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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Advance Times, 1927-04-21, Page 7p', Thursday, April zist x927 'nit:VERY fortune has had a foundationl. Every' foundation, in the first instance„ is laid with the first few dollars saved. Start to save now and lay your foundation. Save seriously—save consistently. For money in the Bank is the buffer against misfortune' and the barometer of future prosperity, >l1 WINGHAM 'BRANCH, 'A. M. BISHOP, Manager. Made only from hard Western wheats, Purity Flour is rich in gluten —the energy giving and body building food. Purity, klour is best for all your'baking,and will supply extra nourishment' to the children, in cakes, pies, buns and bread. Send 10c in .-tan: hs Jroorir .700-recipe,Purity Flo, Cook Book. sea Wmiteen Canada Flour Mills Co. Limited . Toronto. Montreal, Ott w'a,;SaintJohn. gnmenanuonan Enos iia ::,; simim nits s®intimnal ■ THaE. HYDRO SHOP:ix. ■ ■ la Plug Fuses; _. Standard Lamps, 5 fair... ■ . Hydro "Lamps, 60 watt.... . 1 " Hydro Lorain, . 40 watt and A Few Specials. • • e 0 ■ .▪ . 05 e ■ 1.001 .... .35 25 watt.... .30 s ■ ::' • Vacuum' Cleaners and : Flour 'Polilshers .' t ., Foit r. stent. ■ to © ■ II _ Wingham Utilities Commission al ▪ Crawford Block. • Phone 156. 1 ■ \ r®it■■ mInti ( roes a®tiff®®■®®®■.®■ 101111 11■®Nliiii i Don't be too easy. on your hens, Make them produce more eggs', They will, it you give them'a daily' dose of Pratte Poultry Regulator in: tlieirfeed. ` Lots a E gs—GLIARAN- TEED—If you use proved egg -maker. Your money back if 'not satisfied. Pribt �' cru i .. u! �, u�w-1d Peelers att r a a �� Writs for PKATTS POULTRY BOOK F E! ThoPRtTT FOOD 00.sf CAULK l ted' 328 Cmrla.w.AVe'.'-roron6o G Own Sot] . tiepin fill Beni fotrYou aild Batey 2ioo� lr Protect the Growing Foot Trainedsalespeople will, fit the child with a pair of these- comfortable, long wearing shoes. Shaped to allow the foot ample room, to grow, they have' a cushion- inner sole to protect the tender foot. And since they have been known to out- last t w• o , ordinary pairs 'hof shoes, "Hurlbuts" prove moat economieal in the lona run. 12 W. J. GREER, Wingham, - Ontario. No. 507 A tyle with neat stitching" and the new rolled edge and heel -effect. Note"too loud" for the young man' of 40. "90 ` miles an hour" styles --. s `-port model lines, limousine comfort and seri-balloon toes, are features of these Invictus Shoes. • D sums • 1�, .lata 1r s Bilis Proress,, Copyright, 1926, by Collier's Weekly' and G. P. Putnam Sons "Bill Grimm's Progress" Is a pleturization by Fiin, Booking Offices of America; -Inc., (F. B. O.) of H. C, Wltwer's stories of the same name. SYNOPSIS Barbara Baxter, • a federal detec- tive, patches Jack. Fairfax bootleg- ging, but Bill Grimm, although Ms enemy, saves him from being jailed. BIZ and. Pansy Pilkington both come to New York to make their fortunes, .and in the city Fairfax hound,- Bill until Bill becomes a prize-fighter to knock out F'airfax'S man. Bill becomes over -confident and is knocked out by Keeley. d. return brut is arranged. A. half hour passed and no sign of Knockout Keeley. Twenty utes more, and still he hadn't en- tex ed the ring. What the devil was keeping him.? "I'd been all charged up Tarin' to go, when I stepped through the ropes, but now the shrieking, sarcastical comments of the gallery and this unexpected wait begin to seep slowly, through my confidence. Se= rio'ns doubts; questions frena no jl wheres begin to attack me! while the big crowd rocked the house with cheers, Knockout Kee- ley finally stalked down the -aisle with his handlers and entered the ring., cruelly calm and collected. Mewas all business—a butcher re- porting for . Work at the /abattoir! We stepped to the middle of the ring efor the referee's instructions, and I nearly slugged a newspaper photographer for exploding a flashlight right in my face. Kee- ley grinned at my nervousness, and, schooled in every trick of the ring, he cut. in on the referee with a cool, "Do I walk to the ropes each time I knock this fellpw down?" With the dousing of all lights but the blinding battery above the ring and : the sudden, deathly ad - said, I might as well go the whole hog; For the first time in the fight I took the offensive, ; wowing the crowd and stopping