The Wingham Advance Times, 1927-06-02, Page 7ThursaaY, Aloe and., at92.7
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E NOPSIS ...
MN Grimm comes to .New York
to make Ms fortune and becomes a
heavyweight boxer. under the tete.
lege of Butch Ford. .Pack l'airfax,
BIZZ's bugaboo, bets Bill's ;;tea -sloop,
on which he holds the unpaid notes,
against twentipli'pe thousand dollars
that Btl will not K. 0. Carney.
Barbara ,Bainter, Fill's fiancee, di-
rects his tea-shbp venture. Herne,
Bill's friend, in Love with ..Fans&, tin•
vites theme all to a house warty,
I give in to Barbara's orders that
there was to be no scenes, so I
didn't tip Herne about what was.
between me and his old eollese
chum.
My refusal to knock over a poul-
tice went big with Barbara which
in a dinging, sky-blue evening
gown had the other cuteys biting
their wails, I fill a tuxedo easy,
and Herne told me once during the
evening's merr'y'making that nvi
and Barbara together made e pair
"off a mag+azinae cover, Smoker th•aa.
`aawa.y! .
During one of tie endless dances
we strolled out in the big garden..
around Herne's . mansion and:. .
down on a stogie bench. Tt tip '^
braw, brioht, moonlirht nicht wbee
not only evade me sentimental, • er
1t give .zee the blues. Isere t
Bairbara not three tushes ,1 e
from me, but with any alley 10
lose mousy she • seemed fu, .':ee
away than Heaven.
"You must find Fairfax and get
atim. to release you from your fool-
ish wager, Bill," says Barbara, ar-
ranging her hair after a wonderful
dote mission iR which talk was at a
premium, "Offer him tthe'twenty
out What a 'puselyeat means when It
says meow!
Barons de slow dao healing; and my
hands was in `bead Shape the night
of my bout witlx. Om.e-Round Car-
ney, as ft showed the newspaper
etaboys divesting 'taw dssting room be+2ora
massacre. Same. of 'am said 1
s
wear v. saP !to gra in "there with a
nerrc1erer Ike 'Carney with. nes"
amulets 10 diatre'ss, but a postpone•
meet would of cost me a teu-tthent
saaad,dollw,a . appearance forfeit, and
than wss art;! A row over the ref-
eree heti geee me a five days' de -
ley 'at that, gent helped, Butch
beefed purposely to g4ve my lia.nds
a chance to get well. We didn't
.are actually if ,Oarney's old man
refereed the fight; all we wanted
was somebody which could count
tip to test.
'One want after 'another put the
excited crowd on edge and kept 'tem
there --and me with 'em. Oarney
was late showing up, and when he
dirt he started a long argument
with Butch Fond about my ban -
Lieges. Monsieur Oairn•ey was Then
tc the feet that my hands was burn
rl, and he was there to make the 1
most of it. This was a big "shot tot
both, and I didn't blame him--
all
im—all in the game -but the sus•
r rs wanted action and they
•-:r1 Carney to a fame -thee -well,
'Th.Ely r;y 'razzed plenty more when
ate camera even otawled into the
ring i.; to get some pictures for the
":es which was to be taken o4.
the 'fight. Thaat was more delay,
while they fixel the batteries at
blinding lights and we posed tor
this and that. All the while me
mind was in uproar. If I didn't
knock out Carney I stood to lose
my tea parlor, my where of the
T had to aot tike a movie star and smother Pansi/a dress.
five thousand you boamowed from purse and my chance to meet the
Mr. Heine for the notes on the tea world's champion. Likewise, Pan
shop." sy 'would drop a gaend and my bud
"But suppose--" I started. dy, Oariton Herne, would lose ten
"331,11," quietly remarks Barbara, thousand to Fairfax, which would
"did you hear my suggestion?" have the laugh on ue a11! •
One look educated me. Finally the nerve racking stalling
"1 ayo, honey!!" I says. "I'm off." come to a end. The ring was swift,
I searched the gardens for Fake ly cleaned of everybody but roe,
fax close to half a hour before I Carney and the referee. All the
Emptily found him with no less than lights went out but ithe high power -
Pansy. P,idkington, which was sup- 8d ones over our Meads, the cram -
posed 'to loathe the very sight of eras begin steadily clicking and a
hero.. They bottle glanoed up when hushed buzzing settled over the
I:stumbleed on'em,•fond T gave Pan- tightly packed thousand's, slumping
sy a stare whieh.n nest'of put a per- back in their s•ea'ts to witness m
manent waavetinher hair. She flush- Tong, hard fought battle.
ed and looked uncomfortable, but lent, boys and glrls, I had entirely
Fairfax deliberately blew his riga- different plans!. My idea was that
rete smoke in my face ,and grinned the quicker this one was over the
nastily. better for all concerned. That's 'the
"Fairfax," I says, dying -in agony way Camay sized up •the situation
of having to crawl to this bozo, himself, and at the bell we both
"I'd like to call our bet off,, and I'm charged from our torseera with one
ready to take up my notes—" idea in mined—oto win with a Ipunch
":you'll call northing off!" he in if 'possible!
to rupts, with a snarl like a wolf. I wasted no precious thine itt.
