PAGE EIGHT - THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1946 lB dB add add add abd 0b Oh 00D OND ORD OND OND OND ON 09, Land aad And Lad Lad ac dandy 2 dB SOD OD Ld ad acd aod asd asd as COD ID SOD COD ASD. A Tale of Great Love 2 dB SAD BED SOD ND BND S90 THD G90 090 EN HO NO S00 NI FIO TNO 6 wlll CHT HTH fh lt had been warmth anywhere; in her heart or anywhere, "Yes." Lady Mary, g out tea, added surprisingly, "But I often think we pay too much at- tention to it--to its whims and iis fancies, and to its traditions, too." "Do you?" said Kit, "Certainly, That tradition, for must be taken straight to Wan- derslay ect rubbish! Do you know," she turned to Ginnie, "I wanted so much to go tc Spain for my honeymoon. But of course Kit's father took me to Wanders- lay. Such an unfriendly house, 1 used to find it--at first, It stared. 1 remember how I cried--" "I haven't cried," said Ginnie softly. "I never cry." And with those words so clearly spokes, it was, Kit thought, as if she defied her husband and her fate. "But the garden," went on Lady Mary, "was always good to me. Are the polyanthuses coming instance, that the wretched bride : Press Baron's Family Arrives 'of the district Problems Relating To T.B. Survey In order to inform the public of some pertinent facts regarding the importance of taking advantage of facilities undertaken the sponsorship of this campaign first at the. request of | las! Answered Answer: The Kiwanis Club has the Ont, T.B, Association, and sec~ ondly because of the individual de- sire to render service on the part of the members, a How is this campaign financ- Answer: Your purchase of Christ- mase seals last year provided the necessary funds for this campaign. 8. How long does this campaign Answer: Nov, 13-Dec. 7, inclustya, 9, Are the sponsors VASE ers of this campaign receiving any remuneration? Answer: None whatever, It 1 purely a voluntary service, Edinburgh --~ (CP) -- Mrs, Hel» en Bannerman, author of many children's books including "Li Black Sambo," has died here, Pe a > glints, Be sponsored Oshawa - wanis Club, between November 13 and December 7, the following and answers have been which at the same time will serve to clarify certain points which jusy arise, al 1 What happens a family if the breadwinner has to.take a period of treatment? Answer: Individual funds have been set aside to take care of such cases, 2. If the Mother requires treat- ment what will happen to the fam« ily isis she is undergoing treat. Arrangements will be pply household assistance as well as subsistance, No hard- ship will result, 8. I am rather hesitant about accepting examination, Are my fears groundless/ Answer: You need have no fear as this examination is practically identical with having your portrait taken, and your friends can accom- pany you if you wish. Only 3 minutes are required. 4. In case a canvasser doesn't call upon me what should I do? Answer: Extra appointment cards Bo Eo RL Rd "'anits" as the ideal plan for young men who want old-age security along with family protection in their own life insurance estates . , , 33> Descriptive toldor may be seouren from our nearest office, R. F. AKER, C.L.U, Branch Manager 22 Alger Bldg, « Oshawa | ad It was a clear, soft afternoon-- |on well? I put in'such a lot." a day in which color seemed the "don't more vivid against the greys and| "Those bright Pictured aboard the Ile de France as the vessel docked in New York from Europe are the Marchioness of Huntly and her brother, the Hon. An- thony Berry, children of Viscount Kemsley, head of the Kemsley Newu- will be available at various down- town stores, a list of which will be published shortly. rimrose things you were looking at this duns of foreground, distance and | that , Ginnie descended the s before the portico. Kit was wait- ing in the car, for today they were to make together their first call on his mother. Ginnie's coat of wolverine swung round her. indeterminate shade was that of this spring day. Her round cap was of the same fur, Below jt her pointed face was pale and yet vivid, with a vividness that came not only from the touch of lip- stick but from the long eyes. She was putting on her gloves. He had time to Observe hes. a she 3 was more than pretty; she was beau- tiful. It was as it spring herself advanced toward him. She seated herself in the car. She did not speak--only that shy ce. The car slid forward the long straight avenue. He thought, his hand on the wheel, of how today a month had passed since their wedding. A strange month; for he had not cared to follow his original plan to take her abroad after a week at Wan- derslay. His was no ordinary mar- riage. Indeed, it was no marriage at all, He flung himself into the familiar work of running his estate and he took Ginnie on his workaday expeditions about the place. is people--the tenants and the laborers--liked her, he found, She had a gentle manner. Ginnie didn't look at her hus- band's face. She could see it al- ways, without I . She thought with apprehension of Lady Mary, whom she would see in a few minutes. She thought of the Hunt Ball which tomorrow Ee od pox erslay. er with Jmbappinéss. For Jerry had been invited. And he had a ted in spite of the di rate little note that she had written, implor- ing him for her sake not to come, begging him to see that it would be all wrong to come. "Unlucky" too, she had said, knowing how superstitious Jerry was. But he had taken no notice. He liked, she reflected sadly, to stay at Wan- derslay, He ed the park and the horses and Wisbech and the size of the place. He liked to write on notepaper with that heading it didn't seem to him dreadful that he should meet