the parade to the exits by sending Keeley back on his heels with a stiff right to the head. 1 followed that up by whipping a left and right to the body, and Keeley danced around,' changing feet and looking serious. "Where's 'at smile now, Keeley, youbig bum?" , screamed Left Hook O'Brien, and the crowd/ joined in the jeers, quick to switch to the man in front Keeley fainted with hit left to make a opening for his deadly right, but I just . grinned a bloody ` grin at him and • hooked anther. one-two oto the body. He. clinched and looked wildly to his corner for ad- vice, but I shook him off and drovehim around the ring with a sterni of punches that had him hanging on for his life at the bell. The crowd was just ten thousand raving lunatics! Hurt, weary and apparently dura+ founded at my ability to take ,4t, Keeley tried desperately to end the mill in the third, but,• throwing caution to the winds and science with it; I traded punch for punch with him, and it was Keeley who first dived into a clinch for .pro- tection. , We battled along the roles at close quarters, and Kee- ley looked worried when I took two hard rights to the jaw without batting a eyelash, putting both gloves to his 'head_ fn return. The crowd was now begging me to knock him out, and I was cer- tainly' trying to oblige! Keeley went into a clinch, holding my armors pinned at my sides and ;try- ing to bring his head up under my chin. These unfair tactics soon gat me boiling, and I sent the neighbors' children into a fresh up- roar .by dropping nig hands and ' walking to the center of the ring. "Quit wrestling, and fight,, you If they hadn't swept hi at up, he'd be there yet. fence of the mon, my°'bonfidence had completely deserted me. l3utch's orders to me was ,forgot- ten -1 could only remember that in tit.) other fight Keeley had k:;ocked ne:. cold! Hypnotized, I walked to : meet him in mid -ring. The next thing I. knew I was` dumbly listeni:.g to the 'referee counting over nle, "-six-seven--- eight—„ 1 was up at nine. Down again! Up again. Down again! You'll have to ,excavate the old 'dies if You wish a punch -by -punch account of that fearful first roui.d. I'm a bit clouded on it myself. All I can remember is th tt the thing was as one-sided a. a painting! I was sprawled on the boards either five or twenty-eight times, without the slightest idea of how I got there. I do recall the cus- tomers razzing tne unmercifully as I fell on my stool at the gong. Butch., O'Brien and Shifty Jones • worked' frantically over inc during the minute's rest, and 1 managed. somehow to stagger out for the second frame of this massacre. The coldly smiling Keeley 'begin where he left off in the first round and pounded Me from pillar to post. I didn't have brains enough to dive into a clinch and hang on, though Butch howled himself hoarse begging me to 3.o so. Already there was yell* of "Stop It!" and many was milling towards the exits, ,convinced'I was through.. _The 'referee kept looking to my corner for the sponge to come,. splashing. into the ring, but had Butch Ford ever tossed it in I'd of murdered hip:, 'I didn't want. to lose standing op—Knockout Keeley Might kill ma, like he did poor Young Thomas, bat he wash t going to make me quit! And now a funny thing began to happen to toe. Keeley was tiring and panting from bra *W'n . sflorts to pot me away. iiia blare nes Diens *courant and lees :.rushing too. The puniahr;zent I'd 'taken seemed to have the amazing effect of Steadying my nerves, and my head waaa cleamdg, Slowly .it be- gin to dawn on me that I wet win- ning a ,much more important fight sty battle with the memory of that knockout at Keeley's hands! Like a flasai,: on top of that thoughht, cants a realization Which braced Me like a electric shook I'd taken everything Knock- out Keeley had, and I was Still on my feet! Something kept shriek• tug in fry ears, "Bee's shot his bolt; go after him now; boot him dorm -*friar all yours t as A cold, deadly raga took;, 'the ;peace of my nervousness, encl I glared at the. Still stoning Wiley out of fay , good eye. If itis was the Sport of beaste, tike Oarbara big false alarm!" I half sobbed at Keeley and turned him completely around with a sizzling right to the face when he charged in. He was on the ropes at the gong, trying to lose on a foul. Twice he threw