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Page 56 text:
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.Q .v I IN A LITTLE WHILE 'Helen and I were dining together on the last night of the old year as we had done on the last night of every year since we had known each other's friendship, You remember Dr. Meadows, she suggested timidly, toying with her fork. And you remember that I never liked himf' I replied more boldly than I thought I could, for I knew that it was hurting her. Inwardly I trembled and I am sorr she said very sorr . , 1 . Y Because doesn't tell me, Helen, and we have never taken so long to tell each I have promised to marry himf' she said so calmly that I was frightened. For a long time, there was silence, an eternity of silence out of which ghastly visions stared. I struggled desperately against the temptation to be sorry for myself at losing Helen, but the sickening sensation that this news brought was not born of a selfish motive. The heart was more deeply seated. This golden-hearted girl, with her high ideals, her supermoral standards, her priceless Faith, was bartering her life for less than a penny. The man of whom she spoke shared none of these things. He could not, or would not, understand the motives that actuated them. He scoffed, she confessed later-and a real friend can be very frank in confessing-at that which she held dearer than life itself, and yet-she promised to marry him. Why, Helen, I said, when I could finally manage words, you did not care for Dr. Meadows out there in France. I hoped that she would not detect the But he always cared for me, she protested feebly. - Yes, I remember that he did, and to my mind it was his only redeeming The thought of Dr. Meadows in the Riviera was not so inspiring. I remembered him especially the night the poor soldier and the nurse were Hung to death over the embankment, and I wondered how Helen could forget, or how she could care But perhaps she was not thinking of Dr. Meadows that night in France. Lovely Helen, watching the old year die beneath a chill, December sky and calling life treacherous. Then pledging our friendship that we might come to- gether once a year to tell each other the things we had, the things we hoped to do. Surely there must be something in such a friendship as this, that could help her We postponed our theatre engagement that we might have more time for talking. She was to leave me early the next day. Only what was left of this night was mine. Very tenderly, at first, I pleaded with her: then I urged, then brought my logic on familiar grounds. The night grew into early morning, and second after second and second after second dragged wearily, without the least The story of my brother, whose life had been wrecked by an unfortunate mar- riage, was well known to her. I told it to her again, without avail. We had seen a score of war-time wives and husbands cast aside, like so many unwanted play- things, and in nearly every case because a Catholic conscience and a conscienceless , 52A l I z. -'il'-Q' 'F 5 fs ,- and there had been five of them. . V:: l: I felt what was coming. - And why? I asked. f Becausei-, I other things before. -1 tears in my voice. Z virtue. : for a man who was so inhuman. 5 now. - 3 sign of victory. tie had failed to bind. F 5 QE ig - I 'LXQEESl11IIIiIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIEIEQSSZSE. ll I. E A N I N G S fESP-Zi-ifHIEIIIIllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIJIEHEWZZ--'?-'iiffzfeb T' a u V . 51V629054.16-Y.'arQirislIliIlilllliIIlllllllIlllllllllllllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIllIIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIllllllllIlllIIIIlllllllllIlllllllllllllllllIIIlllllllllllllllllIIlllllllllIllllllillllilllll! ,Mel-M. .frZf-P2522 ,K ,
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Page 55 text:
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. 4, A G L E A N I N G S fi?-1'i9.HIhllllllllllllllllIIIIIIIIIIIIQIRSIEZYX 'T+J,,f5L4:C6 ' ' mi. Q rl' THE IDEAL BUSINESS GIRL Sad is the day for anyone when he becomes absolutely satisfied with the work that he is doing, the thoughts that he is thinking, and the life that he is living! When there ceases to be forever beating at the doors of his soul a desire to do something larger which he feels and knows that was meant for him to do. This quotation may also apply to the Business Girl, for sad is the day, indeed, N when she becomes absolutely satisfied with the work that she is doing. It is her duty to give every moment of her time to the interests of her employer. As soon as she becomes satisfied with her work she ceases to be of use in the office, since she does not try to improve. Improvement is a great necessity for every steno- grapherg for if she does not develop she must lose the efliciency that she has. There is no standing stillg she must either progress or retrogress. Therefore the .. modern stenographer, must strive to improve herself daily. ' Another and very vital point in the business world is Punctuality . This - 5 reigns high in the eyes of the employer. A man may have a stenographer who is ' efficient, courteous and honest, but if she lacks punctuality all her other qualities - are as it were trampled under foot. What employer will tolerate a girl who ill- uses all discipline by coming in late morning after morning? Few, if any. And they are not to be condemned for it. A business man has said: I expect from my stenographer the same service that I get from the sun, with this exception: The artificial light, but I pay my 2 ' stenographer to work, six days out of seven and to be punctual. I also expect 5 her to radiate my office with sunshine and with sympathetic interest in the work ' K. I am doing. E ,Q It is the spirit in which one lives and works as well as the volume of the work, I that makes her profitable. She must be dependable, agreeable and courteousl E 5 Nothing so under-rates the value of a stenographer as a disagreeable .way of : ph Q 'P speaking. The voice with the smile wins the hearts of all, and cheers those, who f ' Q are in constant contact with her. The Ideal Business Girl does all her work-and does it well. Above all things,. E ' she does not have one eye on her work while the other watches the clock. This I W 305155 latter detail is one that is very seldom of any assistance to a business girl. s f 'Q'fgQf5,'3:.? If the girl who is entering upon a career in the great business world will faith- - Til? fully follow these simple rules, she will be a woman of Whom the employer will A have a reason to be proud. e ' fini Try then, Business Girl, to master your defects and to better yourself, for, I lf-,M 4 Sad is the day when we become satisfied with what we do and think. I ' .- ffn9:5E,'i MARIE KOPF, : Commercial, '26. - A I , if Gi.