Lady Mary again or sleep under Kit"s roof. . .. The car had drawn up at the ry. ni par. appeared. nie, following her toward Lady Mary's drawing room, felt a renewed tremor. Kit's mother, she guessed, hadn't really wanted her as a daughter-in-law. "Her welcome would be chilling-- It seemed strange to see Lady Mary in the small chintz-filled room--she, who had fitted so well in the spaces at Wanderslay. "Dear child--" after she had kissed Ginnie she still held her hand. "You're looking very pretty! But, my dear, you're fhinner! You're too thin, Isn't she, Kit?" "I think she is," he replied Quietly, after greeting his mother. "Then you should see that eats more," Lady Mary told him. To Ginnie she said, "You have fate os. TH an 's wrong. same Kit," she added as Ginnie looked up at her from" a buffet by the mild wood fire, "you should have her painted as she is now." "I probably shall," said Kit, and smiled, Of what was he thinking? One couldn't tell. But Ginnie was thinking of Anastasia Stone, whose portrait also had been painted as a bride and which hung on the stairs at Wanderslay. Gazing into the blue flicker flames, she wore a little smile o goodwill, as if she were listening to what Kit and his mother were saying. But in fact she hardly heard their voices. Her thoughts had slipped into an accustomed groove. She thought of the past and of the present, not of the future; her mind shrank from that. She thought of Kit's cour- tesy and coldness. She thought of her own efforts to be as he would like. It all made no difference. One would wander forever in this frozen country. And one's heart would feel forever--like this--as it it were Sracking. ah "Is Ginnie's charming brother coming to the ball?" asked Lady ot 12% PH 0a a p rides didn't come." felt her cheeks grow hot. Did "Kit notice, she ered that | color? Yes, he missed n A "And how do you like Wan- , my dear?" Lady Mary -Gon looking up, met the and kindness in her she | his lips compresse morning," said Kit. Gently, Lady Mary smiled, not scorning ome's ignorance. It was, Ginnie thought, almost as if she liked one. But of course she didn't know what her daughter-in-law really was-- "They're one of my favorite flowers," she was saying. "I wish I'd known," Ginnie told her with earnestness. "I would have picked you some." "Thank you, my dear. Perhaps | next time, You must let her solfie} quite often, Kit. I'll get some young people to meet her--the daughters of the people who will be calling on her--" Ginnie accepted a piece of bread and butter. It felt like saw- dust in her mouth. How strange, she thought, that kindness should make one feel so clearly one's un- happiness. Yes, she had never felt more desolate than at this mo- ment. And really there was no reason, In this room there was just a kind elderly woman, terri- fying no longer. it's glance was only meditative as he lay back in his chair. The photographs of him as a little boy, the tea table, its old china winking in the light of the fire--it all looked serene, as if everything were as it should be; quite all right-- it 'was as if she and Kit might be going back presently to a happy home. "My darling," he might call her, as before he had ca. her-- "And is Kit kind to you?" Lady asked, Ginnie glanced up. She looked from face to face, She gave a bright silly smile, "Oh, yes--I--" the words choked in her throat. She half rose as if she might escape. 'Please--" She put her hands before her face and burst into tears. *. 0 Kit stood, his back to his study fire. He had dined alone, Coffee, untasted, had been taken away. Now, his hands in his pockets, he stared, meditating, at the floor. Again and again he saw Ginnie's tear-stained face. .He heard her muffled voice as she addressed his mother: "You mustn't think-- I am so sorry--" hapless little jumble of lies and of efforts to snatch at some rag of conceal- ment, Poor little naked creature, shiv- ering in a bitter wind. It was thus that he saw her. And it was he who had set her in the cold. The fact that his mother should have witnessed those tears mat- tered less than if anyone else had done so. She, at least, would keep all such things to herself. But he remembered the reproach in her voice as, Ginnie having got into the car, she had drawn him back for a moment into the porch. "Whatever reason there may be for this is bad," she declared. "So young," she had murmured. "Too une, to have married you, Well--and what, he wondered, d, shoulda man do who learns on his wedding night that his wife has been a sneak, acting for touts? That she is, self-confessed, a little adven- turess--at eighteen years of age! He might have dealt with her next day in a manner to make the day memorable to her. And from then on forgiven her, loved her as his bride, Yes, if she had not also learned that she had mar- ried him without love. Then why should he feel now as if somewhere there was a light in his thoughts? 'Because--the an- swer came slowly--her tears this papers Ltd. They were met on their arrival by the Hon. Oswald Berry (left), twin brother of the Marchioness, "After spending a short time in the U.S. they will sail for Bermuda. Their father's huge newspaper inter- ests will be spotlighted in the press probe ordered by the Brithsh govern- ment, 5. Why should the results of my examination go to a physician? Answer: Naturally, he is the only one capable of prescribing the prop- Fe Why is th X y e campaign support- ed by the Kiwanis Club? » COMPANY evening had shown him that his coldness had risked breaking her. Didn't that also show that per- haps she did love him a little? (To be continued) LEAD. 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