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The Wingham Advance Times, 1934-11-22, Page 6re WING -HAM ADVANCE -TIM S;. SYNOPSIS swift panic, "Don't let hien cone. i Ellen Church, 17 years old, finds can't pretend with hint much longer. 1�,erse f' alone in;the world with her And if he Comes, I'll never be able artist mother's Iasi warning ringing to do anything else but pretend!" in her ears, to "love lightly." Of the The taxi turned sharply through 'world she knew little. All her life the dawn, and made for the nearest she had livedalone with her mother • Park exit. in an old brown house in a small rur- al community. All her life, first as a Tony came the next day, slightly new baby, then a bubbling child, then before noon, looking a trifle older charming young girl :. shehad than he had in his tousled Pierrot posed for her talented mother who rostome. 'Seeming less sun -browned, sold her magizine cover painting , less sure of himself, but somehow ;through an art agent in the city . more dear than ever—infinitely more Mrs Church's broken life . •. the ; dear! Ellen; starting forward to meet unfaithful husband, his disappearance him, could Hardly hold back her arms and after seventeen years of sil-1—They seemed to be on springs - erace announcement of his death was on spring that dragged them forward at last disclosed to Ellen. The news toward him. of the husband's death killed Mrs. Ellen—she wasn't looking quite so Church. .. . Ellen, alone, turned to , t iv id herself, as she had in the brief the only contact she knew, the art costume of a page boy. Her hair was agent in New York. Posing, years of parted demurely in the middle, and posing, was her only talent so she she wasn't made up, She wore a was introduced to two leading ar- plain little dress of navy blue crepe,. .fists, Dick Alven and Sandy Macin- with white linen collar and cuffs, and tosh. Both used her as a model and small, strapped black slippers. . She both fell in lovewith her . . but was like a school girl in appearance. "Well?" she asked. The red rushed' up under the brown of the boy's cheeks, but he managed to speak just as nonchalantly as she had. "Very well, indeed!" he answered. "Oh, very-" And then, without quite knowing how they got there, they were in each other's arms, and he was kissing her oddly shaped winglike eyebrows. And she was quivering, close' to sobs, against his shoulder. For a moment they stood together, so. And they Tony spoke. "I guess," he said, "that settles itl We will be married as soon as pos- sible. How," his voice was close to breaking, "how could you send me home as you did, last night?" "This morning!" corrected Ellen. Tony's face had •a high, uplifted look. He paid no attention to the correction'. "You had me worried," Ed said; "stalling that way. Pretending that you hadn't' fallen for rue, and that my bank account was all that mattered." Ellen raised a slender hand-lialf in protest, .half in a gesture of with- drawal. Alen, trying to follow the warped Philosophy of her mother to "love lightly" resists the thought of love. Her circle of friends is small, artists and'two or three girl models. Ellen attends a ball with Sandy. While dancing a tall young naan claimed her and romance is born. 11TOW GO ON WITH THE STORY "But now," said. Ellen, "you'd bet- ter take me home. And then you'd better go home yourself, and go to bed and get some sleep. And when you wake . up, have black coffee— lots of it. I'm not saying have cof- fee," she endeavored to laugh, "be- came I think you need it, because I think you've been drinking or any- thing. You said you hadn't, and I believe you. Attd---" It was such a long speech, Ellen wished that she 'might give up the effort, that she 'might just stop talking . and let her head lie back on the broad shoulder :beneath the f'lerrot suit, "And, after `youIve had your coffee, sit back' and go over the facts in the case. And if you still feel the same way about marrying me, by noon tomorrow, come around and we'll get down to. cases. My name? It's Ellen Church. „I've been forgetting that you didn't Itnow who I was; either, You'll find that name below a,bell atthis—" she gave him a street number, "address. And if, after the sleep and the coffee and the thinking, you still want to go on . Well, a marriage license can be had, they tell me, up.toifaur! If we should happen to get together "Listen," said Ellen. "Stop and look and listen! You're going too fast, Tony you're assuming to much.. I didn't mean .to worry you last night and I wasn't stalling, either. I wasn't pretending not to like you, for I do like you far better than any of the other men I know. But I suppose it was, really, your bank account that finally sold me—on marriage, I mean. For," her heart thudded