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Page 57 text:
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s st wtlfxfus:axeL1Iuuuanuuuumnulumens:-as 'P L li A N 1 N G S 235-Z'i9IHl!lllllllllllllllllllllllIllill!2?fEL'Df'-T'P if e Helen always paced the floor when things went wrong. She walked now with a more jerky step than I had ever seen-up and down, up and down, until I thought the very boards cried out in protest. Suddenly she stopped before the picture of an old French Abbey where we had gone together one day while we were in France. Our hearts were heavy that day. I wondered if Helen remembered. We met a kindly old Monk there who heard our confessions, and with absolution poured into our souls, that God-given consolation which must be a fore-taste of Heaven. VVhen we were leaving, he handed Helen a beautiful colored card on which was pictured a cell-the rough wood bed, the bare wall, a pale, pathetic Christ on a hand hewn Cross, and over the cell doors the words that the good Father told us had steeled the heart of many a disconsolate novice: In a little while, F.ternity.', No matter how hard the task, he said, how heavy the cross, cannot one bear it 'for a little while'? There was only one card. Helen begged me to take it. You will need its inspiration more than I, she said, laughingly, and because I so adored her, I agreed and took it. Now, the charm of that day, the consolation we received, the help we were given to carry on when every fibre cried out against it-these memories came back with new and greater emphasis. Dear Lord, I breathed, watching the change so perceptible in her face. I have done all I can, won't you please do the rest? A few moments later, the clock struck four. Four hours of the new year gone and in a little while-Eternity. Helen yawned. I.et's go to bed, she said, you can scold me some more in the morningf, In the morning, I laughed, and went after her, as I had always doneg but this once, not in the spirit of surrender. We tramped to Mass through the blinding snow that had been falling all night. I sat beside her in the pew, praying, hoping, thinking, wondering. She prayed better than I long and earnestly, with her head bent so low and her slim, lovely body so that once I stooped to listen. When she hnally raised her head, her eyes were bluer because of tears. There was about her then something of the old Helen that I once had known. She left me after breakfast, promising nothing, but taking with her the picture of the old abbey-cell. - Some days later her letter came, as I knew it would. I do not know how to explain it, she wrote. Something in the picture, something in the memories it stirred, something of that old spirit of sacrifice that took us through those terrible days in France, or perhaps--and I guess, after all, it is really this-something in your prayers, in the pleading face of that pictured Christ, in the thought of those words, 'In a little while-Eternity'. The little while may mean many long, hard years, but I am not going to count their length. I am only going to ask for help for each day, even if I do have to 'live through' with every fibre of my broken heart, crying out against it. You will continue to pray, I know, and when the pain eases, as I know it shall, 'in a little while,' I will write to you again. I folded her letter close to my heart. ' And perhaps- , 1 added my grateful reflections to those it contained. I never saw Helen after that memorable New Year's Day. She had earned for herself the merits of a long life of suffering indeed in a little while. Three months had barely passed when I was summoned to her deathbed. I wonder if you would not like to have this again, said an oddly familiar voice, as we left the cemetery the day of her funeral. She prized it highly and 53 1 E d -Y. Q-5921IIIIIIEIIIEIIIIIlllllllllllllllllllllllIIlllllllIIlllllllIIllIIlllllllllllllllllIIllllIlllllllhlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllillIlllllllllllllIIIIIIIllllllllllllllllillllillIll' i itil'-tif Q 2
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