"You •won't welsh on me, you big, :feinting, but immediately stated a
cheap squawlrer! I'm going to -vicious left hook to the jaw. At
basalt yotl. and make you like it, do tlliat exact instant Carney let one
you hear that? You can stay There go to the same place. Both punches
with your ex -sweetheart. I'll 11t was perfectly tinned end perfectly
fiorm Barbara 'Baxter Where you delivered. Bach' glove connected
may be found!", solidly, acid we both went down'
About a hour later we're all in- with'a crash, while the neighbors'
side the big shouse clowning, and c'liildren went simply insane! The
e .and Darbar'a was getting ready forst 1 heard was the referee saying
to leave: Herne was telling us "Five!" in a kind of trembling
about something, and Fairfax was voice, f rolled over and blinked
hanging over pansy at the other up, but 1 could see no stigns of Mr,
," end of the room with a let nnatcla Carney. Then I`eeen a hairy leg on
between his fingers, toobusy talk- bopof my heaving chest, and the
ing bo, light • anis cigarette. I seen next thing I neade•out is One -Round
Falirfax bend' doivn swiftly like lie Camey sprawled on top of me,;
was going to' ki's's Pansy and abet deadto the world; and the referee
shoved hint away. The next instant dazedly counting us both out! '
Pansy screeamed and jumped up, I felt very slapstick, but other.
beating Prantioally at her dress wise I was O. IC.
with her hands. The burning match At "seven" 1 throwed oft Oar
mna+st of fell oat her gauzy evening liey's leg and at ' eeight" I was on
gown and Set it ablaze. one knee against the ropes—there
Tt asounds mach worse than it ac- seertned to be a thousand of 'tan!
tually was, tbougb there were You should of beard that race riot
reams of.,excitsment for a few min- outside the ring—sixty-four boiler
Utes. The rest of 'em just stood factories and twenty-two 'Mamas!
around helpless 'Vith panic, so •T Butch Ford's working face under
had to ant
like •a movie :stain and the lower rope looked like a;drlank•
smother Pansy's flaming dress with en moon, At °'nine" T grabbed the
a costly rug and Ine equally costly rd es- frantically and managed to
dinner cont. To make it even More pull myself erect, Oarney hadn't
soenarto, Pansy executed a faint i'n flicked a muscle, and the referee
my amens. Darn it, I Irate tints grand grabbed my glove,• holding it up to
stand stuff, no foolingt However, the frenaied mob, aa
she wasn't burnt very, naueh, but I'd just got up in time to win!
1rt7v' hands was a amass of blisters, The ?gout had lasted exactly Hitt+.
Pairfax's dr'uvkeia laugh caused ty-one s^eooh.ds i trained two.
Herm to do a snap in, and he ohaas- 'months for It. The engaged par
ed Pelee out of the houee with tuonas of the manly amt, 'lien had
orders to come back never, paid famine please for seats rand
1 was busy for the next hellbent' waited weeks inthe expectations
ducking the gushing 'girls which. of a ;hoar of thrills, showered the
• mistook Me for a hero, Herne had Tung 'with eausbioais, pop battles end
a doctor there in no time. ,and the baffled bowie of ''Fake i" The cop
serearn of it all was that 'Pansy got 'pas had their work slit Out for
the hyster title ,and wouldn't stand themtone a couple. of 'hours atter-
. ...
'nobody near her butBarbara! ward.
'.Chas three of us wound lipby going But I'd " won back. "Ye Tiffin
home in Ilorne's big molls -Boyce, Shoppe," saved my own twenty -flue l
with hint at this wheel, and whale thousand, ami Ilemhe's cra,i,zy bet rte
Pereey kissed Barbara good night f t:a one round knockout, so •1 shoniti ,•
nearly fainted, The grail wliieb tali be anneyedl
#]guro out women telt alst'figure (To be Continued), ,
J.