sickly at the. tomorrow, perhaps I'll let you buy falsehood, "I don't love you, not as me one. But if you," she was able, L love goes in novels. I won't ever love by gritting her teeth, to make her Llove that way. I've always said voice. seem: casual, 9f you don't show ;anyone marriage would have to be sort. up, I'll know you're completely nor-; of lukewarm to interest me, and I trial again; I'll probably be that way, haven't changed my mind! What I myself. No," all at once she was mean is, 1 don't Iove you madly. T. shivering violently, "don't kiss me— don't believe in love, not for girls, not now. Don't you dare kiss me! It's all right for men—with a man, If you come tomorrow, there may be love's only a gesture any way!" years of kissing ahead of us . If • "Most women," said Tony, and he you don't come, well have one less spoke with the conviction that every moment to forget." rich young man possesses, "would be Her heart. said, "Oh, God, don't let' afraid to talk as frankly as you do, him stay away." It said, also, in Ellen, if they really didn't care! A TICKLISH TASK Tll cyarc loading,; dynamite o scow (above) for Canadian$ pioneer - 'Mg in the Woman Lake district, there they do not worry 50 notch aleottt how retell gold goes out of the country ;as how much freight is coma in In the periods of spring and when access to this remote die h D.; trict is impossible, it is necessary ;'to has/et-an 'abundant supply of things essential to evergalay life. It is not a matter- there of ringing tip the corner grocery, but of a long hard traverse of difficult country' itt which so strange a corrintodity evert as dytia- etite is needed. Tleyd be afraid of losin my bank account—" Ellen tossed her head until the curls of it were all a -dance. "I'm not afraid!" she boasted. How could a boy guess that the boast Was so hollow? "I suppose," Tony went on, "that I'm sort ,of :old-fashioned, in some ways. But my mother and my father were married for thirty years. My father died just two months before nay mother went away, and when she followed him (and say what you will, it was heartbreak, for she hadn't been ill), she was calling—" the boy's voice shook, "calling his name. I be- lieve in that kind of marriage, my- self." Ellen's eyes were staring far away. "My mother loved my father until they both died," said Ellen. "And that," her imitation of Claire's shrug was piteous, "and that's why 1 don't believe in that kind of marriage. I want to get what I can out of life— I want to squeeze life dry, like a sponge. If you mary me, it will have to be on those terms, You're not to expect too much from me. Not too much love, or too much gentleness, or too much loyalty. Pll try not to do anything to put any sort of a blot on your name, you canpretty well count on me, there, because I'm; not the type! But I shall continue to have my own friends, and to go out: with them. And I'll keep on with my work, if I find I'm not busy en - Without quite knowing how they got there they were in each other's arms. ough, running my marriage. I'll—" One of the first things she had noticed about Tony was the strength of his jaw line. It widened out now, in an odd manner. It became blunt. "What," said Tony, "if I make a few remarks and stipulations? As long as this seems to be a mutual contract we're drawing up! What if I say that I'll have as many womet. friends in my life, as you have men? What if I say that I'll find my ex- citement elsewhere, if you don't keep my home peppy enough? What if I say I don't care about the blots that I put on the family name, as long as wearing the family name can be •held so cheaply by my wife? What if I say I:thoroughly agree with your theories? That what you've said can go—double!" Ellen's hands were folded in her lap. They looked like calm little fin- gers, but in reality the nails of them were biting into her pink palms. Tony—oh, he musn't go about with other women! Not when he was ler, husband. She— reversing a single standard to fit her own quaint mea- sure—could be less fastidious. Be- cause she knew that other men would never matter to her. But how could she be sure that some other girl wouldn't matter to Tony? She start- ed to speak, changed her mind, and said something entirely different front the thing that she had intended to say. "At that, our marriage should work out better," she said, "than most mar- riages. It's being built on a perfectly honest, '. fifty-fifty, cardslon-the-table basis," Some of the buoyancy seemed to have gone out of the heir to the Bran- der millions. Only his doggedness, the strong line of his chin, was left. "It'll work out all right!" he told Ellen. "Say when!" Oh, the throbbing of the heart in Ellen's breast! Oh, the persistent beat. in her temples:. . "Why," she