stiff rights inches below the top of my trunks and the' referee obeyed: the angry crowd and waned him. The bell found Keeley slow to J: get to mid -ring. We both led lefts, and Kealey jmmediately tried to clinch, as ordered,•from his cor- ner, but I beat him off with,a sud- denly discovered straight left. Keeley missed with a torrid upper- cut and then staggered me with one that connected. Victory in' his eyes, he rushed eagerly to follow up his advantage, and I 'slipped to my knees in trying to thick his winging Slaves. Hop- ping quickly. up, I ran into a wild right which put me on Queer Street. My knees sagged. I was badly shaken up and I heard yells of "Go on, Keeley, he's out on his feet! Do Iike you done to him be- fore!" That yell rallied me. Keeley was not going to do to me like he done before. No, by Heaven! Butch told inc afterward I charged Keeley like a maniac, holing, "No—no-- no!" Keeley stopped; my rush with two winked lefts to the mouth which brought blood,' but he was short with another jab, and, steady- ing myself, I crashed a right to his Jaw, toppling him to the floor. wouldn't take a count, but sprang. up full of flglht, and, both punch. drunk, we astlood toe to toe tossing tem in till it sounded like a race riot outside -the ropes. Hats, cans, programa and whet not were being i thrown into the; air by the fight - mad mob, , n ltrih kept. up: a =tin- Unmindful utin Unmindful of Keeley's daxsperate bow., 1 •.finally backed him Into a neutral corner. ' Groggy myself, 't anted for hie wind with .nay left. ad he .fell for It, dropping his guard for,. a half second. A half second was enough, for In a I *hipped over my right JO his jaw' with every quivering ouaice of my undrod and ninety pounds blrohinil fe as h i t 11 le ir lak. • It wasn't a' OttiMli tom my bad em zed body; that blow cable from my soul ,a protest egainst tate de. vered with a dire -mince glove, the oat punch I had haft in ire, and I t I{eeley have it! I wasn't going to 0 be a, loser again! Keeley. tottered Lor a instant, then claacb,ed tans down to the can. vas as stiff as a board, and if they anti swept frim up he'd be there But whet I` slaw saiaettehed ere motioniesd at flit' feet Vas tug wfi wealcntllleesf; fears avid ri'annor Mt of the tents to stick to fray b to the end! er.o be Continued) 1 , Money Savers Far this weekend The Dominion Stores carry a full line of all well Itnawn advertised lines of groceries. You can obtain your favourite brands at any of our stores and always aZ a noticeable saving, The merchandise also reaches you quicker and fresher We invite you to inspect the stock in our stores at your leisure. Nationally Advertised Cereals Kellogg's Corn Flakes 2 range. mile Shredded Wheat lime Post Toaatues 2 pkgs. 232c `.;•con a Quaker Corn Flakes 3 laky.• 27c.: &'®s9tgt� moan a 231,P:::: gDDcgc. 27c :New easoaaga i�io.20tun PPtep �ran9 (Kellogg's) 2 tor 25c " Maple et;', Puffed W eat 2 for 2' c Syrup Cieri{t'at or Aylmer fr? ear's ours t ,•:rw,es' .Napes it' r., Hayfield eraand Machine ,;33 ac Maple Leaf M.takes Pocket Bine Crown larand C kyr, szes 29e '+'t g, �scs, i -n, 2 for 3,9RL" C soap` ;3 cakes Fry's fareair•"sas* Drink ante Enjoy IeEILSia;,`.Solt •Mend TEA in -Cartons only }ftt; ' 1b., 4lb. or y, ib. �i {{ Sia.m olor., eelle7�c anylon, Assam lb. and Trayyncore D. 5.1. Bunt 5�ca • A ,a. For fine fabrics 20, tie Telfe Tea iseults 3 lb. 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Already enthusiastic owners by the thousands are wholeheartedly endorsing this unusual car—are praising its arresting beauty, its long, low lines, its fleetness, its countless new refinements, its up-to-the-minute cot*. pleteness. Even their most optimistic expec. tatiotis have been more than realized in the New and Finer Pontiac Six. If you have not seen and inspected the New and Finer Pontiac Six at close range, --if you. have not investigated the new, lower prices which are making Pontiac Six the outstanding car value of its held you owe it to yourself to do so without delay. For, in the New and Finer Pontiac Six, General Motors presents its latest achievement :its answer to the need for a trulyfine,low priced six -cylinder car.Yon are invited to come in and see it for yourself. AT NEW LOW PRICES - W. J. BROWN W1nggh :., a , lint. U NF AL CANADA, i'.I7!a Ii fa