In her voice, It w.it roi
Harry Lintot was silent. He did she begged h!rsn to cofdrau' horas imas her
not know wheat' to say. A hundred ,resolve, to .strengthen her for the
conflicting emotions fought within sacrifice by his agreement.
Trim; "You mnoat tie married to-mornow"
No woad of love, of secret' under- he said] grarety, "Auld m'ay life lie I
standdnig, had ever passed. (.•betweeae good to you. ,I pray that it may—:I
this( girl and himiselt, and yet each believe it will. Things often turn
knew inevitably tIhat they were in oat for the best, you n,know. I
love. lief an
d•
timate true, attvaye do if one tries to
It was a curious leaping of theWhata.t is right. d have always
s
inner spirit of each of them towardthatbeal • it haus rat
the other. No uttered words had do w6siledi me. - 3bl think I olein to bid
Rem knew that Diana tanned the
been necessary.necessary.held to that
good night"
As well as if she had hold him She turned 'to Wan blindly, her
hands outstretched, all her heart in
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tmelsionate lore which had sprung ult
in his heart for her ak their very
Rust meeting.
(Presently he said, rather hoarsely
"Them. -the wedding takes place
temorrow?"
She turned her golden -head away,
so that he should not see the misery
in her eyes.
Oh, God, if she could only die,
she thought wildly, here, in this
Peaceful solitude, wrapped round by
the tropical] darkness; with Hairy
,peside her!
Tf only something, some
could happen that this
miracle,
hated
the piteous lovely eyes upraised to
And as they stood, faltering there
)upon the threshold of their fare-
well, .a sudden wild uproar burst
ulon the still night.
TO BE CONTINUED.
Men of 30,40,50
PSP, VIM, VIGOR, Subnormal!,
Went normal pep, vim, vigor, vitalityr
Tay Oetrox Tonle Tablets. Contains
Ionia, stimulants, oyster elements—
aids to normal pep atter 30, 40 or 80.
Get a special introductory size for only
664. Try this aid to normal pep and vim
today. For sate at all good drug stores.
i
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