said, and her voice sounded like a stranger's voice, even In her own ears, "why, the sooner the better! It'e just'' after twelve, now. Maybe, if we took a taxi, we 'could catch tts a license right off, and be married, and have a bite of luncheon together, before three, At three, 1 have a date to pose kr Dick Alvin, in his studio. Hee dolog a mural , ." She broke off before the torrent of '.cony's words. "Do yott mean to, tell tine," he was shouting, "that you'd go off, right after the eeretnotty and pose for some artist? Do you mean to toll me you'd leave your husband to go to another man, so that he can put you into a dirt' little Indian picture?" Ellen was interrupting, "Long after our marriage is aver, Tony," she said hotly, "long after we've stopped being, Dick's mural will go on, giving beauty and fine- ness to people. It's not a dirty little Indian picture, Tony—Dick is a great artist." "Great artist be hanged," grated Tony, "I bet he's in love wit1i you, theEll—" en's face was burning, "If it's going to be like this;" she said, "when we've known each other less than a day—well, then, I guess we'd better call off the whole busi- ness." But, suddenly, she was in Tony's arms again, and his mouth was against her mouth. And the whole earth whirled' dizzily about them. And then with ` her hand tight in Tony's and a blue, small hat clamped down over her ears, and a white, strained smile on her lips, Ellen was being whirled away—toward lower New York and the niarriage license bureau. Only they weren't going in a taxi: Tony was`. driving a scarlet. Rolls- Royce roadster with a special body and a mean 'way of nosing through traffic. a The ., document which gave two yoting people the right to join their lives together was properly authenti- cated. It was witnessed and sealed. And then the man behind the bars was speaking. "Want to be married here, now?" he questioned. "The clerk can do the job_,, Ellen' had a desire -a keen desire— to scream. No, she didn't want to be married in this dark, 'dusty room. Not to Tony -to Tony whom she loved -to Tony who would be her hus- band. But Tony, with a blush creeping down until it covered his firm, tanned neck, was stammering out something. "No," he was saying. "Not. hese. I want to be married in a church. Only married once, y'know." The man who had sealed the -pap- ers saidsomething, here, about being an optimist. "As for that,"• Tony added, as if he were speaking in hisown defense, "we haven't a ring yet!" Ellen, glancing swiftly down at her slim, ringless hands, was flushing,. too. Why, she had quite forgotten about a ring! Of course, they'd have to buy one, wasn't it all a part of the marriage service? "With this ring—" something like that? Her embarrassment made her for- get to be dishonest, "I want to be married in a church, too," she told the man behind the bars, and the man laughedat her ve- hemence. It was only when Tony had slid into the driver's seat of his car, and slipped in the clutch, that he sighed and spoke. "Thank God, that's over!" he said. Ellen sighed, too. "The first hundred licenses are the hardest," she told him, but he ignor- ed her flippancy. Instead, guiding the car deftly through the traffic, he reached down and briefly patted her hand. "Such little baby fingers,» he said. "Wonder if we'll find a ring small enough to do any good?" They did find the ring. All the. way up in the Fifties. A slim little circlet of sapphires ("because they're more like you, believe it or not, than diamonds!"), And a great single sap- phire on a gossamer hoop of 'platin- um. "Y,our engagement ring!" Tony re- marked. "We're on our way," Tony said, as they paused in the heavy early afternoon traffic on the avenue, "to the Little Church 'Around the Cor- ner. It's a bromide, I suppose, to be married there. But I've always liked itsgreen handkerchief of a lawn, and its green shrubs—" Steadily, to keep the panic from rising, from .submerging her like 'a sea. Ellen tttrned her eyes from Tony's face.. Somehow, when her eyes were on his face, she couldn't. see, or think, clearly, The car turned, sharply, into the side street, And there stood the church about which -so many legends have been built, the Little Church set friendly -wise in its green oasis of lawn. (Continued Nutt Week) 1 A HSALTH SERVICE"OP "r 5 CANADIAN MaDICAL? ASSOCIATION ANO LIFE l$SURANce COMPANIES. IN CANAOA IT ACHES Good health, personal comfort and Thursday, Nov. Z2nd, 1.934 AS ROYAL WEDDING APPROACHES A beautiful portrait study by Dor- othy Wilding of Prince George of. England and Princess Marina of Greece, who are to be married in Westminster Abbey on "Nov. 29th. The wedding will he one of the most magnificent apectacles ever wit- nessed in London, with notables from every part of the world attend- ing. appearance demand that the mouth be kept clean, and free from decayed teeth and inflamed gums .Not only will decayed teeth become painful but they prevent the proper chewing of food, are likely to foul the breath and, spoil their owner's good looks. Fur- thermore, disease in and around the teeth is the cause, of many serious. disturbances in other parts of the body. Dental caries, - or decay of the teeth, means the disintegration or breaking down of the tooth structure. It is the disease which most 'com- monly occurs in the human ,family. Some people suffer a great deal ;oth- ers comparatively little. At times, de- cay occurs rapidly, and at others, not at all. 