[Mainly For Women
(13y Dorothy, Dix)
WI-IY MARRIAGES GO WRONG
-„.,_ilii..•
Mien's sins egaipst matrimony , are
those of omission, While those of wo-
men are sins of commission. The
coniplaiatt' of nine out of ten ,unhappy.
wives is not what their husbands do
but what: they fail to do. They don't
allege that their husbands beat thein
pi starve them or are unfaithful, but
that they ane neglected.
It never .enters the heads of these
men that nowadays a woman doesn't
have' to marry for her meals. She
can earn her own living. The reason
she takes a httsband is to get love and
companionship and if her husband fails.
in these her marriage is a failure and
she is miserable . There are husbands
;e -ho never speak to their wives execept
to criticize them; who complain about
everything that goes wrong in the
house and never praise the general
efficiency with which things are run.
There are husbands who never take
their wives out to any place of amuse-
ment, who never suggest a treat for
their pleasure or give any concern for
their personal happiness. The curious
thing is that the very inen who are'so
neglectful of their wives generally do
love their wives and :admire them and
appreciate thein, and it issheer blind-
ness that keeps theme frons seeing they
are breaking their wives' hearts by
the things they don't do.
creams on the market to -,day are not
good. Every cream will not bring
skin as there is as iiauc1i dif erence ill
skins as there as in eYes and hair, So
.before condemning a cream or before
giving , up hope of deriving benefit
from creamse KNOW YOUR SKIN,
I?erhape yen • yourself have a fine
delicate skin diet inclines to dryness
skin which is neither oily or'dry, and
possibly a third sister has a skin of
still coarser grain which is very oily.
It would be difficult indeed. to find
one ci'eaaii that wquld adequately
serve all three of you. One of' you
reasons there is such a variety of
creams is the necessity to meet the
needs of different skins.
Still supposing the three sisters, each
remedy, whiei it reallyis in the case
of the first and third sister, and the
keeping of the skin in normal condi-
tion as in the case of the second sis-
ter, lies in selecting the three follow-
ing 1?inds of cream. ,
The first sister, whose skin, is fine,
elicate and inclined' to dryness, needs
a cleaning eream with rather a oily
base and a nourishing cream to feed
the tissues so that they will have an
ample ,supply of nutriment. Lack of
sufficient natural oil, or food, is what
makes the skin tend toward dryness,
and the dryness will quickly 'develoie
wrinkles unless the uudernotaLbed
tissues do set enough food.
The second sister, who has normal
skin, must choose a cleansing ereant
drying properties so that the normal
Condition doesn't swing to dryness or
oiliness. '
'the third sister needs to use a lens -
o 'clea 'I 1 - r e1 is as-
tringent
nsa i,g cream fo lemon a
tringent or drying ; and shrinking ie
its action and this will tend to correct,
the extreme` oilness as well es refine
the skin.
By selecting the ,proper cream the
first and third sisters can bring their
skin to the normal condition of the
second sisiter.
PLUEVALE
The regular meeting of the Wo-
men's Institute will be held at the
home of Mrs, Mex Nlowbray, Thurs-
day :afterriooai, June et11.
Mrs. Geo.' Robertson,`' Mrs, Albert
Engel and Mr. an'd, Mrs. Russel' Me
Gregor of Owen Sound, spent the 24th
at the home of Mr. David Jewett and
Whit Stewart.
. Mr, James and Howard Clark and
Miss 'Verna Clark spent Sunday at
the home of Mr, Thomas Stewart,
But if men's sins are mostly those
of omission, women's are those of
commission and it is the things that
wives do that ruin many a perfectly
good marriage. The chief thing. wo-
men do is nag. They nag their hus-
bands about smoking, the way they
eat, about not wiping their feet when.
they come into the 'house, about the
money they lent and never got back,
about the mistakes they made, They
nag, nag, nag until their husbands sit
in silence not daring to utter a word
for fear they will start something.
What a pity we can't make men do
the things they should do, and women
leave undone the things they should
not tt.
WHICH WOULD YOU MARRY?
(By Dorothy Dix.)'
Which would you rather marry, a
man you do not love, but who is good.
and kind and able to take care of you,
and run the risk of learning to love.
him after marriage, or marry a man'
you do love, but. who is poor, lacks
energy and has no regular trade? Of
course, most girls would, marry the
man they love no matter what his dis-
abilities are. But she would likely be
more happy if she married the man
who comes up to her ideal than if she
married') the one who fires her fancy.