'In other words, individuals vary in their susceptibility to dental caries and there may be variations, from time to time, in the same indi- vidual. If there is one primary or essential cause, it is not known. A number of factors are recognized as contributing to the occurrence of decay. of the teeth. We may assume, that decay never begins on the smooth, clean surface of a tooth. There must be some groove or crack on the surface or between the surfaces. It is at such a point that decay be- gins, the enamel is perforated and the damage spreads inside the tooth.. The process is much more rapid in- side, because there the . tissue is soft as compared with the outer coating or enamel, this latter being the hard- est substance in the body.. The un- dermining may be so extensive as to cause the tooth to crumble some day under the pressure of a bite. At this stage, the tooth is sensitive to heat or cold, to substances that are sweet or sour. The real pain, Which we know as tooth -ache, comes and per- sists when the decay reaches the pulp of the tooth, as it _ is there that the. nerve is located. The prevention of dental caries and. all that this implies rneans, first of all, a proper diet particularly early in life. By a proper diet is meant one that includes milk and fresh. fruits and leafy vegetables to supply minerals and vitamins. The teeth and gums are kept healthy by: use, so that some coarse food is desirable to ex- ercise the teeth, gurus and jaw mus- cles. The teeth and gums should be. kept clean by being thoroughly- brushed, horoughlybrushed, preferably after each -meal, but certainly without fail after break- fast and before retiring. The value of antiseptics in the mouth has never been demonstrated. "Be true to your teeth, or they will be false to you!" Questions concerning Health, ad- dressed to the Canadian .Medical As- sociation, 184 College St., Toronto„ will be answered persoally by letter. Bride—"I wish to make a complaint about the flower seeds you sold me, Mr. Cashcarry.' Merchant -"What was wrong with: them." Bride -"I planted -somefour-o'- clocks and they never opened till five:' Merchant -"You most go by day- light saving time, don't you?" , Bride—"Oh, yes, I never thought of that. Excuse me for complaining," Professional J. W. BUSHFIELD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Money to Loan. Office --,Meyer Block, Wingham Sudcessor to Dudley Holmes. Directory R. S. HETHERINGTON BARRISTER and SOLICITOR Office?— Morton Block. Telephone No. 66 H. W. COLBO'RNE. M.D. PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Medical Representative D. S. C. R. Phone 54. Wingham A. R. & F. E. DUVAL CHIROPRACTORS CHIROPRACTIC and. ELECTRO THERAPY North Street -- Wingham Telephone 300. Dr. Robt. C. REDMOND M.R.C.S. - (England) L.R.C.P. (London) PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON F. A. PARKER ' OSTEOPATH All Diseases Treated. Office adjoining residence next to Anglican Church on Centre St. Sunday by appointigaent. Osteopathy Electricity' Phone 272. Hours, 9`a.m. to 8 p.m. Business A. J. WALKER Furniture and Funeral Service Ambulance Service Wingham, Ont. THOMAS FELLS AUCTIONEER REAL ESTATE SOLD A Thorough knowledge of Patin Stock. Phone 231, Winghana. J. H. CRAWFORD Barrister, Solicitor, Notary, Etc. Successor to R. Vanstone. Wingiharp Ontario DR W. M. CONNELL PHYSICIAN AND SURGEON Phone 19. J. ALVIN FOX Licensed Drugless Practitioner CHIROPRACTIC - DRUGLESS THERAPY RADIONIC EQUIPMENT Hours by Appointment. Phone 191. Wingham Directory Wellington Mutual Fire Insurance Co. Established 1840. Risks taken on all classes of insur- ance at reasonable rates. ' Head Office, Guelph, Ont. ABNER COSENS, Agent. Wingharzt. It Will Pay You to Have An EXPERT AUCTIONEER to conduct your sale; See T. R. BENNETT At The Royal Service Station. Phone 174W. 4. HARRY FRY Fuirniture and Funeral Service C. L. CLARK Licensed Embalmer and Runeral Director Ambulance Service. Phones: Day 117. Night 109.. THOMAS E. SMALL LICENSED AUCTIONEER 20 Years' Experience in Parnt Stock and Implements. Moderate 1Pt'ite> . hone 331,