It' is a hazardous thing for a wo-
man to marry a roan she respects but
does not love, on the off -chance that
after marriage he will be'able to heat
up her luke warm affections, to the
boiling point. Marriage does not fos-
ter romance—it dispels it. The wo-
man who marries without love for her'
husband never falls in love with hire
because she always sees hint as he is.
But many a woman who marries a
man she likes but does not love finds
that her affections for him become
friendship that is one of the most sat-
isfying relationships on earth.
•
Also, while poets may scoff at the
part that material things play in our
happiness and proclaim that love is
enough, in real. life we cannot ignore
the practical. Furtherinore, the man
who marries a woman who is not in
love with hint generally makes the
ideal husband because he is always
tryingto win her, He is a thousand
tunes more considerate and .tender
than the . man who thinks his wife is
so much in love with him that he can
treat' her as he pleases.
It is far more difficult for a woman
to fall in lov. e with her husband than,
it is fr her to fall out of love with
him, And .the woman who is married
to the man she cannot respect soon.
ceases to care for him, except in a
ii Shepitying, contemptuous fashion.'
sees his weaknesses and dispises
thein., So I think that in the std the
woman who choos,es the man she re -
slants and who can do a husband's
part in "taking cart of her, makes a
better bargain than does the woman
who marries .a ne'er-do-well for time
sake of a few heart throbs.
FACIAL CLEANSING CREAMS
• (Dy Josephine auddleston)
Many woman believe, after ufiing, to
particular cream and not gettingbone-
:ficial results, that the cream itself is
no good, This is untrue for very few
What the Red Cross is doing
for the Good of Canada
For the Veteran
Befriends 3,500 soldiers still In hospital - . relieves.
sickness and need in their families . . cares for the
soldier settler ... provides sheltered employment for the
disabled in three Veteran's' Workshops.
For the Children
Through Junior Red Cross, 'has aided 5,000 crippled
children and has pledged over 137,000. school children to
practicehealth habits and to serve others.
For the Pioneer
Brings nursing service to those in frontier districts through
39 Qutpost Hospitals and Nursing Stations,
PQr the New Canadian
Welcomes and gives needed attention to immigrant inothets
Lind children at three Seaport Nurseries.
For the Mothers and, Daughters
In Horne Nursing Classes, has taught principles of nursin
diet and home hygiene to oyer 12,000 women and girls.
For the Disaster Victim
Is organized to afford prompt relief to sufferers from
fire, flood and epidemic. •
Nation -Wide Appeal 1
Canadian Red Cross Society
Send Contributions toe
Ontario Divisions, Canadian Red Cross Society,
410 Sherbourne Street, Toronto 5, Ontario
Varied Sports ',. igwin Inn k
n the Choice of a aeonvrention centre
there are many questions to; be.
considered, The aocoumodattontis for
the (lodging of delegates are of great
importance, but also there ' are the
factors of entertainment to 'be eon-
sidered if the convention is to he
suooessful from every angle. 14
choosing the place for the 1927 con-
vention or .the 'Canadian, weekly
Newepaliae ; ASsodation, which
brings together the 'publishers of
weekly newspapers • in, every section
of Canada, the executive of the aeso-
dation ssiidere(' all angles or the
matter before )deciding that :this
yetir's eonventipm would be held .alt
Bigwinilto., tri th'e Lek r est"Beya dise
triot of the Mghlamrds• or Ontario. •
Here, not only -would the delegates
provided with splendid hotel ne-
eoaxainodatiot for themselves and
their wives, but they. Would also ffind
splendid ftlaoilitiets in the vma'y of con-
vention hall and ootnfnittee roonaa for
transacting their business: Prom the
entertainment side of the question,
Blgwln Ina., located on the shore of
Lake of Bays, offers to visitors every
variety of land and, water sports.
Located in a 'beautiful region of lake
and, forest, 'it is an ideal holiday
centre and one width is growing in
porpulanity with ,each sbeiSOI , Every
toric gal' aquatic sport such as boat-
ing, baiting and fishing may be on-
.toyed, and in addition there is gall,
tennis, bowling and other pursuits
tor those who seek these forms of
diversion.,.
Big wing Inn is one of the ohs rrei ag
?summer, hotels of Bests rn Canada
and is nogweglently located near
Huntsville on the 'X"ciroaa,ta-North
Bay line of the rational System,
Prom Huntsville the visitor is taken
by 'well-appotnted steaatiboat to the
Inn, and special sleeping ears oper-
ate to an; t trem Huntsville for the
oon-venie nee of w'isatersr- enaadialu
National Xtailwayu l hOtogra»ih.. t